THE GUARDIAN WEEKLY – JUNE 27, 2025 PREVIEW

GUARDIAN WEEKLY (June 25, 2025): The latest issue features ‘Chain Reaction’ – The consequences of America’s attack on Iran….

How will Israel’s conflict with Iran play out? Only a brave person, or perhaps a weekly news magazine, would try to foresee the outcomes of a war in which the contours have shifted almost by the hour.

After the United States bombed Iran’s key nuclear facilities last weekend – and Tehran responded with a choreographed missile attack on a US base in Qatar – Donald Trump declared a ceasefire, clearly hoping that would be the end of it. Initially at least, Iran and Israel appeared not to have got the memo, provoking a sweary outburst from the US president on the White House lawn. But as of Wednesday, a fragile truce appeared to be holding (follow our latest coverage here).

How will Israel’s conflict with Iran play out? Only a brave person, or perhaps a weekly news magazine, would try to foresee the outcomes of a war in which the contours have shifted almost by the hour.

Julian Borger takes up the story of how the US was drawn into Israel’s war with Tehran and how it pulled off a remarkable, top-secret operation. And in another excellent commentary, Nesrine Malik laments an impotent western liberal political establishment that makes appeals for cool heads and diplomacy, but is entirely incapable of addressing the problem, namely its own lack of a moral compass or care for the norms it claims to uphold.


Five essential reads in this week’s edition

Spotlight | Russia surpasses 1 million casualties in Ukraine war
As the grim tally of Moscow’s invasion is reached, an expansive propaganda campaign and state payouts are keeping grieving relatives onside. Pjotr Sauer reports

Science | A bug’s life: small ways to make a big change
Insect species are under threat around the world but there are simple, science-backed actions we can all take to stem their decline. Tess McClure and Patrick Greenfield find out how

Feature | The mommas and the poppas

Italian-style late family meals, bed-sharing like the Germans, breaking down gender stereotypes the Icelandic way … f ive Guardian writers try f ive dif ferent European parenting styles. Will they make it out unscathed?

Opinion | From LA to London, the populist right hates our cities
Once a conservative stronghold; Los Angeles is now occupied by the military. Liberal cities have become targets for politicians looking to stir up voters elsewhere, argues Andy Beckett

Culture | Danny Boyle on risks, regrets and returning to the undead
In 28 Years Later, zombies maraud over a Britain broken by more than Brexit. Its director talks to Xan Brooks about cultural baggage, catastrophising – and why his kids’ generation is an ‘upgrade’

NATURE MAGAZINE – JUNE 26, 2025 – RESEARCH PREVIEW

Volume 642 Issue 8069

NATURE MAGAZINE: The latest issue features ‘Cyborg Tadpoles’ – Soft electrode implant maps neural activity in the developing brain…

This tiny robot moves mini-droplets with ease

Magnetially controlled device can combine or split microlitre-sized droplets.

Sensors pinpoint the exact time of a Yellowstone explosion

Data could help to reveal the warning signs of potentially dangerous eruptions caused by liquid groundwater abruptly turning into gas.

One dose of gene therapy gives years of relief from blood disorder

The average number of bleeding episodes for men with haemophilia B dropped almost tenfold after treatment.

Why pangolins are poached: they’re the tastiest animal around

Trafficking of scales for traditional medicine plays a relatively small part in the hunting of pangolins in Nigeria.

DRIFT MAGAZINE – SUMMER 2025 LITERARY PREVIEW

THE DRIFT MAGAZINE (June 24, 2025): The latest issue Fifteen features It’s morning in America. Daphne, chased by Apollo, grows hooves. We live in an age of conspiracism and insincerity. Spring and summer will not follow. Staying below two degrees might be a challenge. It’d be corny to call it Orwellian. We reached the limits of what moral outrage can do. Miraculously, we still made decisions. Acting recklessly. Lining up at the barricades. The more you have, the more you have to protect. Eye contact is everything. Already, the oil field was quieter. Misogyny converts reality. All that love for objects. It sanctifies him. He wore a face that spoke of multiple divorces. She was bitter about her beauty. That’s all in an evening screening. We’re in a definitional war. Publicity beats truth. Art that risks nothing is worth nothing. A negation of the possibility of forgetting. A private fiefdom. A child on whom childhood was wasted. A game of inches. Ask a pundit or professor. There are only so many laughs to be had.
Interviews

