Reader responses to our June issue
British generals have long been seen as the bunglers of the deadly conflict, but a revisionist look argues that a U.S. general was the real donkey
Celebrated for her books about love, the writer might finally win a Nobel Prize for something darker
A half century ago, a young doctor took on a deadly form of cancer—and the scientific establishment
Now fallen into shadow, the Romania-born Baron Franz Nopcsa was a groundbreaking scientist, adventurer -- and would-be king
Located in Austria, the archaeological site is providing rich new details about the lives and deaths of the arena combatants
Early iterations saved soldiers' lives, debunked myths about slavery and helped Americans settle the frontier
The British author’s world—antic, subversive, wildly inventive and monstrously humane—returns to the screen in Steven Spielberg’s <i>The BFG</i>
With weeds, critters and Celtic symbols, Mary Reynolds is transforming what it means to garden
Even amid the carnage of the war, the battle in the Dolomites was like nothing the world had ever seen—or has seen since
Is it crazy to think that people are at their most natural in the water?
You asked, we answered
The artwork, by famed artist Jacob Lawrence, captured the turning point in the Civil Rights Movement
The renowned artist dazzles the world again, this time using a lake in northern Italy as his canvas
In central Africa, a former Israeli military trainer and his team are deploying battle-tested tactics to stop the runaway slaughter of elephants
The chance discovery beneath a nearly 2,000-year-old pyramid leads to the heart of a lost civilization
New gene-editing technology gives scientists the ability to wipe out the carriers of malaria and the Zika virus. But should they use it?
A new theory links their fate to a meat-heavy regimen
The beauty of the national park became clear long before Ansel Adams
Readers responses to our May issue
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