
Maxim US
After the Dance
After becoming a world-class ballerina, Rachelle di Stasio is set to excel as a model and actress
2 min |
November - December 2022

Vanity Fair US
The Past Is Present
Half a century ago-amid Supreme Court hearings on Roe v. Wade, racial reckonings, and political tension a group of women launched Ms. magazine. Here, Gloria Steinem reflects on that first year
2 min |
November 2022

Vanity Fair US
The Fight Ahead
The Supreme Court's decision to end federal protections for abortion access didn't just rewind the clock 50 years, it opened a Pandora's box of confusing, potentially life-threatening legal complications. VF talks with five women on the front lines.
10+ min |
November 2022

Vogue US
Queen Elizabeth II, 1926–2022
In honor of Britain’s longest-reigning monarch, Annie Leibovitz and Hamish Bowles pay tribute to a life of resilience and service.
9 min |
November 2022

The Atlantic
Who Do the Benin Bronzes Belong to?
Thousands of pieces of art were looted by the British in what is now Nigeria, and are held mostly in Western museums. What to do with them is a harder question than it might seem.
10+ min |
October 2022

Reason magazine
The Twin Crusades Against Drugs and Guns
Americans are suffering the "unjust, cruel, and even irrational" consequences of the wars on intoxicants and firearms.
10+ min |
November 2022

Newsweek US
'The Rock on Which Modern Britain Was Built'
In her seven-decade dedication to a life of service to her subjects, Elizabeth II won their hearts as well as their respect
4 min |
September 23, 2022

Newsweek US
Charles in Charge
With Queen Camilla by his side, the new king faces challenges in his realm-and his family
6 min |
September 23, 2022

Harper's BAZAAR - US
Amanda Gorman Poet, 24
Amanda Gorman, whose recitation of "The Hill We Climb" at the 2021 inaguration made her America's most famous poet, has never met a mountain she couldn't scale
4 min |
September 2022

Mother Jones
Black or Bot?
As trolls and foreign agents co-opt Blackness for political gain, it's becoming harder and harder to identify truth online.
9 min |
September/October 2022

Cosmopolitan US
Reverse Culture Shock Is the Dark Side of Living Abroad
No one talks about it, but I'm ready to.
4 min |
Issue 05, 2022

The Atlantic
The Wedding Present
As a young woman, I had a friendly correspondence with a German soldier right after the war. I've been thinking about the silence at the core of our exchange ever since.
10+ min |
September 2022

The Atlantic
A World Without White People
Mohsin Hamid's empty parable of race transformation
10+ min |
September 2022

Poets & Writers Magazine
Best Wishes
Stories from the front of the book-signing line
7 min |
September - October 2022

Poets & Writers Magazine
Annie Hwang - Agents & Editors
Annie Hwang of Ayesha Pande Literary talks about community building, professional burnout, the questions writers should ask when querying agents, and the demanding work of advocating for diversity in publishing.
10+ min |
September - October 2022

ELLE US
Ms. Robinson Goes to Hollywood
When my book became a TV show. I had to get myself camera-ready.
5 min |
August 2022

Poets & Writers Magazine
Book Prize Celebrates Older Poets
Even as the number of awards for debut poetry books seems to have increased over the years, an inordinate number of those awards are won by writers age forty and under.
4 min |
July - August 2022

Harper's BAZAAR - US
As Told to - The Play's the Thing
Shakespeare's Hamlet has been endlessly adapted. Playwright James Ijames's fat ham turns the chilling tragedy into a riotous exploration of queerness.
5 min |
August 2022

Reason magazine
We Have a Printing Paper Problem
A new supply chain parable for our times
6 min |
August - September 2022

Reason magazine
Who Controls What Books You Can Read?
Welcome to Reason's summer banned books issue
5 min |
August - September 2022

Reason magazine
Rise of the Sensitivity Reader
Overzealous gatekeeping on race and gender is killing books before they're published or even written.
10+ min |
August - September 2022

Reason magazine
Why Ryan Reynolds Can Use Winnie-the-Pooh To Sell You a Phone Plan
As Pop Culture icons enter the public domain, a strange new era of copyright begins.
10+ min |
August - September 2022

Newsweek
‘Men and Women Need to Fight Together for Equality'
Track and field-great Jackie Joyner-Kersee on winning Olympic gold and her hopes for the next generation of female athletes
8 min |
July 01 - 08, 2022 (Double Issue)

The Atlantic
The Book That Never Stops Changing
What I’ve learned about Dublin, and myself, in a lifetime of reading Ulysses
8 min |
July - August 2022

Esquire US
Two fathers
Their sons were among the sixteen people who were killed in a bus accident on a cold afternoon in Saskatchewan. Chris Joseph and Scott Thomas lost their sons in the same way, but in grief, their roads diverged.
10+ min |
Summer 2022

True West
Alaska's Wild West
Adventure and history await discovery across the last frontier state.
9 min |
June 2022

Reader's Digest US
Advice to the Young
One of the world's most celebrated writers has much to share—though she sometimes wonders whether she should keep her thoughts to herself
10 min |
June 2022

The Atlantic
Tracy Flick for Principal
Tom Perrotta's '90s antihero returns.
10+ min |
June 2022

The Atlantic
Chasing Joan Didion
I visited the writer's California homes, from Berkeley to Malibu. What was looking for?
10+ min |
June 2022

New York magazine
Fernanda Melchor Writes Tragic Machismo
In her novels, male fear and desire are two sides of the same coin.
4 min |