BARRON’S MAGAZINE – JUNE 23, 2025 FINANCE PREVIEW

BARRON’S MAGAZINE: The latest issue features ‘The Top CEOs of 2025 – Who’s afraid of change? Not these 25 leaders, who have positioned their companies to thrive, and reward investors…

Meet the Top CEOs of 2025

Our annual list features 26 leaders whose deft guidance has put their companies in a stronger competitive position.

Premium Credit Cards Are Getting Pricier. Do the Perks Match the Fees?

Chase’s Sapphire Reserve is charging $795, topping the American Express Platinum card. We look at the slew of rewards premium credit cards offer.

AI Could Create the First $10 Trillion Company. This Stock Pro Lays Out How.

A conversation with Ulrike Hoffmann-Burchardi of UBS Global Wealth Management. Where she sees the next “transformational innovations.”

THE NEW YORK TIMES – SATURDAY, JUNE 21, 2025

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Sheltering in a Bunker, Iran’s Supreme Leader Names Potential Successors

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has not only picked replacements in his chain of military command in case they are killed in Israeli strikes, he has also named three senior clerics to replace him should he, too, be slain.

Israel Kills Iranian Commander as Both Countries Trade Strikes

The senior commander led the force that oversees Iran’s proxy militias in the Middle East. A European diplomatic effort to stop the fighting ended without a breakthrough.

As Iran and Israel Battle, the Rest of the Mideast Fears What’s Next

Trump Got the Fight He Wanted. Did It Turn Out the Way He Expected?

President Trump’s clashes with Los Angeles over immigration were a decade in the making — and their outcome remains unclear.

REVIEWS: BEST SCIENCE BOOKS OF 2025 (NATURE)

NATURE MAGAZINE (June 20, 2025): The best books in science in 2025

The Infrastructure Book

Sybil Derrible Prometheus (2025)

In 1995, a massive heatwave in Chicago, Illinois, took at least 739 lives. The city authorities assumed that a lack of air conditioning was responsible for most deaths, but an investigation attributed them mainly to social isolation. As Chicago-based engineer Sybil Derrible notes in his penetrating analysis of urban infrastructure: “Technology comes and goes, but infrastructure stays because infrastructure is all about people.” Surveying 16 large cities globally, he investigates water, transport, energy and telecommunications networks.

Free Creations of the Human Mind

Diana Kormos Buchwald & Michael D. Gordin Oxford Univ. Press (2025)

Of the physics Nobel prizes awarded since 2000, “no fewer than seven … stem directly from Einstein’s work in 1905 and 1915”, point out historians of science Diana Buchwald and Michael Gordin. Their brief, appealing book discusses the general theory of relativity and quantum theory, but is preoccupied mainly with Albert Einstein’s life, personality and philosophy, especially his complex relationship with war — including the design of the atomic bomb — and pacifism.

Amazing Worlds of Science Fiction and Science Fact

Keith Cooper Reaktion (2025)

Astronomers observed the first confirmed exoplanet in 1992. Some 5,900 are now known, in about 4,500 planetary systems, with around 1,000 containing several planets, according to NASA. No life has been detected yet, showing just “how rare our planet Earth still is” and how “the imagination imbued within science fiction can only carry us so far”, notes science journalist Keith Cooper. His engaging book, based on interviews with writers and researchers, examines what science fiction has got right and wrong, and what science can learn from it.

Yearning for Immortality

Rune Nyord Univ. Chicago Press (2025)

THE NEW YORK TIMES – FRIDAY, JUNE 20, 2025

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Forced to Wait for Trump, Israel Faces Strategic Dilemma in Iran

The Israeli military needs President Trump’s help to destroy a key nuclear site in Iran. Waiting for that help comes with risks for Israel.

A U.S. Attack on Iran Would Show the Limits of China’s Power

China, which depends on Iran for oil and to counter American influence, has a lot to lose from a wider war. But there’s not much it can do about it.

