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A visit to Richmond

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Wraparound — From the July 1974 issue

Danger!

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C.S. Reinhart’s “bourgeois epic”

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Within the rim

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Crapy Cornelia

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Julia Bride

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A story in two parts (II)

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Julia Bride

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A story in two parts [(I)]

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The sense of Newport

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New York revisited (concluded)

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New York revisited ([I])

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Fordham castle

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The Beldonald Holbein

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George du Maurier

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Port Tarascon

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The last adventures of the illustrious Tartarin

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Port Tarascon

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Fiction — From the September 1890 issue

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[Editor's Note]
A global-warming get-rich-quick scheme, a magic-mushroom murder,
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“Water is the medium of climate change — the ice that melts, the seas that rise. It is also an early indicator of how humanity may respond to climate change: by financializing it.”
Photograph (detail) by Aaron Huey
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“How a rising of the ocean waters may flood most of our port cities within the foreseeable future . . .”
“The Glacier of Sermitsialik” (1872)
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From the March 1933 issue
“I submit that he who cannot do these things is not completely educated.”
Illustration by Elizabeth Shippen Green (1902)
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“The strange timing of Pollock’s murder begot paranoia of all shades and textures . . .”
Photograph by Paul Stamets

Percentage of the French who think it “somewhat” or “very” possible they will one day become homeless:

56

Neuroscientists found that sloths sleep around nine and a half hours a day. Previous research had studied only captive sloths, who sleep on average sixteen hours a day, possibly because they are bored and depressed.

A young man who lied to Berlin police about having lived for five years in a forest was revealed to have run away from home because he disliked his internship.

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