When Donald Meets Hillary
Who will win the debates? Trump’s approach was an important part of his strength in the primaries. But will it work when he faces Clinton onstage?
The Politics Issue: A presidential Ponzi scheme, sizing up the debates, Trump’s punk-rock appeal, and female-leader backlash. Plus, museums learn to love selfies, the failure of poetry, Ta-Nehisi Coates on O. J. Simpson, and much more.
Who will win the debates? Trump’s approach was an important part of his strength in the primaries. But will it work when he faces Clinton onstage?
How political consulting works—or doesn’t
His great accomplishment was to be indicted for a crime and then receive the kind of treatment typically reserved for rich white guys.
An exhibition of unintended consequences. A short story
Sifting through decades of testimony of people caught up in the horrors of violent zealotry, a writer grapples with what hasn’t changed in our new world of terror.
Hillary Clinton’s candidacy has provoked a wave of misogyny—one that may roil American life for years to come.
Forget Adderall. Forget Provigil. Eric Matzner says his nootropics will make your brain sharper in weeks.
In one study, college students who had substantive conversations were more content than their peers who exchanged mere pleasantries. But don’t write off chitchat just yet.
If Hillary Clinton takes office, her best adviser in mediating Israel and Palestine’s century-old conflict might be the man who came closest to doing it before.
How big business jammed the wheels of innovation
“Rufus Gifford is a rock star.”
Cultural institutions learn to love selfies, tailor-made apps, and social media.
A very short book excerpt
The punk-rock appeal of the GOP nominee
Westworld, HBO’s new series, reframes the classic monsters-run-amok plotline: The audience watches androids become more human—as the humans become less so.
Nicholson Baker went undercover in the classroom. His resulting book delivers a message about education that Americans still need to hear.
A biography by Ruth Franklin captures Shirley Jackson’s punishing upbringing and marriage, which perhaps informed the destruction of heroines in her work.
It’s the site and source of disappointed hope.
Russian audiences swooned over Van Cliburn during a fraught period in relations with his home country. Nigel Cliff tells the humble musician’s story in a new biography.
Sebastian Smee’s group biography details four incentivizing rivalries between famous painters as they strove for excellence.
Readers respond to our July/August cover story and more
A big question
A poem