“They’re Using Megaphones”​ | An Interview with Wendy Brown

The Drift Editors

“Losing Any Claim to Moral Leadership”​ | An Interview with Nikhil Pal Singh

The Drift Editors

“We Will Not Win on Our Own”​ | An Interview with Eman Abdelhadi

The Drift Editors

“Politics Is Conflictual”​ | An Interview with Olúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò

The Drift Editors

“All Sticks, No Carrots”​ | An Interview with Adam Tooze

The Drift Editors

Dispatches on the New Regime

Unified Purpose and Total Vision​ | Our New Department of Justice

Piper French

State of Exception​ | National Security Governance, Then and Now

David Klion

A Bureaucratic and Feminine Mind​ | The Right’s Misogyny Politics

Becca Rothfeld

Brutality and Opacity​ | Birthright Citizenship Under Attack

Elisa Gonzalez

Agit-Slop​ | The White House’s Numbing Aesthetic

Mitch Therieau

A Disaster Big Enough​ | Climate Policy on Life Support

Jake Bittle

Competing Moral Visions​ | Two Paths for Pronatalism

Gaby Del Valle

Easy to Exploit​ | Collapsing the Urban-Rural Divide

Nick Bowlin

Collective Political Activity​ | Reclaiming the First Amendment

Rhiannon Hamam

Anti-Anti-Rape​ | On the #MeToo Backlash

Jamie Hood

God-Like Confidence​ | Donald Trump’s Cult of Faith

Tope Folarin

MIT TECHNOLOGY REVIEW – JULY/AUGUST 2025 PREVIEW

MIT TECHNOLOGY REVIEW: The Power issue features the world is increasingly powered by both tangible electricity and intangible intelligence. Plus billionaires. This issue explores those intersections.

Are we ready to hand AI agents the keys?

We’re starting to give AI agents real autonomy, and we’re not prepared for what could happen next.

Is this the electric grid of the future?

In Nebraska, a publicly owned utility deftly tackles the challenges of delivering on reliability, affordability, and sustainability.

Namibia wants to build the world’s first hydrogen economy

Can the vast and sparsely populated African country translate its renewable power potential into national development?

TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT – JUNE 27, 2025 PREVIEW

TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT (June 25, 2025): In this week’s TLS , If all Russian writers are supposed to have come out of Gogol’s Overcoat, then “all American literature”, according to Ernest Hemingway, “comes from one book by Mark Twain called Huckleberry Finn”. James Marcus reviews Ron Chernow’s 1,200-page biography of Twain – the Great American Novel seems fated to be twinned with the Great American Door-Stopper.

Inventing a history

How Stalin shaped the Soviet collective memory By Bryan Karetnyk

‘A dear little genius’

Mark Twain and the making of an American literary revolution By James Marcus

Triumph at Camp David, disaster in Iran

Jimmy Carter’s abrasive foreign policy adviser and rival to Henry Kissinger By Edward N. Luttwak

THE NEW YORK TIMES – WEDNESDAY, JUNE 25, 2025

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Trump Officials Push Back Against U.S. Report on Iran’s Nuclear Program

President Trump’s administration contradicted a preliminary report that suggested U.S. strikes did not significantly set back Iran’s nuclear ambitions.

A New Political Star Emerges Out of a Fractured Democratic Party

The emergence of Zohran Mamdani is likely to divide national Democrats, who are already torn about what the party should stand for.

Trump Lashes Out at Spain as NATO Leaders Make Spending Pledge, With a Caveat

President Trump had demanded that members raise their military spending. He criticized Spain after it pushed back on the demand.

U.K. Says It’s Buying 12 F-35A Stealth Jets That Can Carry Nuclear Weapons

The decision means that Britain’s air force will have a nuclear role for the first time since the end of the Cold War.

THE PARIS REVIEW – SUMMER 2025 LITERARY PREVIEW

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THE PARIS REVIEW (June 24, 2025):

Fanny Howe on the Art of Poetry: “If I could say I was assigned something at birth, it would be to keep the soul fresh and clean, and to not let anything bring it down.”

