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The New Republic
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Books
July 26, 2022
Anna Altman
Lynne Tillman’s Solitary, Raw Memoir of Caring for Her Mother
53 million Americans are caregivers to a family member. How can an experience so common so often remain in the shadows?
July 21, 2022
Scott Bradfield
Growing Up With Frank O’Hara
Ada Calhoun set out to complete her father’s abandoned biography of the poet. She ended up with a reflection on living with art.
July 13, 2022
Ian Beacock
Yascha Mounk’s Misguided War on Wokeness
“The Great Experiment” flatters liberal readers that by expressing their distaste for cancel culture, they have become diverse democracy’s most gallant defenders.
July 6, 2022
Noah Kulwin
Robert McNamara’s Son Reckons With a Legacy of Destruction
Craig McNamara’s family did not talk about the Vietnam war. He spent his life asking questions about it.
June 30, 2022
Audra J. Wolfe
Is Nuclear Power Just Too Dangerous?
A survey of the world’s worst nuclear disasters highlights the catastrophic consequences of technical hubris.
June 28, 2022
Jennifer Wilson
How to Lose a Guy in the Gilded Age
Uncovering the resort where rich women sought the elusive right to divorce
June 27, 2022
Phillip Maciak
Notes Toward a Theory of the Dad
Keith Gessen’s memoir, “Raising Raffi,” embraces the embarrassment and vulnerability of fatherhood.
June 22, 2022
Jess Bergman
Ottessa Moshfegh’s
Lapvona
Is a Relentless Gore Fest
Moshfegh’s fourth novel gets unusually creative with excrement and brutality. To what end?
June 20, 2022
Magazine
Joanna Scutts
The End of the Art-Baby Problem
In the lives of women from Alice Neel to Ursula Le Guin, motherhood was entwined with a quest to make art.
June 15, 2022
Magazine
Ed Burmila
Is the Neoliberal Era Over Yet?
The current political order may have proven a failure. But neither party has presented an alternative yet.
June 14, 2022
Magazine
Benjamin Kunkel
Stewart Brand Saw the Future
In his journey from hippie sage to global business consultant, the Whole Earth Catalog founder embodied the shifting spirit of Silicon Valley.
June 9, 2022
Magazine
Jake Bittle
America’s Gun Control Gridlock
Crisis at the NRA should have been a gift for gun control advocates. What went wrong?
June 8, 2022
Samuel Clowes Huneke
The Slow Advance of LGBTQ Rights in Washington, D.C.
James Kirchick’s “Secret City” focuses not on the public work of activists, but on the presence of gay men and lesbians within government—many of them conservatives.
June 2, 2022
Magazine
Ryu Spaeth
Werner Herzog Tests Himself Against the Wilderness
“The Twilight World” is the summation of a lifelong obsession with chaos, hostility, and meaninglessness.
May 31, 2022
Scott W. Stern
DDT Is Still With Us, 50 Years Since It Was Banned
Scientists have found toxic levels of the chemical at large. And some groups are making the case to produce even more.
May 27, 2022
Anna Altman
The German Fortunes Built on Nazi Plunder
Germany has never fully reckoned with the Nazi connections of some of its wealthiest families.
May 23, 2022
Sophie Haigney
Elif Batuman’s Experiment With Eventfulness
How much has to happen in a novel?
May 20, 2022
Mary L. Trump
Mark Esper’s Fascinating Revelations Would Have Been Far More So in Real Time
If he and John Bolton and Bill Barr and all the other “adults in the room” had spoken up when it mattered, history could be different.
May 20, 2022
Priya Satia
Would These Undelivered Speeches Really Have Changed History?
At a time of upheaval, we want to believe that better leaders have the power to change the course of history. But counterfactuals are never simple.
May 17, 2022
Andre Pagliarini
How Ian Bremmer Cultivates an Air of Expertise
His book on global crisis is less interested in plausible solutions than projecting a sheen of authority.
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