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Sunday October 5, 2025
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Since 1998, Arts & Letters Daily has linked to more than 17,000 articles, book reviews and essays. Consider supporting us. »
Oct. 3, 2025

Articles of Note

The dodo, the woolly mammoth, the Tasmanian tiger: One company believes it can bring them back, making animal extinction a thing of the past... more »


New Books

The history of vanilla — the world’s favorite flavor — is rife with counterfeiting, pilfering, piracy, smuggling, and account fraud... more »


Essays & Opinions

In 1956, Gore Vidal declared: “I am at heart a propagandist, a tremendous hater, a tiresome nag”... more »


Oct. 2, 2025

Articles of Note

Rachel Ruysch’s reputation once rivalled Rembrant’s. Now, due to snobbery and sexism, her paintings are compared with wallpaper... more »


New Books

An instant classic that has endured for seven centuries, the history of the reception of Dante’s Divine Comedy is a history of Western taste... more »


Essays & Opinions

Many writers find writing agonizing. Few have expressed that feeling as vividly as Cynthia Ozick... more »


Oct. 1, 2025

Articles of Note

Biographers have been likened to fiction writers and professional burglars. Richard Holmes takes a different view... more »


New Books

Know your meme. In the early 2000s, technology, art, and amateurism combined to reach such cultural achievements as LOLcats... more »


Essays & Opinions

Mary Carleton, the “German Princess,” charged with bigamy and theft, was a sensation in 1660s London. More than 500 people visited her in jail... more »


Sept. 30, 2025

Articles of Note

The gallerist Mary Boone ruled the 1980s New York art scene. At 73, she’s fresh out of federal prison and back at work... more »


New Books

“If anyone builds it, everyone dies.” Eliezer Yudkowsky thinks hyperintelligent AI could be worse than nuclear war... more »


Essays & Opinions

Cormac McCarthy could remember nearly everything he had read or heard. He was also a hoarder, with an affinity for nonstick cookware and tweed coats... more »


Sept. 29, 2025

Articles of Note

The Gothic doesn’t moralize. There are no happy endings. Only intermingled, chaotic narratives of fear and transgression... more »


New Books

Charlotte Brontë was a secular saint who cared for her frail siblings in the face of their cruel, selfish father — or so the story goes... more »


Essays & Opinions

Why are even tenured professors, people with the most secure jobs on earth, so unwilling to speak their minds?... more »


Sept. 26, 2025

Articles of Note

In 17th-century Europe, an eclectic mix of aphorism, fiction, dialogue, and essay cultivated a new sensibility: aesthetic taste... more »


New Books

New York City saw its first traffic jam in 1913. The cause? A Henri Bergson lecture at Columbia... more »


Essays & Opinions

The screen revolution will shape our politics as profoundly as the reading revolution of the 18th century did. Welcome to the postliterate society... more »


Sept. 25, 2025

Articles of Note

Cheever, Updike, Bellow, Ellison — is anyone under 40 still reading the titans of mid-20th-century literature?... more »


New Books

To understand what’s lost when a waiter tells you to scan a QR code, peruse the history of the menu... more »


Essays & Opinions

Consider the snail. One lung, one heart, one foot, 15,000 teeth, and first appeared 200 million years before dinosaurs... more »


Sept. 24, 2025

Articles of Note

Michel Houellebecq’s writing is a serious, perhaps desperate effort to express directly the experience of total absorption... more »


New Books

Sally Mann is not just a taker of ethereal photographs. She is a Southern yarn-spinner, a humorist, and a darkly comic raconteur... more »


Essays & Opinions

What does an essayist need from a reader? To be willing to enter spaces in which solidarity is one of the possibilities... more »


Sept. 23, 2025

Articles of Note

Arvo Pärt is the most-performed living composer, after John Williams. His genre: holy minimalism... more »


New Books

What’s the greater scandal: A few bad actors producing shady studies — or major psychologists' apparent ignorance of basic data precautions?... more »


