
Will Donald Trump Destroy the Presidency?
He disdains the rule of law. He’s trampling norms of presidential behavior. And he’s bringing vital institutions down with him.
A damage report on the presidency by Ta-Nehisi Coates, Eliot Cohen, and Jack Goldsmith. Plus, Woody Allen’s lazy filmmaking, Joyce Maynard’s personal-essay domination, and why happy people cheat on their spouses.
He disdains the rule of law. He’s trampling norms of presidential behavior. And he’s bringing vital institutions down with him.
For all the visible damage the president has done to the nation’s global standing, things are much worse below the surface.
The foundation of Donald Trump’s presidency is the negation of Barack Obama’s legacy.
A good marriage is no guarantee against infidelity.
Buried deep under an island in the Baltic, the world’s first permanent nuclear-waste repository is nearing completion. If all goes according to plan, future generations may not know it’s there.
A newly discovered short story by Kurt Vonnegut
The current debate over public education underestimates its value—and forgets its purpose.
As a psychotherapist, Irvin Yalom has helped others grapple with their mortality. Now he is preparing for his own end.
What it takes for Chinese drivers to get on the road
The war opened the credibility gap. What we’ve learned since has only widened it.
An anatomy of daydreaming
Why scientists are preparing to freeze the research vessel Polarstern in sea ice near the North Pole
A very short book excerpt
The personal essay may be over—but Joyce Maynard isn’t.
Putting next to no effort into his films is the secret to sustaining his reputation.
Revisiting the work of A. E. Housman
Katherine Dunn’s cult classic, Geek Love, has eclipsed her debut, Attic, for too long.
The physician and author Victoria Sweet finds her purpose.
Can America recover from the Trump administration?
Readers respond to our July/August 2017 cover story and more.
A big question
A poem