Atlantic Reads: The Housewives Underground With Kaitlyn Tiffany
The <em>Atlantic </em>staff writer Kaitlyn Tiffany and Jeffrey Goldberg, <em>The Atlantic</em>’s editor in chief, discuss Tiffany’s new book, <em>The Housewives…
The <em>Atlantic </em>staff writer Kaitlyn Tiffany and Jeffrey Goldberg, <em>The Atlantic</em>’s editor in chief, discuss Tiffany’s new book, <em>The Housewives…
A new memoir by a Montreal garbageman shows the actual work of cleaning up the world’s junk.
By staging a mixed-martial-arts melee on the White House lawn, the president expressed the essence of his worldview.
The author wrote a tale that challenged the nation’s founding myths. Then it disappeared.
A short story
Andrew Sean Greer’s new novel is deeper than it looks.
The author of the best-selling graphic memoir <em>Persepolis</em>, who died last week, made defiance into a lifelong project.
As our nation turns 250, it’s worth asking what form patriotism should take.
Two books about the 1856 beating of a senator show how words can incite violence—and also help defeat it.
To find a future for the institution, Stephanie Coontz turns to its wildly varying past.