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June 19, 2013: [Summits][Transparency][Pensions][Ruinous promises]
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Readings — From the April 2012 issue

Heart of snarkness

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Review — From the December 2011 issue

Speakeasy

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A Czech’s boozy refuge from writer’s bloc

By Joshua Cohen

Review — From the November 2011 issue

La doublure

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The singular fabrications of Raymond Roussel

By Ben Marcus

Review — From the November 2011 issue

Voyagers

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The restless genius of Patrick Leigh Fermor and Bruce Chatwin

By Robert Macfarlane

Review — From the October 2011 issue

Enter a sentence of Elizabeth Bishop’s

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Revision and craft

By William H. Gass

Review — From the September 2011 issue

Apocalypse, now what? Climate change comeuppance

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By Gary Greenberg

Review — From the August 2011 issue

The Tomist

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Francis Fukuyama’s infinite regression

By Mark Kingwell

Review — From the July 2011 issue

Gastronomania

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The beatification of our daily bread

By Will Self

Review — From the June 2011 issue

For love or money

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Youth basketball comes of age

By Charles Bock

Review — From the May 2011 issue

Lonely island

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Mike Leigh’s intimate cinema

By Francine Prose

Review — From the May 2011 issue

Speak, malady

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An autobiography of cancer

By Adam Baer

Review — From the April 2011 issue

A roller coaster, dropping

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Lynd Ward’s Depression visions

By Luc Sante

Review — From the March 2011 issue

Bad air

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The politics of malaria

By Helen Epstein

Review — From the March 2011 issue

After Rhodesia

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Robert Mugabe’s crisis of stasis

By Alexandra Fuller

Review — From the February 2011 issue

Tug of war

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Timothy Snyder looks east

By Adam Hochschild

Review — From the February 2011 issue

Undelivered

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Egyptian novelists at home and abroad

By Robyn Creswell

New books — From the February 2011 issue

New books

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By Lorin Stein

Review — From the January 2011 issue

Age of exuberance

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The lost grandeur of the Gilded interior

By James Fenton

Review — From the January 2011 issue

Between insanity and fat dullness

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How I became an Emersonian

By Phillip Lopate

Review — From the December 2010 issue

Bellow in purgatory

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The middle novels

By Nathaniel Rich

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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.”
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The author writes about the inspiration for “May I Touch Your Hair?,” in the July issue
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From the March 1933 issue
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“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 . . .”
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Percentage by which the risk of type 2 diabetes increases for every two hours a day that a person watches television:

20

SEPTEMBER 2011 > SEARCH >

Anders Gr?ntved, Harvard School of Public Health (Boston)

Two bottled ghosts—of an old man and a young girl—were sold at auction in New Zealand.

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The practice of sexualized eyeball licking was causing conjunctivitis in Japanese sixth graders.

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Article — From the September 1958 issue

The Coming Ice Age

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