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Beyond “Dead White Men in Periwigs”

The Real Thing?

Life in the Portal

Record High

How did Warner Bros. Records land the Grateful Dead, Fleetwood Mac, and Prince?

His Younger and More Vulnerable Years

Heart of Darkness

It was only after Robert Maxwell’s death that the world realized how far his criminality extended. Yet the riddle surrounding his final moments endures

The Victorian John and Yoko

Sounds of Silence

A collection of photographs captures the calm that has given Venice room to breathe and its treasures a chance to shine during the coronavirus pandemic

Ere Erdogan

David Mamet

With theaters shut, read what the playwrights are reading. In Mamet’s case, this means William Bolitho (introduced to him by Shel Silverstein), Christopher Hollis, and Pierre Berton

All in the Family

Like his daughter Ghislaine, the notorious British media baron Robert Maxwell was a monster. How did it all start?

Heroes and Villains

Stan Lee’s final days were as tragic and conflict-filled as his career was momentous. The comic-book legend’s biographer reveals the roots of his undoing

Captain Crook

Future Shock

Eight questions with Elizabeth Kolbert, Pulitzer Prize–winning author of The Sixth Extinction, whose new book contemplates the earth’s precarious future

City of Dreams

Rivals on the Rails

The Grip of the Grape

Spy Games

Scaling Mount Whitman

Through years of research and introspection, an author asks, How did Walt Whitman write the poetry that we remember him by?

Nazi Hunting in the Austrian Countryside

Ripley’s Match

Richard Bradford’s new biography of Patricia Highsmith evokes a flawed genius who bridged crime writing and high literature

75 Years of Ebony

Magazine covers spanning 1945 to today celebrate the community that gave us Jackie Robinson, M.L.K., Aretha Franklin, and Oprah

Lovers and Friends

Nuclear Winter