Ellen (Magellan) Falterman enjoys a farewell pig roast and sets off from the Trinity River, in East Texas, in a bid to become the first person to circumnavigate the globe in a rowboat.
In “The Furrows,” a brother vanishes beneath the waves, and resurfaces in a hundred guises.
The author reads his story from the September 19, 2022, issue of the magazine.
Georges Simenon was a high-living libertine; his greatest creation was a man of moral restraint. Yet the writer’s excesses are a clue to his detective’s successes.
Using warmth, candor, and more than a little alcohol, the show creates some of the best interviews in hip-hop.
Erich Schwartzel’s “Red Carpet” details the hazardous courtship of American entertainment companies and the Chinese government.
The author discusses “The Secret Source,” his story from the latest issue of the magazine.
“The Rabbit Hutch,” “Northern Paiutes of the Malheur,” “Sinkhole,” and “Sonorous Desert.”
Poetry by Joshua Bennett: “At the orchard, we are stars set loose across the mind / of a boy in a field on his back, dreaming with both eyes open.”
How a best-selling series gave young readers a new sense of agency.
New cartoons from the magazine.
The company has spent billions on cases about one of its most popular products. As its executives try a brazen new legal strategy to stop the litigation, corporate America takes note.
How Elizabeth Strout’s beloved protagonist spends the pandemic.
She didn’t consider herself a teacher. But, through warm, sometimes ruthless attention, she made people writers.
Michael Judd visits a rooftop garden in Brooklyn to evangelize about the pawpaw, which, if he has anything to say about it, is set to become the next hot fruit.
The musician was a consummate showman, but “Moonage Daydream,” a new documentary, rarely shows him at play.
A summer hike through the burn zone of the central Sierra Nevada.
In Sean Sherman’s modern Indigenous kitchen, every dish is made without wheat flour, dairy, cane sugar, black pepper, or any other ingredient introduced to the continent after Europeans arrived.
In the sequel to Andrew Sean Greer’s Pulitzer-winning novel, a fiction writer leaves the Bay Area for a trip across America, and learns how little he knows.
“For many years, there had been people who said that something was different about the water.”
Poetry by Jorie Graham: “Tongues in dusk / are bats but I try / to remember / larks.”
Works underway to clear the tree off the railway tracks
Liverpool made several signings this summer but also saw plenty of players head out of the exit door and one ex-Red has not had the best start at his new club. Writing for The Daily Mail, Alvise Cagnazzo wrote about Divock Origi: ‘There is no doubt who the worst signing of the season has been in Serie […]
Читать дальше...The protester was moved on as King Charles III addressed parliament for the first time as Britain's monarch this morning.