Orange You Glad

What’s it really like to be someone else?

Washing Feet in Dolpo

On a medical mission at the top of the world, finding a healing dose of cheerful stoicism

Rewilding Our Minds

Why nature is so necessary during the pandemic—and how we repay the debt

The Power of Restraint

We must find a better way to commemorate 9/11

The Birth of Black Power

Stokely Carmichael and the speech that changed the course of the civil rights movement

Jacques Barzun and Friend

What did a distinguished historian, and possibly a great man, see in an unkempt young would-be writer?

Natural Magic

Modern medicine’s roots in alchemy, astronomy, and the apothecary shop

Unsentimental Education

Mary Ware Dennett’s quest to make contraception—and knowledge about sex—available to all

The China Model

Its economic success and rejection of democratic values have engaged leaders across the globe

Putin’s Potemkin Paradise

The troubling appeal of Russia’s blend of political repression and bourgeois comfort

The Writer in the Family

The fiction of E. L. Doctorow gave a young man hope of connecting his father and his literary hero

The Weight of a Stone

Searching for stability in an erratic world led Oliver Sacks and other writers to the realms of geology

Double Exposure

On our first memories

Under a Spell Everlasting

Thomas Mann’s Magic Mountain, published a century ago, tells of a world unable to free itself from the cataclysm of war

The Fair Fields
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Only rarely did the outside world intrude on an idyllic Connecticut childhood, but in the tumultuous 1960s, that intrusion included an encounter with evil

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

The Brahmin and His Imaginary Friend
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How a classic paean to the honest virtues of a Maine fisherman obscured several ugly truths

Illustration by Aad Goudappel

Granaries of Language
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Dictionaries are far more than alphabetized collections of words

Reborn in the City of Light

At a time when Paris was an incubator of modernism, a group of bold American women arrived to make art out of their lives

Thoreau’s Pencils

How might a newly discovered
connection to slavery change
our understanding of an abolitionist
hero and his writing?

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