Category Archives: Magazines

COMMENTARY MAGAZINE – OCTOBER 2025 PREVIEW

October 2025 – Commentary Magazine

COMMENTARY MAGAZINE: The latest issue features

David Is Goliath, and That’s Great

Strength wins, not modesty by Seth Mandel

Forgetting What America Means

Next year’s 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence can’t come soon enough. Both Democrats and Republicans need remedial lessons in basic American principles, stat. by Matthew Continetti

The Despair of the Teacher in the Age of Artificial Intelligence

How can students learn when they can tell a machine to do their work? by Michael Lewis

THE NEW ATLANTIS — AUTUMN 2025 ISSUE

THE NEW ATLANTIS MAGAZINE: The latest issue features….

What Comes After Gender Affirmation?

Making transition the first-line treatment for children was a mistake, many health agencies now say. A growing group of psychologists wants to restore the therapeutic relationship.

Two Hundred Years to Flatten the Curve

How generations of meddlesome public health campaigns changed everyday life — and made life twice as long as it used to be

Why We Are Better Off Than a Century Ago

Our ancestors built grand public systems to conquer hunger, thirst, darkness, and squalor. That progress can be lost if we forget it.

THE NEW YORKER MAGAZINE – SEPT. 22, 2025 PREVIEW

A portrait of French poet and critic Stphane Mallarm.

THE NEW YORKER MAGAZINE: The latest cover features ‘Maira Kalman’s “Stéphane Mallarmé with Shawl” – The never-ending novelty of style.

Charlie Kirk’s Murder and the Crisis of Political Violence

After a shooting with obvious political resonance, news about the perpetrator’s motives rarely brings clarity. By Benjamin Wallace-Wells

How Jessica Reed Kraus Went from Mommy Blogger to MAHA Maven

The founder of “House Inhabit” has grown her audience during the second Trump Administration with political gossip and what she calls “quality conspiracy.” By Clare Malone

Is the Sagrada Família a Masterpiece or Kitsch?

In the century since Antoni Gaudí died, his wild design has been obsessively realized, creating the world’s tallest church—and an endlessly debated icon. By D. T. Max

THE NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE – SEPT. 14, 2025

Current cover

THE NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE: The 9.14.25 Issue features David Enrich, Matthew Goldstein and Jessica Silver-Greenberg on how JPMorgan enabled the crimes of Jeffrey Epstein; Jonathan Mahler on how Trump shut down the war on cancer; Amy X. Wang on gold diggers; and more.

The Cost of Performing Childhood for Your Parent’s Art

It’s not quite #MeToo, but a spate of new memoirs is forcing a reckoning on what consent means when your parent is the artist.

How JPMorgan Financed Jeffrey Epstein

When most people think about Jeffrey Epstein, they think of a sexual-abuse scandal. But it’s also a financial scandal — one in which JPMorgan, the nation’s largest bank, not only enabled Epstein’s sex-trafficking operation but also enriched him while reaping profits for itself. Matthew Goldstein, and a team of other Times journalists, combed through 13,000 documents to explain why. By Matthew Goldstein, Gabriel Blanco and June Kim

Sept. 8, 2025

BARRON’S MAGAZINE – SEPTEMBER 15, 2025 PREVIEW

Stock Market Wrap. Federal Reserve Is Next Week's Big Event - Barron's

BARRON’S MAGAZINE: The latest issue features ‘This Metal Could Rock The World’ – Rare earth minerals are vital to tech-innovation, and China dominates in the field. Can the U.S. catch up?

How the U.S. Will Break China’s Rare Earth Dominance—and How to Play It

China controls about 85% of global processing capacity. The Department of Defense has a plan to rectify that.

Not Every IPO Can Be Hot. Sorry, StubHub.

The ticket reseller is going public in a tough ticket reselling market with a high valuation. Investors should be cautious.

Pfizer Is Growing More Reliant on Vaccines as Controversies Swirl

For U.S. Big Pharma companies, vaccines have largely been an afterthought. But by 2030, they could be a quarter of Pfizer’s revenue.

Stock Market Wrap. Federal Reserve Is Next Week’s Big Event

Small-Cap Stocks Are on a Roll. What Could Push Them Higher.

SCIENCE MAGAZINE – SEPTEMBER 11, 2025

Science issue cover

SCIENCE MAGAZINE: The latest issue features ‘Bringing In Light’ – A Swirling supercomplex captures ocean light for photosynthesis.

Mosquito-borne viruses surge in a warming Europe

Chikungunya cases break records in France; West Nile virus appears near Rome

New picture of Mars’s interior emerges from lander data

Studies identify a solid inner core and buried remnants of giant impacts

Did Great Britain’s economy shrug off the end of Roman rule?

Pollutants in sediment core suggest mining and smelting did not tail off

Strongest black hole collision yet resonates with Einstein

“Overtone” in gravitational waves from black hole merger matches predictions of general relativity

THE ECONOMIST MAGAZINE – SEPTEMBER 13, 2025 PREVIEW

THE ECONOMIST MAGAZINE: The latest issue featuresThe $3trn bet on AI‘…

What if the $3trn AI investment boom goes wrong?