Essays & Opinions

Large language models vacuously reflect our writerly traditions back at us. So why does their embrace of the em dash shock us?... more »


Sept. 22, 2025

Articles of Note

“The suburban novel’s concerns — conformity, consumerism, lack of fulfillment among plenty — have come to feel dated, almost quaint”... more »


New Books

What makes a good job for a poet? For Constantine Cavafy, a post at Egypt's Department of Irrigation Service gave him ample free time... more »


Essays & Opinions

To fend off the creeping prevalence of AI-written prose, one must adopt a new kind of literacy, an adaptive practice of bullshit detection... more »


Sept. 19, 2025

Articles of Note

The child art star. Is great art a justification for the extreme exposure of the children of memoirists or photographers? ... more »


New Books

"What growing up fundamentalist helped me learn early on is how terribly wrong you can be while thinking very hard”... more »


Essays & Opinions

What makes a literary “it” girl? Going to certain magazine parties, being beautiful, and writing on Substack, comprise the cliche... more »


Sept. 18, 2025

Articles of Note

Have you smelled that robot stink? It wafts off writing that's grammatically fluent but conceptually hollow... more »


New Books

Greenwich Village was “vicious” for James Baldwin — “partly because of the natives, largely because of the tourists, and absolutely because of the cops”... more »


Essays & Opinions

Gertrude Stein, clown princess. "All the attention directed at Stein has been unfair or misplaced, even from her admirers"... more »


Sept. 17, 2025

Articles of Note

The vanishing art of editing. Few have wielded a sharp No. 2 pencil with more skill than Star Lawrence... more »


New Books

Beware the AI Prophets and their horde of hype-mongers, grifters, techno-messiahs, and pseudo-intellectuals... more »


Essays & Opinions

A $23-million Stradivarius is just an instrument that tickles “human ears by friction of a horse’s tail on the entrails of a cat”... more »


Sept. 16, 2025

Articles of Note

Is physics in crisis? That's the ascendant view on YouTube. Cue the rise of "conspiracy physics"... more »


New Books

"Sometimes an era is graced with a gift — a book that is not merely deficient in the usual ways ... but epochal in its ineptitude"... more »


Essays & Opinions

The paradox of lexicography: A golden age for the appreciation of language coincides with the demise of the dictionary... more »


Sept. 15, 2025

Articles of Note

On July 15, 2021, Max Bazerman received upsetting news: The Harvard professor was complicit in a massive fraud... more »


New Books

Stupidity is one of those things that's always just there, forever and always. Can it really have a history?... more »


Essays & Opinions

The hoarder, the mansplainer, the guy with bad timing — we need character sketches to help us articulate, and change, our qualities... more »


Sept. 12, 2025

Articles of Note

“‘Cultural criticism’ is a term like ‘religion’ — that is, it exists, but it also doesn’t.” B.D. McClay explains... more »


New Books

The Medieval moon. The moon was taken to be a cause for the Black Death, a symbol of female foolishness, and a drinking partner... more »


Essays & Opinions

Substack “is the emerging locus of the literary world, and may swallow it completely in the next five years”... more »


Sept. 11, 2025

Articles of Note

In the 1950s, attacks on education were aimed at individual teachers. Now the target is the system itself... more »


New Books

How did a large swath of the Anglophone intelligentsia turn against free speech — one of its best, and most ennobling, traditions?... more »


Essays & Opinions

Social media has devolved into slop —  and users are logging off. Its death rattle will be not a bang but a shrug... more »


Sept. 10, 2025

Articles of Note

Mary Roach, "laureate of the lurid," has a knack for surfacing facts that, once learned, you'd prefer to forget... more »


New Books

“Against the backdrop of inevitable human mediocrity, rules are attractive because they promise to insure a generally acceptable level of competence”... more »


Essays & Opinions

Criticism used to be aimed at shaping taste. Now it largely reflects the audience's taste back to it... more »


