Wolfgang Streeck in Inference Review: WHAT A STRANGE book—strange but indispensable nevertheless. From January to July 2015, Yanis Varoufakis served as the Greek government’s finance minister. Adults in the Room is an account of his battle with what he calls Europe’s deep establi … | Continue reading
Peter Wilson in MIL: As a general rule it is true that if you eat vastly fewer calories than you burn, you’ll get slimmer (and if you consume far more, you’ll get fatter). But the myriad faddy diets flogged to us each year belie the simplicity of the formula that Camacho was giv … | Continue reading
Brian Gallagher in Nautilus: Last April, in the famous Faraday Theatre at the Royal Institution in London, Carlo Rovelli gave an hour-long lecture on the nature of time. A red thread spanned the stage, a metaphor for the Italian theoretical physicist’s subject. “Time is a long li … | Continue reading
A Refugee in Paris What do I know of this city A migrant, a refugee Carrying a storehouse of fears Its splendor faded In the falling light Its step sprouting Tense, sinister shadows Shrouded in suspicions What do I know of this city A stranger skirting light and shadows Seeking a … | Continue reading
Sarah Baxter in Literary Hub: The pub is warm and beery. Grog glasses—drained, foam stained—scatter sticky veneer. Red-wine lips, hoppy breath, a slurry of slurring; laughter like gunfire, craic-ing off the wood panels, mirror walls and ranks of whiskey bottles. Bar talk is of th … | Continue reading
Leah Burrows at the website of the Harvard School of Engineering: One of the key misconceptions about solar geoengineering — putting aerosols into the atmosphere to reflect sunlight and reduce global warming — is that it could be used as a fix-all to reverse global warming trends … | Continue reading
Samir Chopra in Aeon: The United States and India, two of the world’s largest and oldest democracies, are both governed on the basis of written constitutions. One of the inspirations for the Constitution of India, drafted between 1947 and 1950, was the US Constitution. Both India … | Continue reading
Simon Callow at The Guardian: To review certain books seems like an impertinence. This is one of them. It speaks for itself with such clarity, certainty and wisdom that only one thing needs to be said: read it. And then read it again. It is a short book, divided into brief chapte … | Continue reading
Stephanie Sy-Quia at the LARB: Homeland is essentially a road trip novel, but its road trip doesn’t work. Contra to the willful American model of making off into the great vistas of the West, Jonathan and his feckless companions (a racing driver and a sexist caricature of a press … | Continue reading
Natalia Holtzman at The Quarterly Conversation: Andrić is particularly remarkable for his psychological acuity. Consider the knot of complexity that is Omer Pasha: born Mićo Latas, he’d been a brilliant boy in a village too small to contain his ambitions. He was bored by his pare … | Continue reading
Evan Osnos in The New Yorker: The New Zealand killer takes his place in the cracked pantheon of violent, Trump-admiring extremists: beside the gunman at the Tree of Life synagogue, in Pittsburgh, who blamed Jews for resettling refugees and immigrants, whom Trump vilifies as the c … | Continue reading
Namwali Serpell in The New York Times: Maybe because we’re living in a dystopia, it feels as if we’ve become obsessed with prophecy of late. Protest signs at the 2017 Women’s March read “Make Margaret Atwood Fiction Again!” and “Octavia Warned Us.” News headlines about abortion b … | Continue reading
Robert B. Talisse in 3:AM Magazine: To be sure, the bipartisan civic ethos is an indispensable ingredient of a flourishing democracy. But it cannot be cultivated under conditions where everything we do is plausibly regarded an expression of our political loyalties. When politic … | Continue reading
Scott Alexander in Slate Star Codex: Let’s review how the pharmaceutical industry works: a company discovers and patents a potentially exciting new drug. They spend tens of millions of dollars proving safety and efficacy to the FDA. The FDA rewards them with a 10ish year monopoly … | Continue reading
Dimi Reider in Newsweek: The very fact terrorists exploit people’s interest in dramatic events should caution you against typing in that search string, and certainly against sharing it with others. Firstly, by doing so you’d be playing up to the narcissism of someone who couldn’t … | Continue reading
To Alexander Fu on His Beginning and 13th Birthday Cut from your mother, there was a first heartache, a loneliness before your first peek at the world, your mother’s hand was a comb for your proud hair, fresh from the womb— born at night, you and moonlight tipped the scale a 6lb … | Continue reading
Phil Baker at the TLS: With its somewhat whimsical skulls and bats, Gorey’s more accessible work has all the trimmings of Gothic Lite, part of the same cultural wave that has made H. P. Lovecraft’s Cthulhu into a popular plush toy. It tends to be set in a waveringly Victorian-Edw … | Continue reading
Hua Hsu at The New Yorker: In June, 2015, Roberto Carlos Lange, who records as Helado Negro, released a single titled “Young, Latin and Proud.” Despite the bold title, the song sounded more like a flicker than like a flame. It was tranquil and soothing, with Lange singing gently, … | Continue reading
Lavinia Greenlaw at the LRB: Sex is Johnson’s true subject. She respects its power and repeatedly enacts a woman’s right to sexual realisation. Physical contact is something so fraught and regulated as to be inherently violent. Violence can come out of detachment too: ‘He dragged … | Continue reading
Hillel Italie in The Christian Science Monitor: Three Saudi women’s rights activists whose arrests last year have been condemned worldwide are being honored by PEN America. Nouf Abdulaziz, Loujain al-Hathloul, and Eman al-Nafjan have won the PEN/Barbey Freedom to Write Award, the … | Continue reading
Eric Lander et al in Nature: We call for a global moratorium on all clinical uses of human germline editing — that is, changing heritable DNA (in sperm, eggs or embryos) to make genetically modified children. By ‘global moratorium’, we do not mean a permanent ban. Rather, we call … | Continue reading
