While the election was ugly in its vociferousness, Gopnik says it was beautiful in the passions it evoked. On the Republican side, Gopnik said the election was passionate. On the President's side, he ...
When I heard last year that Adam Gopnik was writing a “stirring defense of liberalism” titled A Thousand Small Sanities, I had many questions. How would he turn liberalism into a story about his kids ...
Earlier this week, I attended a reading at The Strand for Adam Gopnik's new book, The Table Comes First: Family, France, and the Meaning of Food. The book is an intellectual dive into the history of ...
In his book, Gopnik puts his signature genteel bohemian liberalism on full display. He rhapsodizes about how John Stuart Mill and Harriet Taylor’s marriage was a metaphor for the power of “compromise.
The idea that it can be bounded in by honest conservatives in a Cabinet or restrained by normal constitutional limits is unsupported by history. “Yes, we should go there,” Gopnik wrote. The worst ...
In Angels and Ages: A Short Book About Darwin, Lincoln, and Modern Life, Adam Gopnik calls Charles Darwin a “pointillist” because he made grand theory out of tiny details, a method with which I ...
This week in the magazine, Adam Gopnik writes about the relationship between atheism and religious belief, and reviews two new books about the history of atheism. On the New Yorker Out Loud podcast, ...
A one-man show, a box of old stories, and the strange intimacy of talking to a room full of strangers. The Canadian federal election, on Monday, which culminated in Mark Carney’s retention of the ...
If you are a recent New York transplant who has found yourself possessed with longing for a time when the city must have felt more authentic, when you might have wandered the streets with great minds, ...
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