APOLLO MAGAZINE ———- APRIL 2026 PREVIEW

April 2026 - Apollo Magazine

APOLLO MAGAZINE: The latest issue features ‘Exposed! – Italy’s First Photos”

How Milan is refashioning itself as a contemporary art hub

The city has long been synonymous with finance, fashion and design, but it is increasingly banking on art too

The dangers of playing the ‘beautiful’ game

The idea of the beautiful and the damned is a longstanding one, but a problematic one – in art as well as life


Restoring Dresden’s crowning glory

The city has been rebuilding the Residenzschloss, home of its one-time ruler Augustus the Strong, since the Second World War – and the results are worth the wait

Simply red: a short history of Shiraz

The Shiraz grape is native to France, but it has longstanding links with Persian courtly life and culture

THE NEW YORKER MAGAZINE – APRIL 6, 2026 PREVIEW

The cover of the April 6 2026 issue of The New Yorker in which construction workers toil under a city street as people...

THE NEW YORKER MAGAZINE: The latest issue cover features Victoria Tentler-Krylov’s “Parallel Lives” – Around and under construction.

What Was Behind the T.S.A. Meltdown?

The present mess has roots in two entangled, defining White House projects: DOGE and the mind-bending expansion of ICE. By Benjamin Wallace-Wells

Trump’s War Hits the Chaiwalas

Restrictions and attacks in the Strait of Hormuz have made fuel prices rocket. Just ask the roadside tea venders in New Delhi. By Nathan Heller

He Helped Stop Iran from Getting the Bomb

A former C.I.A. officer says that he recruited scientists as part of the United States’ effort to disrupt Iran’s nuclear program. By David D. Kirkpatrick

THE NEW YORK TIMES – MONDAY, MARCH 30, 2026

New U.S. Missile Hit Iranian Sports Hall and School, Analysis Shows

The Pentagon used missiles untested in combat in an attack that struck civilian sites near a military compound on Feb. 28, according to video examined by The Times and weapons experts.

Trump Claims Progress in Talks to End War, Then Again Threatens Attacks

President Trump warned that if a deal was not struck, the U.S. would respond by “completely obliterating” Iranian energy infrastructure targets.

Private-Credit Wobbles Could Prove Perilous for Trump

The Trump administration is poised to broaden access to risky investments that are showing signs of strain.

U.S. Allows Russian Oil Tanker to Reach Cuba, Despite Blockade

The tanker full of crude oil could reach its expected destination today, providing a lifeline to the island amid intense U.S. pressure.

THE NEW YORK TIMES – SUNDAY, MARCH 29, 2026

A Toothless Iran? Missile and Drone Strikes Show It Can Still Inflict Pain.

A wave of strikes across the Middle East in recent days showed that Iran had not lost the capacity to retaliate.

Israel Strikes Tehran as Regional Diplomats Gather in Pakistan

Officials from Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Turkey were meeting in Pakistan in hopes of finding a way to end the war.

5 Takeaways From the ‘No Kings’ Rallies as the Midterms Heat Up

The war in Iran was a galvanizing force, but plenty of protesters focused on President Trump’s immigration crackdown. Senate candidates joined the crowds.

‘This Is One of the Ways We Can Say We’re Fed Up’

6 min read

THE NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE- MARCH 29, 2026

Current cover

THE NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE: The 3.29.26 Issue features Blair Braverman on leaving her life of dog sled racing; Maggie Shipstead on bringing her mother’s ashes to Antarctica; Kevin Fedarko on the Grand Canyon’s North Rim; Taffy Brodesser-Akner on teaching her son to take a vacation; and more.

The Iran War is Revealing the Messy Middle of Our Renewable Energy Transition

When the world map of literal power changes, the political hierarchy shifts, too.

Every Pentagon Has Its Buzzword. For Hegseth’s, It’s ‘Lethality.’

It’s blunt instead of vague, brash instead of evasive, bold instead of cautious. And yet the word obfuscates as much as old defense jargon. By Nitsuh Abebe

‘A Mass Disaster Nonstop’: Inside the Turmoil at Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s C.D.C.

Forty-three current and former C.D.C. employees on the changes they say are replacing science with ideology — and making Americans more vulnerable. By Jeneen Interlandi

The Epstein Scandal Has Reached the Far-Right Meme Stage

Once the Epstein files transitioned from an abstract concept to a real-world event, it became more difficult for fringe conspiracy theorists to control the story.

BARRON’S MAGAZINE – MARCH 30, 2026 PREVIEW

March 30, 2026 - Barron's Magazine

BARRON’S MAGAZINE: The latest issue features ‘AI’s Hazy Days’ – Tech investing has been turned upside down as artificial intelligence rewrites the rules of business. our Tech Roundtable offers 15 stocks for the new world.

Tech Investing Seems Broken. Our Roundtable Pros on 15 Stock Picks to Fix Your Portfolio.

The battle over AI is playing out in real-time on Wall Street, leaving tech investors bruised and battered. Our Tech Roundtable on stocks for the new world.

Buy UPS. Better Days Await the Stock.

The iconic shipping company hasn’t given investors much to celebrate recently. But headwinds are turning to tailwinds.

Not Worried About an Oil Shock? Chevron CEO, Other Energy Execs Sure Are.

