Thomas Nagel has a prediction: Our present practices of killing animals for food, when no longer gastronomically necessary, will become morally unimaginable... more »
Intelligent design has been dismissed by scientists and courts as "creationism in a cheap tuxedo.” But its advocates persevere. They're just getting dumber... more »
In defense of Instagram poetry. As Samuel Johnson said, “to circumscribe poetry by a definition will only show the narrowness of the definer”... more »
Writers like Zola, Balzac, and Dickens — masters of a range of modes — are vanishingly rare. But we do have John Lanchester... more »
The “Invisible College,” a secret brain trust of scientists and billionaires, is embracing a new religious mode: belief in UFOs... more »
Murdering to Mozart. Once, classical music was the backbone of popular entertainment. Now it's portrayed as a handmaiden to sadism and psychopathic violence... more »
Steven Pinker's message — that despite significant challenges we’re making progress as a species — seems benign. Why do so many people hate him?... more »
The poet Letitia Elizabeth Landon died in 1838 in a castle in Africa. She was 36, an emblem of insipid girlishness. The truth was far darker... more »
Vonnegut’s moral clarity. More than any other writer, he cut through cant and sophistry to expose self-deceptions for what they are... more »
The bad boy of French literature. The real Cyrano de Bergerac dueled, drank, and chased women. When he was 36, the Jesuits reputedly arranged for him to have an accident... more »
What the American West really means. A “limitless frontier,” a “safety valve” for the nation? Greg Grandin unpacks our euphemisms... more »
Richard Rorty took a therapeutic approach to philosophy. Indeed, he wanted to transform it into therapy. We're still dealing with the political implications... more »
A market still exists for Hitler’s watercolors, yet that dark corner of the art world is beset by a problem: rampant forgeries... more »
Oft satirized and generally considered a “dry old stick,” Walter Gropius, founder of the Bauhaus, actually had a touch of charisma... more »
The idea of a "good death" is commonplace, as if death were something at which we succeed or fail, something to achieve. Better to think of a "fitting death"... more »
Who was Oscar Levant? The sardonic piano-playing sidekick in plenty of films in the '40s. Turns out his talent was bigger than anything he managed to do with it... more »
Alfred Stieglitz offered “new ways to see the world.” His vision attracted Georgia O’Keeffe and wove a tangle of personal and professional ambitions... more »
Art forces us to consider the experience of others — but it that a good thing? For Paul Bloom, empathy is selfish and shortsighted. For Knausgaard, it's banal... more »
Talk of translating literature is often esoteric; invariably it's described as an “art.” Unreliability is built into each step of the process. As is anxiety... more »
Between 1917 and 1923, anti-Semitism mutated into something new: the myth of Judeo-Bolshevism. It was a toxic gloss on an ancient hatred. It made Adolf Hitler... more »
It's been said that if nature could write, it would write like Tolstoy. It's his unsurpassed realism that makes reading War and Peace unlike reading any other book... more »
An anti-Communist at large. Arthur Koestler’s 1972 trip to Iceland was pure slapstick: homebrew on the plane, a restaurant called Nausea, and KGB agents galore... more »
Isaac Newton’s interest in alchemy was long regarded as an embarrassment. Now it's seen as the very foundation of all his endeavors... more »
The rise of the pedantic professor. When academic self-regard becomes an intellectual style, no nit is too small to pick... more »
How to become the most successful art thief ever? No violence, no midnight break-ins, no dash to a getaway car... more »
Editing Isaiah Berlin: “You will surely by now not be surprised by my total inaccuracy, vagueness and tremendous distortion of quotations"... more »
The “female Byron.” With her amorous poetry and drug addiction, Letitia Elizabeth Landon was ill-suited for her increasingly Victorian times... more »
Why do we refer to “heads” of state and the long “arm” of the law? The “body politic” is deeply rooted in Western philosophy. And it may be a cure for what ails us... more »
Misogyny is often treated as a question of psychology. But for Kate Manne, the problem is one not of motivation, but of politics... more »
Philosophers tend to speak to one another. But so-called public philosophy aspires to liberate the field from the academy. Is that a good thing?... more »
Creativity is among the most impressive human achievements. It's mysterious — and something that artificial intelligence simply can’t achieve... more »
The internet was shaped by utopian-minded intellectuals who valued respect and transparency. So how did we end up with the internet of today?... more »
Lionel Trilling is known foremost as a critic and professor. Turns out he didn't want to be either. He yearned to be a novelist... more »
As early as 1941, Auden renounced his most celebrated and political works from the 1930s — “Spain” and “September 1, 1939” — as sententious nonsense. Why?... more »
When America read. In the 1940s, people of all backgrounds devoured plays, novels, poems. One hundred million paperbacks went to soldiers alone... more »
Jordan Peterson’s collection of Soviet-era artworks, comprising more than 300 pieces, has taught him something: "Nothing is powerful enough to stand in the way of art"... more »
Once the highest-paid director in Hollywood, the silent-film director Lois Weber has now been all but forgotten. That's a tragedy... more »
For his Stoner, John Williams has been called "the man who wrote the perfect novel.” So why are his other books so resoundingly terrible?... more »
The film project Dau began simply enough, as a biopic about a physicist. It became something else entirely — either a work of genius or total madness... more »
What Stonehenge has come to mean. In the past it exuded grandeur and pathos. Now it’s the site of an absurdist drama concerning traffic... more »
The unobtainable lightness of being. For Plato, thinness was tied to lofty goals. But, as a cultural history of fat reveals, bigger was traditionally better... more »
