Named the best magazine of 2022 by Alta.
Inside our spring issue: Laura Marris visits the fossils at Royal Ontario Museum, where a scientifically accurate dinosaur skull doubles as a musical instrument; Paul Collins investigates the human cost of America's poorly designed clothing donation bins; Lauren Markham unpacks the case against Lyndon LaRouche--a white supremacist, fraudster, and perennial presidential candidate--who was tried and convicted by her own father; and J. Malcolm Garcia tails a seventy-seven-year-old Arizona priest on his missions to federally patrolled border towns. We have interviews with the very first National Youth Poet Laureate Amanda Gorman, acclaimed visual artist Christine Sun Kim, writer Sherril Jaffe, and cult astrologer Rob Brezsny; along with a two-page economic analysis of Jane Austen's motley crew, which has been most conveniently adjusted for inflation.
In addition, Joy Williams considers Harold Bloom's only novel, Noah Van Sciver illustrates E. B. White's 1940 essay "Freedom," and Halle Butler reveals her tower of books. Plus, regular columnists Nick Hornby and Carrie Brownstein persist with their usual wisdoms as they turn their attention to this year's "literary adult equivalent of the Cabbage Patch Doll" and the terror of pop-in people, respectively; not to mention Peter Orner reflecting on Absalom, Absalom! in a new series featuring art by Argentine cartoonist Liniers. And, should your eyes have any strength left in them yet, there are also book reviews, poetry, games, a dispatch from a Virgin Islands sandals shop, and still more!
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