Viral Days
What I Will Miss About the Pandemic
Here’s hoping the new connections and fresh empathy won’t disappear
By Steve Lagerfeld | Thursday, April 1, 2021
Quarantining with Heidegger
For the time being, it’s salad, snuggles, and Being and Time
By Peter Filene | Saturday, March 27, 2021
Twenty-seven Boxes
When a lifetime’s worth of artifacts and memories arrived at my door
By Diane Cole | Thursday, March 25, 2021
Monotony Interrupted
When a snow day is canceled by the pandemic, it’s childhood that’s at stake
By Kelly McMasters | Monday, March 22, 2021
At a Snail’s Pace
France has handled Covid-19 in a very French way
By Anne Swardson | Monday, March 15, 2021
Words in Confinement
Lessons on literature and life from inside a notorious Mississippi prison
By W. Ralph Eubanks | Thursday, March 11, 2021
The Real Reality Principle
Our actions, or inactions, have consequences that we can never truly know
By David Stromberg | Saturday, February 27, 2021
Armed for a Pandemic
A dance troupe’s film project holds loneliness at bay
By Michelle Herman | Monday, February 22, 2021
The Rollout We Deserve
Our tolerance for piecemeal health care has led to the Covid-19 vaccination mess
By David Brown | Saturday, February 20, 2021
Inside the Burns Unit
How Scotland’s national poet brought solace at a time of pain and isolation
By Thomas Fox Averill | Thursday, March 31, 2022
Reading Thucydides in a Time of Pandemic
What the Athenian historian’s insights predict about the future of our own democracy
By W. Robert Connor | Saturday, February 5, 2022
Wave to Me
There’s one thing I won’t relinquish to a pandemic that’s claimed so much
By Megan Craig | Thursday, February 3, 2022
The Plague Year
The more things change, the more they stay the same
By David Guterson | Thursday, January 27, 2022
On Hugging
What we lose when we can’t get close to the ones we love
By Chloe Shaw | Saturday, January 15, 2022
The Pandemic Mood
Who created it and how it is maintained
By Philip Alcabes | Saturday, January 8, 2022
Mad Dogs and Transcendentalists
How the individualism of Emerson and Thoreau differs from today’s libertarianism
By Robert A. Gross | Saturday, November 20, 2021
Back to School
A return to reading as a private and a public act
By Seth Lerer | Saturday, October 23, 2021
Facing Death at the Ends of the Earth
The discovery of the world’s oldest rock offers a hefty dose of perspective