The 2024 election may come down to whether an electorate firmly in the acceptance stage of grief backslides into the second
From the Magazine
One party seems to have been swallowed by its candidate; the other candidate appears to have been swallowed by her party
From the Magazine
There will be no Covid to save Democrats this time. Nor will there be an ‘October surprise’ damaging enough to neutralize Trump
From the Magazine
Voters will determine who has the better strategy
By Amber Duke
From the Magazine
When it comes to what a Trump or Harris presidency could achieve, the answer may be determined by a handful of extremely close senatorial elections
By Ben Domenech
From the Magazine
Consider the ancient Greek understanding of the natural world
By Peter Jones
From the Magazine
The Democratic VP nominee’s ties leave unanswered questions
By Ian Williams
From the Magazine
The Scheme may not be of much interest, but it certainly tells its reader something about the man whose name is on the cover
By Declan Leary
From the Magazine
I still feel politically homeless, only it’s different: I don’t know which candidate terrifies me more
From the Magazine
Will new generations ever be able to afford a home?
By Joel Kotkin
From the Magazine
Appalachia and assassination attempts
From the Magazine
America’s elite has been cowardly and conformist for too long, with effects that are only too obvious
From the Magazine
To be the Israeli Bismarck is no mean feat. But there may be a sting in Bibi’s tail
By Niall Ferguson and Jay Mens
From the Magazine
Dreaming about being a statesman is one thing; being one is quite another
From the Magazine
The Chinese Communist Party is keen to foster the antagonism
By Cindy Yu
From the Magazine
Books + Arts
The chief sin of Amazon’s The Rings of Power is that it is often simply dull
By J.S. Barnes
From the Magazine
In Agent Zo, Claire Mulley has written a thrilling, consistently tense page-turner
By Mark Piesing
From the Magazine
Rebel Sounds is an uplifting compendium of hidden histories of those who have produced, performed and distributed music in times of war
From the Magazine
Deborah Levy’s latest book is a sketch of the author in motion
By Esme Bright
From the Magazine
Rhodri Lewis’s book offers so many fresh insights and well-turned phrases that I had to buy a new notebook to fit them all in
From the Magazine
Maureen Callahan challenges us to ask whether our American heroes are really who we think they are
By Josie Cox
From the Magazine
Abbasi’s heady weaving of the antic and the deadly serious may explain some of the criticism that’s been leveled at the film
By Laura Allsop
From the Magazine
What the notorious films have to say about masculinity in crisis?
From the Magazine
Ukrainian nationals and their allies have been working tirelessly to promote the voices of a people under siege
From the Magazine
Sabin Howard brings classicism back to the Mall
From the Magazine
Life
Perhaps the Chicago White Sox’s swift decline was not the result of a calculated scheme but rather a classic case of Murphy’s Law
By Ryan Spaeder
From the Magazine
The NIH operates a website called Noisy Planet. There you will learn that experts advise you to ‘move away from the noise’
From the Magazine
I’ve been thinking a lot about friendship lately because I recently turned seventy and was considering throwing a big birthday party
From the Magazine
Since democracy is dead in New York, I write in dead persons
From the Magazine
Does the Old Republican Establishment really believe that it can resurrect, reassemble, recreate itself and run — and win — again?
From the Magazine
Simplicity is the point: to strip transportation down to its essence and forget you’re living in 2024
From the Magazine
Place
Dead shows, whether Grateful or & Company, bring a bunch of disparate people together
From the Magazine
What Bacon’s Castle looks like inside and out has about it the undeniable strangeness of the past
From the Magazine
The French city is rich in history, culture and class of all kinds
From the Magazine
Food and Drink
‘I feel like New York is the city that is always exploring new things. If you have a new idea, you put it here’
From the Magazine
In Britain and Ireland, children and poor people would go door to door on November 2, singing and asking for soul cakes
By Jane Stannus
From the Magazine
The cocktail is a love letter to the tangled, intoxicating spirit of New Orleans
From the Magazine
Isn’t one’s taste in wine a classic instance of de gustibus non disputandum est? Well, yes and no
From the Magazine
And Finally
They’re the perfect tool for a politician: they make complex issues look simple
From the Magazine
It might not define all that Americans want in a president
From the Magazine