Topics for the water cooler and then some
Amid the pandemic, I.V.F. rates are on the rise, and so are disputes about what to do with remaining frozen embryos when couples split up. For some, it has gotten messy.
As memories of the Holocaust fade, one survivor’s images remain vivid.
The Cardinal won a tense battle and advanced to the national final for the first time since 2010.
Making voting convenient doesn’t necessarily translate into more votes, research shows.
Samantha Flores, who created a community center in Mexico City for older L.G.B.T.Q. people that closed during the pandemic, is hoping to reopen it.
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Books to Read
Suggested reading from Times editors
I thought I had a classic fear of commitment, but it’s more complicated than that.
Confronting the things that challenge us, off-the-charts stress levels and money matters.
I’ve reported on behavior and mental health for 20 years. As I exit, I can’t help but wonder why researchers have placed so little emphasis on helping people in distress today.
In “Ghosts of New York,” Jim Lewis introduces four characters and follows their intersecting paths.
A not-so-secret ingredient packs Eric Kim’s new creamy pasta with umami.
A Texas woman is appealing her conviction of voting illegally in the 2016 election. A lawyer says her prosecution “guts the entire purpose of the provisional ballot system.”
You can’t stop your landlord from renting out common areas to a film crew, but you can try to get some concessions from the production.
Blake Bailey’s comprehensive life of Roth features a parade of book after book, award after award, and lover after lover.
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