Like many Americans, I had become an admirer of the worldview taken by Canadian prime minister Mark Carney, which is ...
Drawn in peppermint chalk is honest, the way no writing, not Even a diary, is honest, even though it too is a record of sorts, A record of the number of breaths drawn while writing at night. The child ...
Opinion

The Shit

Whenever a friend wrote me reporting a successful shit, I wondered: Why are you telling me this? Good manners dictated I share in their triumph: Good news! So happy for you! Congratulations on your ...
But he was also aware of the violence and humiliation that an absence of discretion could invite. He maintained a certain guardedness. He distrusted flamboyance, claimed to go decades without crying, ...
We will never know how many died during the Butlerian Jihad. Was it millions? Billions? Trillions, perhaps? It was a fantastic rage, a great revolt that spread like wildfire, consuming everything in ...
How has the experience of siblinghood been transposed into literature? In three famous examples, through the dramatic surrender of one’s life (Antigone), through species transformation (The ...
Last year, a Japanese sumo wrestler named Onosato became the seventy-fifth athlete to be awarded the sport’s highest honor: the title of yokozuna, or grand champion. His achievement was a particular ...
Much of the conversation regarding AI to date has concerned its potential for unleashing cosmic dangers or its nebulous promises of global salvation. In practice, however, plenty of the young people ...
In the September 2025 issue of Harper’s Magazine, a selection from Jeff Kisseloff’s book Rewriting Hisstory: A Fifty-Year Journey to Uncover the Truth About Alger Hiss, which was published in April by ...
Of all the niche communities birthed by the modern internet, “gooners” might be the most alien, and to many, the most repellent. Gooning, writes Daniel Kolitz in the November issue, is “a new kind of ...
Three springs ago, I lost the better part of my mind. I remember it starting with my feet. I woke up one February morning in the South Bronx apartment I’d just moved into with my husband, and my feet ...
The word “relevant,” I was recently surprised to discover, shares an etymology with the word “relieve.” This seems obvious enough once you know it—only a few letters separate the words—but their ...