
Israel and America Say ‘Enough’: A Commentary Editorial
Sorry, Haters of Males
Social Commentary by Christine Rosen
A Musky Odor
Tech Commentary by James B. Meigs

Social Commentary by Christine Rosen
Tech Commentary by James B. Meigs

THE ECONOMIST MAGAZINE (June 19, 2025): The latest issue features ‘How will this end?‘….
In a worse place if Donald Trump rushes in
European members need a hard date to boost their defence budgets
Even as interest costs mount, politicians promise hando
Efforts to deliver a baby boom either fail or cost a fortune
The Iranian regime finds itself in its most difficult position 46 years after the revolution that brought it to power. But does it mean the end?
‘There was a massive boom’: A doctor recounts the missile strike on an Israeli hospital.2h ago
Since the war in Ukraine began, analysts have monitored a series of intrusions aimed at stealing information about weaponry and warfighting.
NATURE MAGAZINE (June 18, 2025): The latest issue features ‘Food Forecast’ – How climate change and adaptation could affect global agriculture…
Scientists observe the nematode’s behaviour in the wild for the first time.
Researchers fed moth larvae the chemical building blocks, and the insects’ enzymes did the rest.
In mice, engineered immune cells shrink pancreatic and other tumours bearing a mutant version of the KRAS protein.
The pull of a third galaxy could yank the Milky Way out of the path of Andromeda.

LONDON REVIEW OF BOOKS (June 18, 2025): The latest issue features Joan Didion on the couch; Ocean Vuong’s Failure; The Best-Paid Woman in NYC and Olga Turner Tokarczuk and the mycological turn….
The Warrior: Rafael Nadal and His Kingdom of Clay by Christopher Clarey
The Roger Federer Effect: Rivals, Friends, Fans and How the Maestro Changed Their Lives by Simon Cambers and Simon Graf
Searching for Novak: The Man behind the Enigma by Mark Hodgkinson
How OCD came to haunt American life by Andrew Kay
How a band of island nations became Israel’s staunchest defenders by Pete McKenzie
Butterflies, deep time, and climate change by Lewis Hyde
TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT (June 18, 2025): In this week’s TLS, Mary Beard and Margaret Drabble are not quite getting away from it all this summer. For our summer books selection, they have picked a brace of biographies of Labour prime ministers past and present. Along with Daniel Mendelsohn’s recent translation of the Odyssey, our Classics editor chooses Alan Johnson’s biography of Harold Wilson, her mother’s favourite politician. By Martin Ivens
Twenty-four TLS writers share their summer reading
Three teen-centric novels arrive at a time of national soul-searching
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei rejected President Trump’s call for an “unconditional surrender” as signs grew that the U.S. was considering joining Israel’s bombardment of Iran.
For years, Israel contained its conflicts with Tehran, Hamas and Hezbollah. The broad assault on Iran highlights a shift in strategy.
Administration officials insist that President Trump is committed to mass deportations, even as he has offered a reprieve to certain businesses.

What years of witnessing executions taught me about sin, mercy, and the possibility of redemption by Elizabeth Bruenig
How Tracy Anderson built an exercise empire by Xochitl Gonzalez
J. D. Vance could have brought the country’s conflicting strands together. Instead, he took a divisive path to the peak of power. by George Packer

HARVARD MAGAZINE (June 17, 2025): The latest issue features ‘It’s On’…
“The stakes are so high that we have no choice but to fight,” says Garber.
The people shaping the battle over federal funding, international students, and DEI
by Nina Pasquini
Putting Harvard’s $53 billion endowment into perspective
by Jonathan Shaw
A roster of lawyers on both sides
by Max J. Krupnick