Appeals Court Lets Trump Keep Control of California National Guard in L.A.

A panel rejected a lower court’s finding that it was likely illegal for President Trump to use state troops to protect immigration agents from protests.

LOS ANGELES REVIEW OF BOOKS – SUMMER 2025

LOS ANGELES REVIEW OF BOOKS (June 19, 2025): The latest issue of LARB features ‘Submission’ – all new essays, interviews, short fiction, poetry, and art reexamining the complex conditions of power (or a lack thereof).

Emmeline Clein finds pockets of faith in feminist writer Shulamith Firestone’s ostensibly airless spaces;

Jack Lubin examines the relationship between rap and supervised release;

Charley Burlock interrogates the myths surrounding wildfires, grief, and California’s supposed “gasoline trees”;

Cory Bradshaw describes the art and agony involved in making amateur porn;

Nathan Crompton and Andrew Witt discuss the documentary form and photographing Los Angeles

Become a member for all of that and more—including essays and features by Alexander Chee, Elizabeth Rush, and Tal Rosenberg; interviews with Samual Rutter and Abdulrazak Gurnah;

Plus, an excerpt from Yvan Algabé’s Misery of Love; fiction by Erin Taylor, Devin Thomas O’Shea, and A. Cerisse Cohen

Poetry by Farnoosh Fathi, Paula Bohince, John James, Caitlyn Klum, Sawako Nakayasu, and Harryette Mullen;

And art by Carla Williams and Talia Chetrit.

SCIENCE MAGAZINE – JUNE 20, 2025 RESEARCH PREVIEW

Science issue cover

SCIENCE MAGAZINE (June 19, 2025): The latest issue features “Plants & Heat”…

Plants Facing the Heat

Can wild plant adaptations help crops tolerate heat?

Wild plant species harbor a vast but largely unknown diversity of temperature stress solutions

Plant microbiomes feel the heat

Rising temperatures change the structure and function of plant microbial communities

THE NEW STATESMAN MAGAZINE – JUNE 20, 2025

THE NEW STATESMAN (June 18, 2025): The latest issue features ‘Warlord’ – Feared, Loathed, Haunted…Unstoppable.

Living by the sword

The history that shapes Benjamin Netanyahu. By Joshua Leifer

Inside the mind of Benjamin Netanyahu

As the Israeli prime minister’s bodyguard, I saw him transform into the gangster he is today. By Ami Dror

The cosplay dictator

Trump has learned dangerous lessons from other strongmen. By Katie Stallard

COMMENTARY MAGAZINE – JULY/AUGUST 2025 PREVIEW

July/August 2025 – Commentary Magazine

COMMENTARY MAGAZINE (June 19, 2025): The latest issue features ‘The War Against The War Against The Jews’…

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

THE ECONOMIST MAGAZINE – JUNE 21, 2025 PREVIEW

THE ECONOMIST MAGAZINE (June 19, 2025): The latest issue features ‘How will this end?‘….

Where will the Iran-Israel war end?

In a worse place if Donald Trump rushes in

To keep Russia out and America in, NATO must spend more

European members need a hard date to boost their defence budgets

Japan’s government bonds: this time it won’t end well

Even as interest costs mount, politicians promise hando

Why MAGA’s pro-natalist plans are ill-conceived

Efforts to deliver a baby boom either fail or cost a fortune

THE NEW YORK TIMES – THURSDAY, JUNE 19, 2025

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An Islamic Republic With Its Back Against the Wall

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?

Israel Vows to Intensify Attacks After Iranian Missile Hits Hospital

‘There was a massive boom’: A doctor recounts the missile strike on an Israeli hospital.2h ago

China Unleashes Hackers Against Its Friend Russia, Seeking War Secrets

Since the war in Ukraine began, analysts have monitored a series of intrusions aimed at stealing information about weaponry and warfighting.

News, Views and Reviews For The Intellectually Curious