This week’s @TheTLS , featuring @Godwin_lives on Shelley’s unfinished poems; @devoneylooser on Charles Austen and the slave trade; @jeres on the life of a plongeur; @Mika_R_S on Anna Wintour; @RozKaveney on Samuel R. Delany; @nheller on the Buddha’s tooth – and more.
Category Archives: Previews
Preview: The New Yorker Magazine – July 11, 2022
The New Yorker Fiction Issue was inspired by Jack Kerouac’s classic book “On the Road,” and the magazine features four writers’ reflections on memorable road trips.
Preview: The Burlington Magazine – July 2, 2022
Louise Bourgeois: Paintings Louise Bourgeois: The Woven Child
‘Je vois red’ raged Louise Bourgeois (1911–2010) on one of the loose sheets of paper that she made notes on, most often about herself and her work and, in this case, about the painting Natural history #2 (1944; Easton Foundation, New York), which struck her as all going wrong. Slipping between two languages, Bourgeois’s fury conforms to the themes of rage, the death drive and childhood aggression that the art historian Mignon Nixon has traced in the artist’s work in reference to the ideas of the psychoanalyst Melanie Klein.
Covers: Texas Highways Magazine – July 2022
Cover Preview: Barron’s Magazine – July 4, 2022
With Yields Above 8%, It’s Time to Get Excited About Income Investing
Our latest guide to income investing explores opportunities in categories ranging from junk bonds to TIPS and REITs.
UP AND DOWN WALL STREET
Central Bankers Talk Tough on Rates. But What if Markets and Economies Tumble?
Randall W. Forsyth
THE TRADER
Las Vegas Sands Stock Could Win Big in a Reopened China
Teresa Rivas
THE TRADER
Stocks Had a Nasty 6 Months. The Second Half Could Be Ugly Too.
Nicholas Jasinski
STREETWISE
The Home-Goods Boom Is Over, Leaving the Bed and Bath Stocks High and Dry
Jack Hough
Cover Preview: Science Magazine – July 1, 2022
An ash and gas plume rises from Hunga volcano, Tonga, on 14 January 2022. Global geophysical observations reveal that the climactic eruption that followed on 15 January produced a broad range of atmospheric waves, with pressure wave amplitudes comparable with those from the 1883 Krakatau eruption. While propagating over the world’s oceans, the remarkable atmospheric waves generated complex fast-traveling tsunamis. See pages 30, 91, and 95.
Photo: Taaniela Kula, Tonga Geological Services
United Kingdom set to abandon EU funding and go it alone
- Horizon Europe grants held hostage over Brexit dispute
Silence greets requests to flag retracted studies
Authors and editors ignored warnings about citing noted fraudster, exposing a problem in scholarly publishing
Hidden carbon layer sparked ancient bout of global warming
Deep carbon exhumed by volcanic rift between Greenland and Europe implicated in 56-million-year-old hothouse
Previews: The Florentine Magazine – July/Aug 2022
The Florentine July/August 2022
Love, Spritz + Gelato
My forearms are sticking to the desk as I type this month’s letter. It’s an irksome feeling that’s offset by last night’s joy of dancing wildly at a wedding and an afternoon dip in a kind friend’s swimming pool. Summer in Florence is an intoxicating mix of sweat, fun and gelato. While many of us escape to our countries of origin for as long as we can, there’s something undeniably alluring about these sun-streaked months in Tuscany. Just think back to movies such as Stealing Beauty and Under the Tuscan Sun before fast forwarding to recent Netflix films Toscana and Love & Gelato. Stereotypes aside—and there are far too many to mention in these productions (Netflix, we’re here if you fancy delving deeper into our city and region!)—summer in Florence never stops working its inexplicable magic. Yes, the wall of heat and buzz of mosquitoes may be draining during the day, but the night brings boundless pleasures, from movie nights by the Uffizi to exhibitions at just-reopened Forte di Belvedere, refreshing beers beside the Arno and brilliantly oddball cultural moments such as a wheat threshing festival in the hills (find out more about that gem on page 16).
Cover Preview: Nature Magazine – June 30, 2022
Order out of chaos
The cover shows an artistic representation of various cancer cells. The large-scale gains, losses and rearrangements of DNA seen in chromosomal instability are a typical feature of cancer — but there is no comprehensive framework to decode the causes of this genomic variability and their possible links to disease. In this week’s issue, Florian Markowetz, Geoff Macintyre and their colleagues present such a framework with a compendium of 17 signatures of chromosomal instability that can be used to predict how tumours might respond to drugs and that help to identify future therapeutic targets. The team created the compendium by examining 7,880 tumours representing 33 types of cancer. In a separate paper, Nischalan Pillay and colleagues examined 9,873 cancers to generate
Preview: New Scientist Magazine – July 2, 2022
How readily should we swallow the idea of diets that delay ageing?
The promise of a new diet that can add as much as a decade to your life is certainly tempting – and might well be proven to work – but for now should be swallowed with a pinch of salt

