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Politics
When Stories Aren’t Enough: How Do You Write About the War in Ukraine?
Katya Cengel on the Struggle to Find Meaning in Journalism
By
Katya Cengel
| August 8, 2022
In the Age of Covid and Monkeypox, Should We Be Prioritizing the Health of the “Viral Underclass”?
Steven Thrasher in Conversation with Andrew Keen on
Keen On
By
Keen On
| August 8, 2022
We Are Still Living in Nixon’s Paranoid America—and It’s Killing Us
Andrew Keen on Why We Remain Prisoners of History
By
Andrew Keen
| August 5, 2022
Forbidden Love: On the Muslim Women Who Fought for Their Right to Play Futsal
“Many of the women desperate to play had seen the game snatched away from them as children.”
By
Jamie Fahey
| August 5, 2022
Yes, “Truth” Still Exists in the Misinformation Age, But It’s Unlikely to Make Many of Us Happy
Isaac Saul in Conversation with Andrew Keen on
Keen On
By
Keen On
| August 5, 2022
How a 2024 Trump-Biden Rematch Would Be a “Black Swan” Moment For a Third Party Candidate
Nancy Jacobson and Ryan Clancy in Conversation with Andrew Keen on
Keen On
By
Keen On
| August 5, 2022
Best Reviewed
Books of the Week
The Fall of Boris Johnson: Margot Livesey on British Politics, the Brexit Blunder, and the Prime Minister’s Lies
By
Fiction Non Fiction
| August 4, 2022
On the Merging of Fact and Fiction in a Berlin Haunted by a History of Secrecy and Lies
By
Keen On
| August 4, 2022
Why America Remains Haunted by Richard Nixon and His Paranoia About the Sixties
By
Keen On
| August 4, 2022
Nancy Pelosi to meet with a Hong Kong bookseller in Taiwan visit.
By
Jonny Diamond
| August 3, 2022
After Combat, Writing the Horrific Stories of War
Bill Glose on Drawing from Real Life
By
Bill Glose
| August 2, 2022
Good News on the Climate Front: Why Things Aren’t Quite as Apocalyptic as Some Believe
David Victor in Conversation with Andrew Keen on
Keen On
By
Keen On
| August 2, 2022
Africa As Las Vegas: Why Some Countries Win and Others Lose in Gambling on Development
Stefan Dercon in Conversation with Andrew Keen on
Keen On
By
Keen On
| August 2, 2022
I Once Wrote—and Spoke, and Thought—in Russian... No More
Volodymyr Rafeenko on Unlearning His Mother Tongue
By
Volodymyr Rafeenko
| July 29, 2022
The Childfree Effigy: On
Network
’s Diana and the Tropes That Betray Women
“The world must think women without children, like me, sob through breakfast, bed three men after lunch, or pulverize lives for fun.”
By
Felice Arenas
| July 29, 2022
No, the Metaverse is Not Going To Save Us
Andrew Keen on the Perennial Problem with Tech Utopianism
By
Andrew Keen
| July 29, 2022
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Against All Odds, Here Are 10 More Crime Movies You Probably Forgot Take Place at Christmas
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Olivia Rutigliano
Inside the World of Brubaker and Phillips' Criminal – on the Page and Screen
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Alex Segura
The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
"Tokarczuk is an excellent storyteller She is very good at creating a 'sense of anticipation…"