Sept. 9, 2025

Articles of Note

From bank robber to scholar: A new generation of addiction scientists use their personal experiences to inform their research... more »


New Books

Baseball is both out of sync with the times and out of touch with its own history. As Roger Angell put it: “I hate modern baseball”... more »


Essays & Opinions

Mary Oliver and her detractors. Her sincerity, simplicity, and commercial success were all deeply suspect. But why?... more »


Sept. 8, 2025

Articles of Note

"The prospect of time itself being wielded as a weapon has transformed the once-rare field of advanced horology into a strategic priority"... more »


New Books

Oliver Sacks knew three things about himself: He took everything to excess, he wasn't a conventional neurologist, he preferred patients to colleagues... more »


Essays & Opinions

What’s most striking about the attack on higher education is not how illiberal it is; it’s how little Americans care... more »


Sept. 5, 2025

Articles of Note

What ails liberal democracy? Its defenders are myopic, parochial, and naïve — and in need of a dose of realism... more »


New Books

A veteran shaman wonders: Why do tourists come to see him when they aren’t sick? And why do they all hate their parents?... more »


Essays & Opinions

Really digging into a work of literature is one of the great liberal arts. What if it’s a dying art?... more »




Subscribe to our Newsletter

Articles of Note

The dodo, the woolly mammoth, the Tasmanian tiger: One company believes it can bring them back, making animal extinction a thing of the past... more »


Rachel Ruysch’s reputation once rivalled Rembrant’s. Now, due to snobbery and sexism, her paintings are compared with wallpaper... more »


Biographers have been likened to fiction writers and professional burglars. Richard Holmes takes a different view... more »


Since 1998, Arts & Letters Daily has linked to more than 17,000 articles, book reviews and essays. Consider supporting us. »

The gallerist Mary Boone ruled the 1980s New York art scene. At 73, she’s fresh out of federal prison and back at work... more »


The Gothic doesn’t moralize. There are no happy endings. Only intermingled, chaotic narratives of fear and transgression... more »


In 17th-century Europe, an eclectic mix of aphorism, fiction, dialogue, and essay cultivated a new sensibility: aesthetic taste... more »


Cheever, Updike, Bellow, Ellison — is anyone under 40 still reading the titans of mid-20th-century literature?... more »


Michel Houellebecq’s writing is a serious, perhaps desperate effort to express directly the experience of total absorption... more »


Arvo Pärt is the most-performed living composer, after John Williams. His genre: holy minimalism... more »


“The suburban novel’s concerns — conformity, consumerism, lack of fulfillment among plenty — have come to feel dated, almost quaint”... more »


The child art star. Is great art a justification for the extreme exposure of the children of memoirists or photographers? ... more »


Have you smelled that robot stink? It wafts off writing that's grammatically fluent but conceptually hollow... more »


The vanishing art of editing. Few have wielded a sharp No. 2 pencil with more skill than Star Lawrence... more »


Is physics in crisis? That's the ascendant view on YouTube. Cue the rise of "conspiracy physics"... more »


On July 15, 2021, Max Bazerman received upsetting news: The Harvard professor was complicit in a massive fraud... more »


“‘Cultural criticism’ is a term like ‘religion’ — that is, it exists, but it also doesn’t.” B.D. McClay explains... more »


In the 1950s, attacks on education were aimed at individual teachers. Now the target is the system itself... more »


Mary Roach, "laureate of the lurid," has a knack for surfacing facts that, once learned, you'd prefer to forget... more »


From bank robber to scholar: A new generation of addiction scientists use their personal experiences to inform their research... more »


"The prospect of time itself being wielded as a weapon has transformed the once-rare field of advanced horology into a strategic priority"... more »


What ails liberal democracy? Its defenders are myopic, parochial, and naïve — and in need of a dose of realism... more »


"One of the things I came to admire about academia is the way it manages to screw everyone in a slightly different way"... more »


The man who inspired Shakespeare, infuriated Robert Greene, shafted Thomas Kyd, and was stabbed in murky circumstances... more »


