Many comics have decades-long marriages. What’s their secret?
Purposeful refusal, far from depriving us, can make way for unexpected bounty.
In her new book, Murderland, Caroline Fraser argues that the rise of these criminals has deep roots in the release of industrial waste.
Salman Rushdie’s artistic decline
The author of a new biography talks about the conservative journalist’s life and legacy.
The Atlantic’s editors and writers share their favorite titles—new, classic, or somewhere in between—from a year of reading.
If the Trump administration wants more babies, it needs to embrace a different kind of parent.
Her ghostwritten autobiography diminishes her, and I found out why.
In the mangroves with Florida’s poet of excess and grift
Susan Choi’s new book, Flashlight, considers the evolution of rage.