Marie NDiaye on the Art of Fiction: “Oh, no! Reading beautiful books can’t be traumatizing. Seeing awful things can be—but reading? I don’t believe in that at all.”

Prose by Anuk Arudpragasam, Tom Crewe, GauZ’, Zans Brady Krohn, and Joy Williams.

Poetry by Will Alexander, John Berryman, Yongyu Chen, Eugene Ostashevsky, Ricardo Reis, and Nell Wright.

Art by Anne Collier, Celia Paul, and Alessandro Teoldi; cover by Tyler Mitchell.

COUNTRY LIFE MAGAZINE – JUNE 25, 2025 PREVIEW

Cover of Country Life 25 June 2025

COUNTRY LIFE MAGAZINE: The latest issue features ‘Hearts of Stone’ – Why we love our ancient sites…

We’re still standing

Tom Howells explores the mystery and magnetism of the thousands of ancient British monoliths and monuments, from Cornwall to the Orkneys

Country Life magazine spread

Going down in a blazer of glory

It is a favourite of royalty and rowers, worn from Augusta to the Oscars — can there be a more versatile jacket than the blazer, asks Harry Pearson

Country Life International

• Russell Higham uncovers the secret society of Cascais
• Holly Kirkwood finds the age of chivalry alive and well in Valletta
• Matthew Dennison searches for traces of the Venetian Empire in Greece
• Tom Parker Bowles savours superb Spanish dishes
• Eileen Reid tracks the influence of two intellectual giants of Avignon

Winging it

Mark Cocker welcomes the renaissance of the peregrine falcon, a raptor that stoops to conquer at up to 240mph

New series: Scale model

Overfishing threatens the very existence of the cod, but Gadus morhua remains a monster of the deep for David Profumo

Dick Bird’s favourite painting

The stage designer chooses a monumental example of early-19th-century political art

The virtues of history

John Goodall celebrates 100 years of the headquarters of the Worshipful Company of Ironmongers, one of London’s Great Twelve City Livery Companies

Country Life magazine spread

The legacy

Leslie Hore-Belisha created a beacon of hope for road users everywhere, finds Kate Green

Luxury

Anniversary jewels and Art Deco delights with Hetty Lintell, plus Willow Crossley’s favourite things

Interiors

Arabella Youens admires the kitchen of a house in the Scottish Borders and considers the earthly pleasures of terracotta

Laying ghosts to rest

A spectacular garden now graces the grounds of the old Somerset-shire Coal Canal Company HQ, as Caroline Donald discovers

Country Life magazine spreads

Water, water everywhere

John Lewis-Stempel delves into the depths of a field pond, mesmerised by the seemingly endless variety of aquatic life

Arts & antiques

A quartet of journeys with The King raised the profile of plein-air artist Warwick Fuller, who talks Royal Tours with Carla Passino

Making an impression

French Impressionism was a slow burner in Britain as Monet and Pissarro gradually influenced our art scene, reveals Caroline Bugler

And much more

FOREIGN AFFAIRS MAGAZINE – JULY/AUGUST 2025 PREVIEW

FOREIGN AFFAIRS MAGAZINE (June 24, 2025): The latest issue features ‘Who Needs Allies?’….

Dispensable Nation

America in a Post-American World by Kori Schake

Beware the Europe You Wish For

The Downsides and Dangers of Allied Independence by Celeste A. Wallander

The Case for a Pacific Defense Pact

America Needs a New Asian Alliance to Counter China by Ely Ratner

India’s Great-Power Delusions

How New Delhi’s Grand Strategy Thwarts Its Grand Ambitions by Ashley J. Tellis

THE NEW YORK TIMES – TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 2025

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Trump Lashes Out at Israel and Iran as Fragile Truce Is Tested

President Trump suggested that both countries had continued fighting despite a cease-fire. He warned Israel that further attacks would be a “major violation.”

Can Iran, Israel and the U.S. Now All Claim to Have Won?

Iran’s response to the attacks on its nuclear facilities killed no Americans and each nation has a victory narrative. But a cease-fire appeared tenuous on Tuesday.

Behind Closed Doors, Harvard Officials Debate a Risky Truce With Trump

The university is trying to avoid the appearance of appeasement, something other institutions that made deals with President Trump found impossible.

News, Views and Reviews For The Intellectually Curious