Because it’s PI Day: pi is perfection with a loose end three point one four and so on without pattern or closure the precision of a mandala drawn by a drunk on two martinis not describing wholeness merely but thinking odd numbers spouting them while rambling home disheveled, irra … | Continue reading
Radium Dream We come at the wrong time of year by a hair or a week, and the brown birds flying onward, out of reach. My son tilts his head. A minor star- burst of cranes lights the far corner of the sky—stragglers, fewer than expected, but enough to glitter the air with strangene … | Continue reading
Carl Zimmer in the New York Times: One night in November 1999, a 26-year-old woman was raped in a parking lot in Grand Rapids, Mich. Police officers managed to get the perpetrator’s DNA from a semen sample, but it matched no one in their databases. Detectives found no fingerprint … | Continue reading
Xan Rice in The New Statesman: At Oxford University’s Nuffield Department of Orthopaedics, Rheumatology and Musculoskeletal Sciences, which he heads, Carr was conducting a clinical trial of decompression surgery, to assess its effectiveness. He explained to Brennan that if she ag … | Continue reading
Cailin O’Connor and James Owen Weatherall in Imperfect Cognitions: Since early 2016, in the lead-up to the U.S. presidential election and the Brexit vote in the UK, there has been a growing appreciation of the role that misinformation and false beliefs have come to play in major … | Continue reading
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Quinn Slobodian in The New Statesman: In 2010, a precious metals blogger called Peter Boehringer posted an image of Karl Marx’s head floating over Frankfurt, the home of the European Central Bank. Like many online “gold bugs,” his message reflected the belief that currencies with … | Continue reading
Daniel Green at Poetry Magazine: James Purdy’s first novel, Malcolm, the story of a beautiful young man who encounters a world of dangerous and grotesque comic characters while searching for his missing father, was published in 1959. The book brought Purdy critical acclaim (and w … | Continue reading
David Hudson at The Criterion Collection: Any attempt to neatly sum up the work of Carolee Schneemann, the painter, filmmaker, writer, and performance and installation artist who has passed away at the age of seventy-nine, will likely be a futile exercise. But in 2016, in a piece … | Continue reading
Drew Tewksbury at the LA Times: While a computer is useless after just a few years or an iPhone goes out of date — planned obsolescence, of course — a brick can last for centuries; it’s the best technology we have ever developed. In the world’s oldest book, “Epic of Gilgamesh,” t … | Continue reading
Bruce Robbins in The Chronicle of Higher Education: On April 7, 2003, less than three weeks into America’s invasion of Iraq, Bruno Latour worried aloud, in a lecture at Stanford, that scholars and intellectuals had themselves become too combative. Under the circumstances, he aske … | Continue reading
Edward Mendelson in the New York Review of Books: George Hutchinson’s Facing the Abyss has bracing and revelatory things to say about American culture in the 1940s; also, by contrast and implication, about American culture today. The book brings into focus intellectual and emotio … | Continue reading
Leigh Phillips in the MIT Technology Review: BP might not be the first source you go to for environmental news, but its annual energy review is highly regarded by climate watchers. And its 2018 message was stark: despite the angst over global warming, coal was responsible for 38% … | Continue reading
Thomas B. Edsall in the New York Times: A recent survey asked Republicans and Democrats whether they agreed with the statement that members of the opposition party “are not just worse for politics — they are downright evil.” The answers, published in January in a paper, “Lethal M … | Continue reading
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Peter Coviello at the LARB: Now, listen: you don’t have to persuade me of the foolhardiness of leaning too earnestly into the elliptical, undergraduate-Ashberian lyrical misdirections of Stephen Malkmus, the band’s movie-star handsome singer and chief songwriter. But let’s indulg … | Continue reading
Padraic Colum at Commonweal: I have never lost my taste for cakes. After the cakes of folk-culture such as pancakes and “the cake of the palm,” came cakes that were still popular but approaching the cakes of the higher cultivation: squares of ginger-bread sold off carts at little … | Continue reading
Eleanor Birne at the LRB: Over the next eighteen months he painted all the Cadaques subjects and ‘largely forgot’ he was painting blind. Black Windows (2006) is a result of this process. It’s a view of a traditional Spanish street – white houses, green shutters, orange roofs – wi … | Continue reading
Shadi Hamid in Comment: How Muslims make their place in a changing America, then, isn’t just about Muslims but about how to hold to the ideal of religious communities making America great. It is also about challenging the spread and normalization of Islamophobia. This rise in ant … | Continue reading
Oxygen Oxygen—died on March 12, 2012. At first, they came in heavy green canisters. Then a large rolling machine that pushed air day and night. When my mother changed her clothes, she had to take the tube out of her nose. She stopped to catch her breath, as if breath were constan … | Continue reading
Elie Dolgin in Nature: Nobody paid much attention to Jean Vance 30 years ago, when she discovered something fundamental about the building blocks inside cells. She even doubted herself, at first. The revelation came after a series of roadblocks. The cell biologist had just set up … | Continue reading
Karan Mahajan in Vanity Fair: The three Gupta brothers—Ajay, Atul, and Rajesh—had bought the Optimum Coal Mine in December 2015, adding it to the tentacular empire they were building across South Africa, with interests in uranium deposits, media outlets, computer companies, and a … | Continue reading