Martha Foley’s Granddaughters
What the esteemed literary editor never knew about the life of her troubled son, David Burnett
By Jay Neugeboren
July 18, 2024To Catch a Sunset
Reflections on allergies, anxieties, and the limits of familial love
By Sandra Beasley
July 11, 2024The Next New Thing
In architecture, the gulf between the traditional and the modern seems wider than ever before
By Witold Rybczynski
July 4, 2024Imperfecta
Her brother’s disease leads a writer to challenge how we conceive of human abnormality in the emerging era of gene editing
By Pamela Haag
June 20, 2024The Widower’s Lament
After the death of the poet Wendy Barker, her grieving husband turns to the literature of loss
By Steven G. Kellman
March 4, 2024The World at the End of a Line
The grandson of one of American literature’s Lost Generation novelists reflects on his namesake’s love of the sea
By John Dos Passos Coggin
April 13, 2023The Goddess Complex
A set of revered stone deities was stolen from a temple in northwestern India; their story can tell us much about our current reckoning with antiquities trafficking
By Elizabeth Kadetsky
March 2, 2023Last Rites and Comic Flights
A funeral in a 1984 Japanese film offers moments of slapstick amid the solemnity
By Pico Iyer
July 28, 2022The Believer
When nobody would touch Joyce’s manuscript, Sylvia Beach stepped in
By Keri Walsh
June 15, 2022Seventy Years Later
The Second World War destroyed Adolf Hitler, but his legacy is showing disturbing signs of life
By John Lukacs
Tuesday, December 1, 2009Strange Matter
The physics and poetics of the search for the God particle
By John Olson
Tuesday, December 1, 2009Wrestling with Two Behemoths
A longtime New Yorker, and New Yorker writer, gets the cold shoulder from powerful New York cultural institutions
By Ved Mehta
Tuesday, December 1, 2009The Doctor Is IN
At 88, Aaron Beck is now revered for an approach to psychotherapy that pushed Freudian analysis aside
By Daniel B. Smith
Tuesday, September 1, 2009A Mindful Beauty
What poetry and applied mathematics have in common
By Joel E. Cohen
Tuesday, September 1, 2009Armchair Travelers
The Renaissance writers and humanists Petrarch and Boccaccio turned to geography to understand the works of antiquity
By Toby Lester
Tuesday, September 1, 2009Mother Country
A daughter examines a life played out in romantic defiance of bad fortune