Issue


Featured Articles

The Impeccable Gardener

Author: Julie V. Iovine

Beatrix Farrand’s exactingly beautiful designs changed the American landscape

Plain Talk From Ralph Waldo Emerson

Author: Gay Wilson Allen

Many Americans, Hemingway among them, thought him a solemn prig. But Emerson’s biographer discovers a man who found strength and music in the language of the streets.

Inventing A Modern Navy

Author: Elting E. Morison

Chaos and farce and catastrophe played a big part. But so did a few men of vision.

The Bottle

Author: Betty Mussell Lundy

Seventy-one years ago, a designer working frantically to meet a deadline for the Coca-Cola Company produced a form that today is recognized on sight by 90 percent of the people on earth

Part I Four Centuries Of Surprises

Author: David M. Ludlum

We talk about it constantly and we arrange our lives around it. So did our parents; and so did the very first colonists. But it took Americans a long time to understand their weather—and we still have trouble getting it right.

Part Iii What Can We Do About It?

Author: William B. Meyer

For more than two hundred years, Americans have tried to change the weather by starting fires, setting off explosions, cutting trees, even planning to divert the Gulf Stream. The question now is not how to do it, but whether to do it at all.

Perfectly Simple

Author: Edward Sorel

William Auerbach-Levy’s genius as a caricaturist lay in what he chose to leave out.

Enlisted For Life

Author: Hiller B. Zobel

Oliver Wendell Holmes was wounded three times in some of the worst fighting of the Civil War. But for him, the most terrible battles were the ones he had missed.