Responses to our Winter 2014 Issue

Loving Animals to Death

How can we raise them humanely and then butcher them?

Big Man in Tiny Houses

Stellar Debate

The Bard of Suburbia

John Updike’s obsession with ordinary life made him the writer by whom we came to know ourselves

Updike By Adam Begley

19th Nervous Breakdown

The struggle to keep it together

My Age of Anxiety: Fear, Hope, Dread, and the Search for Peace of Mind By Scott Stossel

Cure for Helmet Hair?

A Danger to Ourselves

Tough on other species, too

The Sixth Extinction: An Unnatural History By Elizabeth Kolbert

What Killed My Sister?

The answer—schizophrenia—only leads to more perplexing questions

Splitting Our Sides

A new biography of a comedy pioneer

Lorne: The Man Who Invented Saturday Night Liveby Susan Morrison

Mr. Olympia

When the ancient Greeks looked at human muscle, they saw something different than we do

In the Mushroom

True foraging isn’t the domain of the weekend warrior; it’s serious, serious business

Asteroid Hunters

The scientists and engineers who defend our planet day and night from potentially hazardous space rocks

Who Would I Be Off My Meds

Can weaning oneself off pharmaceuticals ease the cycle of perpetual suffering?

Unshrunk: A Story of Psychiatric Treatment Resistanceby Laura Delano

Tiger Mom

At a forest preserve in India, a writer sees the world anew and learns how to focus her son’s restless mind

A Midsummer Night’s Stream
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A Midsummer Night’s Stream

American Carthage
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Echoes from the ancient conflicts between Hannibal’s city and Rome continue to reverberate well into the present

Who’s to Say?
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A bewildering take from a noted scholar of Christianity

Miracles and Wonder: The Historical Mystery of Jesusby Elaine Pagels

Learning to Be Social
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What might Rousseau teach us about how to live with others?

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