The hostile, paranoid, and increasingly authoritarian path ahead for American conservatism.
By Jonathan Chait
As the Taliban retook Afghanistan, a musician in California named AJ Subat set out to evacuate as many people as he could.
By Lisa Miller
How the Fed might manufacture the next recession.
The Phantom of the Opera’s last act.
School-admissions whisperer Joyce Szuflita.
What does it mean to die on your own terms?
Matt Gaffney’s latest puzzle.
Readers sound off on the new Asian America, the state of podcasting, and more.
Our deliberately oversimplified guide to who falls where on our taste hierarchies.
Do you even roll, bro?
An influx of actually worth visiting shops.
Ceramic courses that fuse the technical with the experiential.
Scores a deal at Gramercy Park Hotel’s “everything must go” sale.
Keeping a bohemian artist’s legacy alive in Greenwich Village.
Eisenberg’s is now a new-old mash-up known as S&P.
Another Smith Street revival.
Welcome to Shinji’s, an opulent new cocktail bar that honors the Tokyo Fixer.
The actress is resolutely complex in The Piano Lesson.
Mapping an author’s unexpected acclaim.
Why virtual concerts may be best suited for living artists.
The indie-pop duo still sound as urgent as adolescence.
Blonde’s hollow impersonation of Marilyn Monroe.
Hasan Minhaj leads an inspirational school assembly in The King’s Jester.
Kid Cudi’s Entergalactic is pretty, affecting — and a little too smooth.
Twenty-five picks for the next two weeks.