Life (priest and poet say) is but a dream
Most Sydney coffee shops close at 3pm. Gerome’s opens at 9pm
Working for 17 years as an ICU nurse, Gerome Creencia became used to night shift. What he was never quite able to stomach, however, was being unable to get a decent cup of coffee at work.
The Main Oscars Message? Hollywood Is Afraid
There Is No Obit That Can Successfully Convey How Much Peter Elbow, Who Died At 89, Transformed College Writing Classes
Articles of Note
“Nature and nurture aren’t separate forces — they’re a Möbius strip, endlessly looping back on each other”... more »
New Books
Through binges, bankruptcies, and depressive spells, Edgar Allan Poe knew where the best of him lay: in making art... more »
Essays & Opinions
Fairy tales are archetypal stories that seem to come from nowhere and to belong to everyone. This is an illusion... more »
Articles of Note
How to spot a fake masterpiece. In the exposure of artistic forgeries, it's the little things that give them away... more »
New Books
In the 18th century, hypochondria was a rarefied disease tied to leisure and luxury. Then the laboring classes began to develop it... more »
Essays & Opinions
Today we treat novels as salubrious stress relievers — kale smoothies for the soul. That overlooks their dark, diabolical potency... more »
Articles of Note
Toni Morrison’s audacious Dreaming Emmett.She planned to take the play to Paris, but it lasted only four weeks in Albany... more »
New Books
Dante’s divine… autofiction? The Commedia is not a “memoir” in the conventional sense, yet it’s a deeply personal reflection... more »
Essays & Opinions
The necessity of Martha Nussbaum. Her philosophy is never divorced from the messy, complex, and sometimes painful stuff of real life... more »
Articles of Note
The horrors of early pet food. In Victorian London, “cat’s meat men” pushed their carts of cheap offal and horsemeat up to 40 miles a day... more »
New Books
Van Gogh, age 32, arrived in Paris a "provincial rube" and “painter of no particular skill." Did the city really transform him?... more »
Essays & Opinions
Alice Gribbin: “Those who deem the nude in art a ‘sex object’ betray themselves as prudish and crass”... more »
Articles of Note
Disease that spreads through the air? In the words of one journalist in France in the 1860s, that was “just too fantastic to imagine”... more »
New Books
“The only people who connect ancient and modern Greece are tour guides, Fulbright scholars, and fascists”... more »
Essays & Opinions
What can the memoir of madness accomplish? It can force us to reckon with ugly things, not because they are titillating, but because they are true... more »
Articles of Note
“I once believed my students and I were in this together, engaged in a shared intellectual pursuit.” Then came ChatGPT... more »
New Books
When it comes to sexual matters, the Bible is neither clear nor consistent. Diarmaid MacCulloch teases out the contradictions... more »
Essays & Opinions
“The alternative to a recovery of the liberal imagination … may be neither illiberalism nor the neoliberal status quo but a new barbarism”... more »
Articles of Note
“I have to prepare myself for a certain degree of loneliness.” In her 80s, Helen Garner focuses on her garden, her chickens, and her diary... more »
New Books
Many academics tolerate the metaphysical commitments of mainstream religionists. But a belief in the paranormal?... more »
Essays & Opinions
Technology has long been a boon to creativity, especially in film. But AI and its machine-managed flawlessness are different... more »
Articles of Note
As a utilitarian, Tyler Cowen believes that people do things for reasons. What’s his reason for wanting to know everything?... more »
New Books
Free speech and its discontents. “We cannot have truth and wisdom without accommodating error and folly”... more »
Essays & Opinions
What is intuition? The return of a lost memory? An unearned sense of certitude? A physician deals with losing his decisiveness... more »
Articles of Note
What Tom Wolfe wrought. Many journalists mimc his style. Few do the reporting that makes that style sing... more »
New Books
Here come the pedagogy gurus, with their gaseous abstractions and bureaucratic proceduralism... more »
Essays & Opinions
A victim of his own accessibility. Montaigne’s writing is categorized as “motivational self-help.” Don’t be fooled... more »
Articles of Note
Saudi Arabia’s pre-Islamic history, which it once condemned as idolatrous, is central to a new program encouraging tourism... more »
New Books
Experiencing an obscure, hyper-specific emotion? In some language, there’s probably a word for that... more »
Essays & Opinions
Dave Eggers’s A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius was a “big, huge mistake,” but one we should be grateful for... more »
Articles of Note
Most virtues come with no fine print, but the goodness of loyalty depends on its object. Vladimir Jankélévitch elaborated... more »
New Books
What is "woke"? An abundance of zeal, a lack of proportion, and self-interest masquerading as general interest... more »
Essays & Opinions
Social science has a rigor problem, and the common solutions — replication, public critique — are inefficient. It’s time for a new approach... more »
Articles of Note
Robert Caro has one sentence pinned to an index card above his Smith Corona Electra 210 typewriter: “The only thing that matters is on this page” ... more »
New Books
Stanley Fish goes to the movies. At 86, the "totalitarian Tinkerbell" is still at it, yoking legal theory to Hollywood production... more »
Essays & Opinions
When Fukuyama’s “The End of History?” came out over 35 years ago, it was roundly mocked. But he’s been proven right... more »
Articles of Note
Over time more species are seen as “intelligent” — dolphins, bees, and now, to some, even plants. Why?... more »
New Books
The debate over privacy has bogged down in stalemate between user agreements and opt-out buttons. We've lost sight of what privacy is for... more »
Essays & Opinions
Perry Anderson asks: Why is neoliberalism more powerful and pervasive an ideology than the liberalism on which it rests?... more »
Articles of Note
Decades before the internet, Harold Innis put his finger on a central paradox: Improvements in communication can make understanding more difficult... more »
New Books
Social psychology is a field in crisis. What’s the main problem: bad methods or bad ideas?... more »
Essays & Opinions
A plague of bad essays purports to explain how some distant historical event explains the present. Beware such relevance mongering... more »
Articles of Note
Among the hobbyists. They are often viewed as eccentric weirdos. They’re actually in the business of selling dreams... more »
New Books
A faithful pet, some liquor, books stacked just so — since Montaigne’s time the private library has been a place of quiet joy... more »
Essays & Opinions
The supremacy of finitude: Our lives, our species, and our universe will all someday come to an end. That should galvanize us... more »