Even if the technology achieves its potential, plenty of people will lose their shirts

Don’t panic about the global fertility crash

A world with fewer people would not be all bad

Israel’s Qatarstrophic error 

Its extra-territorial campaign against terrorists has to have limits

The Kremlin’s plot to kill NATO’s credibility

The alliance needs an emphatic response to Russian air incursions

Nitazenes: another failure of drug prohibition

As countries crack down on fentanyl, a new synthetic opioid takes off

Literary Arts Preview: n+1 Magazine – Fall 2025

n+1 Magazine: The latest issue features ‘Force Majeure’ – New AI & I literature. Relate, revolt! Does Trump hate art? Idiocracy now. The new faces of ICE. Fiction by Elizabeth Schambelan.

Large Language Muddle

The AI upheaval is unique in its ability to metabolize any number of dread-inducing transformations. The university is becoming more corporate, more politically oppressive, and all but hostile to the humanities? Yes — and every student gets their own personal chatbot. The second coming of the Trump Administration has exposed the civic sclerosis of the US body politic? Time to turn the Social Security Administration over to Grok. Climate apocalypse now feels less like a distant terror than a fact of life? In five years, more than a fifth of global energy demand will come from data centers alone.

Two Days Talking to People Looking for Jobs at ICE

Naturally there were lots of law enforcement types hanging around the convention — men with military fades, moisture-wicking shirts, and tattoos of the Bible and the Constitution and eagles and flags distended across their arms. But there were also a handful of women ICE applicants and a lot of men of color. The deportation officer applicant pool was, I felt, shockingly diverse — one might say it looked like America. The whole place looked and felt like America.

Stupidology

The challenge posed by this political crisis is how to take the stupidity seriously without reducing it to a wholly mental or psychiatric, let alone genetic, phenomenon. Stupidity can be understood as a problem of social systems rather than individuals, as André Spicer and Mats Alvesson explore in their book The Stupidity Paradox. Stupidity, they write, can become “functional,” a feature of how organizations operate on a daily basis, obstructing ideas and intelligence despite the palpable negative consequences. Yet it’s hard to identify anything functional about Trumpian stupidity, which is less a form of organizational inertia or disarray than a slash-and-burn assault on the very things — universities, public health, market data — that help make the world intelligible.

THE GUARDIAN WEEKLY – SEPTEMBER 12, 2025 PREVIEW

THE GUARDIAN WEEKLY: The latest issue features ‘The Axis of Upheaval…and what it means for the West’

Xi Jinping had been waiting for the right moment to serve notice of China’s growing might and influence to the rest of the world, and the 80th anniversary of the end of the second world war provided the Mao-suited Chinese leader with the perfect opportunity.

Last week’s bombastic (or should that be bomb-tastic?) military parade in Beijing – in the presence of Vladimir Putin, Kim Jong-un and a host of other global strongmen – was intended as a show of force and stability to contrast sharply with the chaotic unpredictability of Donald Trump’s America. And, as the leaders of the world’s most notorious pariah states bear-hugged and strolled around Tiananmen Square like the cast of Reservoir Dogs, the optics did not disappoint.

But behind the scenes, how robust actually is the so-called “axis of upheaval”? As our big story this week explores, the illiberal alliance is riven by internal fractures and mistrust between China, Russia and North Korea that date back many years and cannot be discarded as quickly as Xi, or anyone else, might like.

Spotlight | France’s latest political crisis
The fall this week of prime minister François Bayrou exposed a political malaise that is likely to sour French politics well beyond the 2027 presidential election, reports Paris correspondent Angelique Chrisafis

Interview | Leonard Barden, chairman of the chess board
From honing his game in air raid shelters during the second world war to beating grand masters, our record-breaking chess columnist has lived an extraordinary life. Now aged 96, he chats to our chief sports reporter Sean Ingle

Feature | Syria’s cycle of sectarian violence
Over a few brutal days in March, as sectarian violence and revenge killings tore through parts of the country, two friends from different communities tried to find a way to survive. By Ghaith Abdul-Ahad

Opinion | Angela Rayner’s exit is a bombshell for Keir Starmer
The UK deputy prime minister’s fall will exacerbate all the doubts about the PM himself and his ability to keep Labour in power, writes Jonathan Freedland

Culture | Spinal Tap turn it up to 11, one last time
More than 40 years since the film This Is Spinal Tap was mistaken for a comedy, its hard-rocking subjects are back for a legally obligated final gig. Our writer Michael Hann smells the glove

FOREIGN POLICY MAGAZINE – FALL 2025 PREVIEW

The cover of the fall 2025 print issue of Foreign Policy magazine, showing a tattered flag with a globe on it on a stick.

FOREIGN POLICY MAGAZINE: The latest issue features ‘The End Of Development’

The End of Development

The West’s aid model was always a mirage. It’s time for a realistic alternative. By Adam Tooze

How Big Finance Ate Foreign Aid

Investors have drained the global south in pursuit of aggressive profit maximization. Daniela Gabor

The Development Economist Who Wasn’t

Once dismissed from the field he helped found, Albert O. Hirschman feels newly relevant. Daniel W. Drezner

The Problem With the Global South’s Self-Help Push

Poorer countries have become more integrated but not necessarily more united. David C. Engerman