In How to Be Multiple Wellesley College philosophy professor Helena De Bres explores what twin-dom teaches us about human connection, self-hood, how we love, and who we are.
Read MorePsychotherapist Wilderness Sarchild, licensed to treat patients with the psychedelic drug psilocybin tells us everything we need to know about the journey.
Read MoreIn Pledging My Time, musicologist Ray Padget collected 60 years of stories about Bob Dylan through the memories of the many musicians with whom he shared the stage.
Read MoreAmy Brady recounts the very cool history of ice and how a visionary from Boston convinced people who had never even seen it to love it. Hint: Frozen Daiquiris.
Read MoreMarcel Bruer was one of America’s most innovative designers. If his Wellfleet retreat—containing priceless relics of the Bauhaus movement—hits the market, it will be demolished.
Read MoreAlthough the battlefields have moved from nude postcards to porn hub, Sociologist Kelsy Burke explains why America’s obsession with pornography is still front and center in the culture wars.
Read MoreEcstasy is the Rave drug. It’s also our best hope for treating PTSD and other mental illnesses. In I Feel Love Rachel Nuwer unpacks the MDMA story, from Berkeley lab to Burning Man.
Read MoreMalignant narcissist? Hypo-manic sociopath? In his satiric novel Death of the Great Man, noted psychiatrist Peter D. Kramer gets our ex-president on the couch.
Read MoreIn War Made Invisible Norman Solomon tells us why we’re largely blind to the fact that America has continuously been engaged in wars for over two decades. Hint: It’s the press, Stupid.
Read More