Every era gets the self-help books it deserves. Why are today's teaching everyone to be a jerk?... more »


After a celebrated first novel, Arundhati Roy pivoted to punditry. Can she now escape her own didacticism?... more »


The Mercator projection was ideal for navigation in the age of sail, but is it finally time for a new world map?... more »


What's it like to re-read Moby-Dick when you're Ahab's age? Caleb Crain sees some things more acutely now... more »


Christopher Marlowe didn’t merely precede Shakespeare — he made the Bard’s career possible... more »


Cultivation of courage has fallen away in our modern conception of morality. One field in which it still thrives: boxing... more »


With a large advance and an exclusive source, Joan Didion was set to write a blockbuster on the Charles Manson murders. Why did it never appear?... more »


Generative AI loves it, and so the em dash — elegant, gentle friend to writers — is under attack... more »


What makes an image a masterpiece, a source of deep perceptual satisfaction? The interplay between repetition and variation ... more »


Suffering from mental illness, the poet James Schuyler gave his first public reading at the age of 65. It was a sensation... more »


“A spectacular, flamboyant kingdom of the sun.” Despite its politics, holidaymakers say fascist Spain as a utopia... more »


What if social media wasn’t destroying our relationship to literature, but spurring a golden age of social reading?... more »


Heteropessimism. Having crunched the numbers and pored over studies, the economist Corinne Low has concluded it was a mistake to date men... more »


More aspects of your life are governed by data than you might expect. The common goal? Predict, optimize, profit... more »


“In pop culture, Drake is disappointment’s mouthpiece and its walking embodiment — it’s almost all he talks about”... more »


A bone-chilling specter haunts the linguistic landscape: the creeping uniformity of AI voice... more »


Jane Austen was attuned to the ways that "little matters" — footstools, boots, curtains – can reveal big things... more »


New Books

The history of vanilla — the world’s favorite flavor — is rife with counterfeiting, pilfering, piracy, smuggling, and account fraud... more »


An instant classic that has endured for seven centuries, the history of the reception of Dante’s Divine Comedy is a history of Western taste... more »


Know your meme. In the early 2000s, technology, art, and amateurism combined to reach such cultural achievements as LOLcats... more »


“If anyone builds it, everyone dies.” Eliezer Yudkowsky thinks hyperintelligent AI could be worse than nuclear war... more »


Charlotte Brontë was a secular saint who cared for her frail siblings in the face of their cruel, selfish father — or so the story goes... more »


New York City saw its first traffic jam in 1913. The cause? A Henri Bergson lecture at Columbia... more »


To understand what’s lost when a waiter tells you to scan a QR code, peruse the history of the menu... more »


Sally Mann is not just a taker of ethereal photographs. She is a Southern yarn-spinner, a humorist, and a darkly comic raconteur... more »


What’s the greater scandal: A few bad actors producing shady studies — or major psychologists' apparent ignorance of basic data precautions?... more »


What makes a good job for a poet? For Constantine Cavafy, a post at Egypt's Department of Irrigation Service gave him ample free time... more »


"What growing up fundamentalist helped me learn early on is how terribly wrong you can be while thinking very hard”... more »


Greenwich Village was “vicious” for James Baldwin — “partly because of the natives, largely because of the tourists, and absolutely because of the cops”... more »


Beware the AI Prophets and their horde of hype-mongers, grifters, techno-messiahs, and pseudo-intellectuals... more »


"Sometimes an era is graced with a gift — a book that is not merely deficient in the usual ways ... but epochal in its ineptitude"... more »


Stupidity is one of those things that's always just there, forever and always. Can it really have a history?... more »


The Medieval moon. The moon was taken to be a cause for the Black Death, a symbol of female foolishness, and a drinking partner... more »


How did a large swath of the Anglophone intelligentsia turn against free speech — one of its best, and most ennobling, traditions?... more »


“Against the backdrop of inevitable human mediocrity, rules are attractive because they promise to insure a generally acceptable level of competence”... more »


