Tag Archives: Summer 2025

THE BRUSSELS REVIEW – SUMMER 2025 PREVIEW

THE BRUSSELS REVIEW (June 15, 2025): The Summer 2025 issue of The Brussels Review offers a captivating blend of fiction, nonfiction, and poetry, showcasing diverse voices and narratives. On its evocative cover, Ximena Maldonado Sánchez’s vibrant artwork, Terracotta, beautifully sets the tone for a collection defined by profound emotional depth and artistic exploration. You can also read a review of her work or listen to her journey in our new podcast: Call To The Editor on Spotify.

The issue opens with Sonnet Mondal’s poetic reflections, drawing readers into nuanced meditations on memory, loss, and heritage. His pieces, including “Fragments of Life,” “The Biscuit Factory,” “The Bridge at Midnight,” and “Grandpa’s Veranda,” evoke a poignant sense of nostalgia and the passage of time.

In nonfiction, Gaye Brown’s introspective essay “Some Gifts” elegantly probes the complex nature of generosity, intertwining personal anecdotes with thoughtful philosophical insights. Similarly, Sue Tong’s “Father in the Photograph” and Gina Elia’s “Show and Tell” offer deeply personal explorations that resonate universally, inviting readers to reflect on their own histories and relationships.

The fiction selection is particularly compelling, headlined by Patrick ten Brink’s imaginative and thought-provoking “The Word Thief.” Brink masterfully blends elements of mystery and fantasy to craft a tale that explores the profound power of language and memory. Beatriz Seelaender’s “Motion Picture Sickness” adds a clever and satirical dimension, examining fame, identity, and morality through the lens of contemporary pop culture with sharp humor and keen observations.

Louis Kummerer’s intriguingly titled “A Founding Father’s Guide to Contingency Planning” provides both historical nuance and sharp social commentary, while Charles Wilkinson’s “Hayden in March” and Danila Botha’s “Like Freedom or Fear” explore psychological landscapes with acute sensitivity and emotional authenticity.

JACOBIN MAGAZINE – SUMMER 2025 PREVIEW

Jacobin

JACOBIN MAGAZINE (June 14, 2025): The latest issue features ‘Speculation’ – The house always wins…

“In every stock-jobbing swindle everyone knows that some time or other the crash must come, but everyone hopes that it may fall on the head of his neighbor, after he himself has caught the shower of gold and placed it in safety.”

— Karl Marx, Capital: A Critique of Political Economy (1867)

“Along with a lot of worthless nonsense, the bubbles of the 1920s gave us some durable housing, highways, and a radio broadcasting infrastructure.”

We Have Always Lived in the Casino

John Maynard Keynes warned that when real investment becomes the by-product of speculation, the result is often disaster. But it’s hard to tell where one ends and the other begins.

Money for Nothing

Why the modern financial sector is better at extracting rents than funding the future.

The House Always Wins

The gaming industry is turning every smartphone into a casino — and it’s destroying more lives than ever.

CHICAGO BOOTH REVIEW – SUMMER 2025 PREVIEW

Chicago Booth Review Issue Cover | Summer 2025

CHICAGO BOOTH REVIEW (June 10, 2025): The Summer 2025 issue features how fintech is changing the financial system, whether monopsony is skewing the labor market, and the potential effects of Donald Trump’s economic policies.

Banking Is Getting Easier, but Is It Riskier?

Fintech may be generating unintended consequences for consumers and the industry.

Does Fintech Threaten the Stability of the Financial System?

Regulating new financial products and platforms requires understanding their risks and vulnerabilities.

How AI Can Make Smarter Predictions

Researchers gave AI a way to evaluate and calibrate its own uncertainty.

Are Employers Playing a Game of Monopsony?

Labor’s share of national income has fallen, and competition for workers may have something to do with it.

MIT SLOAN MANAGEMENT REVIEW – SUMMER 2025

MIT SLOAN MANAGEMENT REVIEW (June 10, 2025): The Summer 2025 Issue features a special report on strategic thinking and long-term planning amid the challenges of disruption.

Time Well Spent: A New Way to Value Time Could Change Your Life

Leslie Perlow and Salvatore Affinito

Will AI Disrupt Your Business? Key Questions to Ask

Julian Birkinshaw

The Business Cost of the Shrinking STEM Research Pipeline

Chris Carr and Dave Christy

WORTH MAGAZINE – SUMMER 2025 RETIREMENT PREVIEW

Worth Magazine | Digital Editions | View Latest Issues

WORTH MAGAZINE (June 5, 2025); The latest issue features ‘Brain Wealth’ – Research shows we need to think differently about mental well-being…

Global Efforts in Brain Health Emphasize Prevention, Early Detection, and Tailored Care

By Meehika Barua

Rethinking Retirement: A Lifelong Journey to Financial Security

Cheryl Evans, Director of Lifetime Financial Security at the Milken Institute, emphasized the importance of financial security throughout one’s life and the need for women to take ownership of their financial futures. By Dan Costa

Dan Buettner on the Real Secret to Longevity: Why Blue Zones Thrive | Milken 2025

SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN – SUMMER 2025 PREVIEW

Scientific American

SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN (June 3, 2025): The special edition issue features ‘Into The Quantum Realm’….

The Secret to the Strongest Force in the Universe

New discoveries demystify the bizarre force that binds atomic nuclei together

Tomorrow’s Quantum Computers Threaten Today’s Secrets. Here’s How to Protect Them

Researchers are racing to create codes so complex that even quantum computers can’t break them

Quantum Weirdness in New Materials Bends the Rules of Physics

Electrons swarm in a soup of quantum entanglement in a new class of materials called strange metals

Orion Magazine – Summer 2025 – Nature & Culture

Summer 2025 Issue - Orion Magazine

ORION MAGAZINE (May 30, 2025): The Summer 2025 Issue features ….

Out of the Ashes

Examined Life – How fungi are surviving—and even thriving—in a warming world

Natural Intelligence

A photo of mushrooms growing out of mushrooms. The photo is taken with a blue background

Mushrooms made the world what it is by Maria Popova

Foodways

Intuitive Eating

A black and white illustration of Merlin Sheldrake, Jeff VanderMeer, and Kaitlin Smith surrounded by pink and brown round abstract shapes

On poison, pleasure, and trust by Erica Berry

A New Naturalism

Four writers reflect on the rhizomatic network of self, society, and ecology

Corey PressmanMerlin SheldrakeKaitlin Smith and Jeff Vandermeer