The energy industry is just starting to grapple with the huge toll of the Iran war.

Retirement Savers, Here’s How to Find a Trusted Advisor

A federal rule aiming to protect retirement investors has been officially scrapped. Take these steps to find an advisor you can trust.

The Oil Shock Is Just the Start. Why Inflation Could Reach 4%—and Stay High for Years.

Even if oil prices fall sharply, inflation probably won‘t return to the Fed‘s 2% target for at least several years, due to structural changes in the U.S. economy.

Private Equity’s Push for Small Investors Is ‘Scandalous,’ Says Value Maven Chris Davis

The value maven decried high fees, high leverage, and dangerous lockups. Plus, why he likes Capital One, Chubb, and Tyson.

THE NEW YORK TIMES – SATURDAY, MARCH 28, 2026

Wild Ultimatums and ‘Bombing Our Little Hearts Out’: A Portrait of Trump at War

President Trump has vacillated between boasting about U.S. military superiority and deep frustration that his war of choice is not always having the desired effects.

Iran-Backed Houthis Enter War With Missile Attack on Israel

The attack by the militant group in Yemen appeared to open another front in the spiraling war in the Middle East.

Strike on U.S. Base in Saudi Arabia Injures 12 American Troops, Officials Say

House Vote Sets Up Clash With the Senate on D.H.S. Funding, Prolonging Shutdown

Republicans revolted over a Senate measure to fund the Department of Homeland Security, dimming the chances of a quick end to the crisis crippling airports.

With Cuba Under Pressure, the Castro Dynasty Is Making a Comeback

As Trump officials demand changes, Castro family members are suddenly popping up across Cuba’s political scene. Some even ask: Could one be the “Cuban Delcy?”

THE NEW YORK TIMES – FRIDAY, MARCH 27, 2026

Senate Votes to Fund Most of D.H.S. in Bid to End Airport Crisis

The bill excludes funding for ICE and the Border Patrol but restores it for federal airport security workers. The House could consider the package today.

Gulf States Crack Down on Videos of Iranian Attacks Posted Online

The authorities have made a wave of arrests to stop people posting footage of strikes, citing security risks.

Standoff With Iran Raises Fresh Doubts About Trump’s Freestyle Diplomacy

A jumble of emissaries — a friend, a family member, a dove and a hawk — on the Iran crisis reflects President Trump’s improvisational approach.

Hegseth Strikes Two Black and Two Female Officers From Promotion List

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s highly unusual decision to remove officers from a one-star promotion list has spurred allegations of racial and gender bias.

Trump’s Signature Is Going on U.S. Paper Currency. No President Has Done That.

His signature is set to start adorning new U.S. dollars later this year, a change that the Treasury Department said was in honor of America’s 250th anniversary.

THE GUARDIAN WEEKLY – MARCH 27, 2026 PREVIEW

THE GUARDIAN WEEKLY: The latest issue features ‘Strategy Backfires’ – Can Trump undo the mess he’s made in the Gulf?

Brinkmanship, the ability to take countries to the edge of conflict, was a staple of cold war diplomacy. The remnants of that finely balanced standoff, bound by a rules-based order and spheres of influence, has given way to a world in freefall; to an ever-widening war in the Gulf where the aims are as unclear as the endpoint.

It is approaching a month since the US and Israel launched their attacks on Iran, arguing they were acting to remove the country’s nuclear threat, destroy its ballistic missile capability and free the populace of a tyrannical theocratic regime. Yet it seems it is these civilians and neighbouring Gulf countries who are bearing the brunt of the campaign while the Iranian regime’s willingness to escalate the war seems undimmed.

Spotlight | The ‘anyone but’ election
Pippa Crerar looks ahead to local elections in the UK, where voters seem more concerned with who they want to keep out of political office than who they vote in

Science | Not-so silent nights
Can a “vacuum cleaner turned the other way” become a popular solution to snoring disorders? Natasha May explores the rise of Cpap machines

Feature | Gamifying government
Steeped in gaming and rightwing culture, Elon Musk’s Doge team set out to defeat the enemy of the United States: its people, write Ben Tarnoff and Quinn Slobodian

Opinion | Collateral damage
Attacks on synagogues and Jewish shops in the UK, Europe and the US don’t hurt Benjamin Netanyahu, says Jonathan Freedland, they just hurt ordinary Jews

Culture | Rock return
“Validation was an insatiable monster”: Dave Grohl talks to Ben Beaumont-Thomas about Foo Fighters, life after his infidelity and grief for bandmate Taylor Hawkins

THE ECONOMIST MAGAZINE – MARCH 28, 2026 PREVIEW

THE ECONOMIST MAGAZINE: The latest issue features Advantage Iran

Advantage Iran

A month of bombing has achieved nothing. Will Donald Trump escalate, or talk?

Europe should think twice before weakening its merger rules

A strict competition policy is not the barrier to bigger firms

The case against energy bail-outs

As war rages in Iran, governments must not repeat the mistakes of 2022

Mexico must unleash its private sector

Claudia Sheinbaum’s biggest problem is weak investment and growth, not Donald Trump

England has shown the world how to replace farm subsidies

A rare Brexit dividend

News, Views and Reviews For The Intellectually Curious