Baseball is both out of sync with the times and out of touch with its own history. As Roger Angell put it: “I hate modern baseball”... more »


Oliver Sacks knew three things about himself: He took everything to excess, he wasn't a conventional neurologist, he preferred patients to colleagues... more »


A veteran shaman wonders: Why do tourists come to see him when they aren’t sick? And why do they all hate their parents?... more »


William F. Buckley, curious about marijuana, sailed into international waters to try it. Then he dabbled with LSD... more »


James Baldwin was larger than life — a Black American Socrates. He was attuned to fragility, alienation, and anguish... more »


Agnes Callard claims a Socratic ethic in her latest book, but instead of probing and questioning she delivers resolute answers... more »


“Literary history does not, it turns out, have many examples of people appreciating great chaptering”... more »


A century of scholarship has shown that the figure of the lone genius is largely mythical. Is Einstein the exception?... more »


If anyone could pull off a campus novel about hell, it should be R.F. Kuang. And yet, her latest dark tale of academia drags... more »


John Updike was that rarest of things: a writer who sounds the same in private as he did in public.... more »


Stephen Batchelor has spent a lifetime trying to transcend divisions between Buddhist and Greek thought. The work goes on... more »


"A mental patient, like an alcoholic, is endlessly cunning when it comes to subverting salvation, and Shulamith Firestone was one of the best"... more »


When biologists talk of evolution, they tend to mean Darwinian natural selection. But what about other types of evolution, which explain other things?... more »


Revenge delivers such an intoxicating chemical high that we regularly stage and imagine grievances necessitating justice... more »


“We are obsessed with bad sex and how to protect against it, and we talk about that almost to the exclusion of good sex and how to have it”... more »


A new genre has appeared on the book scene: a biography of a biography. Joseph Epstein has mixed feelings... more »


Jamaica Kincaid is known for her political writing. Let's also consider her early, humorous work and her passion for gardening... more »


The CIA Book Club started with dropping copies of Animal Farm by balloon into East Berlin... more »


Looking to pinpoint the era in which the culture began coming apart at the seams, Paul Elie makes the case for the ‘80s... more »


Is it possible to exclude ideology from debate on our most controversial social issues? Thomas Chatterton Williams thinks so... more »


Constantine Cavafy is an indispensable poet that was throughout his life poised to disappear into obscurity... more »


Essays & Opinions

In 1956, Gore Vidal declared: “I am at heart a propagandist, a tremendous hater, a tiresome nag”... more »


Many writers find writing agonizing. Few have expressed that feeling as vividly as Cynthia Ozick... more »


Mary Carleton, the “German Princess,” charged with bigamy and theft, was a sensation in 1660s London. More than 500 people visited her in jail... more »


Cormac McCarthy could remember nearly everything he had read or heard. He was also a hoarder, with an affinity for nonstick cookware and tweed coats... more »


Why are even tenured professors, people with the most secure jobs on earth, so unwilling to speak their minds?... more »


The screen revolution will shape our politics as profoundly as the reading revolution of the 18th century did. Welcome to the postliterate society... more »


Consider the snail. One lung, one heart, one foot, 15,000 teeth, and first appeared 200 million years before dinosaurs... more »


What does an essayist need from a reader? To be willing to enter spaces in which solidarity is one of the possibilities... more »


Large language models vacuously reflect our writerly traditions back at us. So why does their embrace of the em dash shock us?... more »


To fend off the creeping prevalence of AI-written prose, one must adopt a new kind of literacy, an adaptive practice of bullshit detection... more »


What makes a literary “it” girl? Going to certain magazine parties, being beautiful, and writing on Substack, comprise the cliche... more »


Gertrude Stein, clown princess. "All the attention directed at Stein has been unfair or misplaced, even from her admirers"... more »


A $23-million Stradivarius is just an instrument that tickles “human ears by friction of a horse’s tail on the entrails of a cat”... more »


