
The Voyage Out
Selby Wynn Schwartz’s novel After Sappho is populated by the notable lesbians who helped modernism blossom.
October 19, 2023 issue
Heading Toward a Second Nakba
Nathan Thrall argues that the accident in which Abed Salama’s son died was a predictable, even inevitable, outcome of the Israeli occupation in its quotidian forms.
October 19, 2023 issue
Not Milk?
A new book shows how cow’s milk attained the status of kitchen essential and universal beverage in the United States. But its consumption has been in decline for decades—a trend that nothing seems capable of stopping.
October 19, 2023 issue
Intolerable Freedoms
The Polish director Krzysztof Kieślowski’s “Three Colors” trilogy darkly anticipated some of the central conflicts of the post–cold war period.
October 19, 2023 issue
Is Prussian Militarism a Myth?
Peter Wilson’s Iron and Blood is a bold survey of over half a millennium of German military history.
October 19, 2023 issue
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Stephen Spender: W. H. Auden (1907–1973)“He seemed the incarnation of a serious joke. Wystan wrote somewhere that a friend is simply someone of whom, in his absence, one thinks with pleasure. When Wystan was not there, we spoke of him not only with pleasure and a certain awe, but also laughing.”
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