The paradox of lexicography: A golden age for the appreciation of language coincides with the demise of the dictionary... more »


The hoarder, the mansplainer, the guy with bad timing — we need character sketches to help us articulate, and change, our qualities... more »


Substack “is the emerging locus of the literary world, and may swallow it completely in the next five years”... more »


Social media has devolved into slop —  and users are logging off. Its death rattle will be not a bang but a shrug... more »


Criticism used to be aimed at shaping taste. Now it largely reflects the audience's taste back to it... more »


Mary Oliver and her detractors. Her sincerity, simplicity, and commercial success were all deeply suspect. But why?... more »


What’s most striking about the attack on higher education is not how illiberal it is; it’s how little Americans care... more »


Really digging into a work of literature is one of the great liberal arts. What if it’s a dying art?... more »


Robin D.G. Kelley: “The myth of the liberal university, of the transcendent intellectual, of the power of reason shatters at once”... more »


V.S. Naipaul has taken up a great Romantic ideal: making literature congruent with life. Failure is built into the project... more »


ChatGPT came into being in late 2022. It took only a few years for everyone to start talking like chatbots... more »


Funding of science has become larger and more bureaucratic. What have we lost? Oddball ideas... more »


A literary star of the Harlem Renaissance, Jessie Redmon Fauset often gets overlooked. Why?... more »


Pop-music critics have long been jerks, cranks, and spoilsports. Now the unthinkable has happened: They've become nice... more »


"Systems collapse, things break down, and time tends irreversibly towards disorder and eventual annihilation"... more »


Historical error often helps build national consciousness — and so correcting the record can feel like a threat to the nation... more »


AI can inform. Novels can transform. What will shape the human spirit in decades to come? David Brooks has thoughts... more »


By the Victorian era, Milton had been demoted from sublime poet to good liberal, a republican robbed of radicalness... more »


In the study of English, how did criticism come to supplant rhetoric, belles-lettres, literary history, and philology?... more »


Literary masters offer much wisdom on lassitude and lethargy. But can they help you get in shape? Dwight Garner investigates... more »


The university compensates for what many modern democracies struggle to do: think and act across long historical durations... more »


Human nature is real, says Francis Fukuyama, and it's been a decisive force in political philosophy. Why does that fact provoke such resistance?... more »


James Baldwin juggled countless contrasting ideas, as well as the ability to live with these contradictions... more »


For Iris Murdoch, morality hinged on escaping our egos and attending to others — and so it was rooted in love... more »


“Evil can be a spiritual experience, too.” Mary Gaitskill turns to the words of murders and rapists to understand violence... more »


How to describe a Cynthia Ozick's essays? "Ideas are earthquakes; feelings are floods; literature can lift us up or smite us down"... more »


F. Scott Fitzgerald: the most foolish of American writers. He was foolish in his successes, and no less foolish in his many failures... more »


Alekseyevich Bunin was renowned for his romantic poems and sensual prose. He was also a peerless insult artist... more »


"To think of a satirist as a person who angrily turns against a gale-force wind and sprays liquefied shit at a group of constantly multiplying targets would not be entirely wrong"... more »


How to distinguish perfectionism from the mere pursuit of excellence: Reaching the goal doesn't help... more »


We're watching the last meaningful distinctions between creating and copying dissolve, and most people couldn’t care less... more »


The anthropomorphic mistake: It isn’t to see emotion where there is none. It is to see the wrong emotion... more »


Ibsen and the paradox of progressive moralism. He demonstrated how claims to serve ideals are often ways of serving ourselves... more »


Written reviews have long been the currency of cultural coverage. Now they are imperiled – and worthy of defense... more »


The shushing librarian performed a public service: defending quiet. Now "reading rooms" are turned over to zoom calls... more »


In poetry, the liminal is a tired, vague, often meaningless signifier. Not for Laura Gilpin... more »


For Christopher Lasch, sloppy writing was a form of sloth, and ambiguity was a form of lying. In other words, style revealed the soul... more »


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