Failure is at the heart of both learning and moral complexity. It was David Foster Wallace’s master theme, his tool for evoking irony and tragedy... more »
Physicists have long relied on Richard Feynman’s conception of space-time, but some are now dissenting. They point to geometry and something called “the amplituhedron”... more »
History has been unkind to John Ruskin, he of the beard and the wedding-night disaster. In fact, he was a prophet for our times... more »
The continuing uglification of our world. Modernism, with its place-destroying structures, has transformed architecture. It’s time for a return to aesthetics... more »
One of Nancy Gardner Williams’s lecturers was always wearing an ascot and smoking. She married him, and became “Mrs. Stoner”... more »
Gandhi: compassionate unifier, public intellectual, holder of classist and racist ideas. As he held, every “case can be seen from no less than seven points of view”... more »
It’s time for Diderot, long overshadowed by Voltaire and Rousseau, to receive his due: He was not only a founder of modernity; he was the first postmodernist... more »
A silver lining. A military miscue led to Thucydides’ 20-year exile from Athens — but only in the peace and quiet of exile was he able to write his History... more »
Isaiah Berlin’s impostor syndrome. “I remain unshakeably convinced that I have all my life been overestimated,” he confessed. “All I write … is by nature dishevelled"... more »
Artists may pooh-pooh the idea of being cool, but a few of them had it down pat. Consider Warhol’s catatonic effortlessness or Bukowski’s timeless advice: “Don’t try.”... more »
Betty Ballantine, who helped introduce cheap paperbacks to the masses, is dead at 99. Her goal: “To change the reading habits of America”... more »
Humans are by nature violent, yet also cooperative. How did we evolve this way? By killing off the most violent among us, argues a new book... more »
What do almost all ancient myths and folktales have in common? They deal with danger and death and offer highly pragmatic lessons... more »
What is neuroscience doing to art -- explaining away its mystery or, as Eric Kandel would have it, aiding our sense of art's wonder?... more »
Frederick the Great thought little of historians who merely compiled facts. He preferred architects of history, like himself... more »
Revolutions in science, technology, health, and education have reshaped our world. But can things keep getting better?... more »
“Nightmarish and impolite.” Andrea Dworkin’s critics accused her of gender essentialism, histrionics, and dogmatism. She was undaunted... more »
Ten years ago, Roberto Bolaño was the height of literary fashion. Then the “Bolaño Bubble” burst. His work continues to limp out into the market... more »
Look carefully, attend to people and their situations, learn what is right. For Iris Murdoch, morality was grounded in vision and action, not just metaphysics... more »
When early natural philosophers wrote a book, it might be read by 500 people. Then came Bernard le Bovier de Fontenelle and a revolution in pop-science writing... more »
John Stuart Mill is routinely seen by liberals and conservatives as a secular saint. Turns out he was decidedly less secular than we thought... more »
"It’s on me. I’ve said that again and again. And that is really all I’m gonna say. OK?" Jill Abramson talks with one of the writers she's accused of plagiarizing... more »
Thomas Nagel has a prediction: Our present practices of killing animals for food, when no longer gastronomically necessary, will become morally unimaginable... more »
Writers like Zola, Balzac, and Dickens — masters of a range of modes — are vanishingly rare. But we do have John Lanchester... more »
Steven Pinker's message — that despite significant challenges we’re making progress as a species — seems benign. Why do so many people hate him?... more »
The bad boy of French literature. The real Cyrano de Bergerac dueled, drank, and chased women. When he was 36, the Jesuits reputedly arranged for him to have an accident... more »
A market still exists for Hitler’s watercolors, yet that dark corner of the art world is beset by a problem: rampant forgeries... more »
Who was Oscar Levant? The sardonic piano-playing sidekick in plenty of films in the '40s. Turns out his talent was bigger than anything he managed to do with it... more »
Talk of translating literature is often esoteric; invariably it's described as an “art.” Unreliability is built into each step of the process. As is anxiety... more »
An anti-Communist at large. Arthur Koestler’s 1972 trip to Iceland was pure slapstick: homebrew on the plane, a restaurant called Nausea, and KGB agents galore... more »
How to become the most successful art thief ever? No violence, no midnight break-ins, no dash to a getaway car... more »
Why do we refer to “heads” of state and the long “arm” of the law? The “body politic” is deeply rooted in Western philosophy. And it may be a cure for what ails us... more »
Creativity is among the most impressive human achievements. It's mysterious — and something that artificial intelligence simply can’t achieve... more »
As early as 1941, Auden renounced his most celebrated and political works from the 1930s — “Spain” and “September 1, 1939” — as sententious nonsense. Why?... more »
Once the highest-paid director in Hollywood, the silent-film director Lois Weber has now been all but forgotten. That's a tragedy... more »
What Stonehenge has come to mean. In the past it exuded grandeur and pathos. Now it’s the site of an absurdist drama concerning traffic... more »
Physicists have long relied on Richard Feynman’s conception of space-time, but some are now dissenting. They point to geometry and something called “the amplituhedron”... more »
One of Nancy Gardner Williams’s lecturers was always wearing an ascot and smoking. She married him, and became “Mrs. Stoner”... more »
A silver lining. A military miscue led to Thucydides’ 20-year exile from Athens — but only in the peace and quiet of exile was he able to write his History... more »
Betty Ballantine, who helped introduce cheap paperbacks to the masses, is dead at 99. Her goal: “To change the reading habits of America”... more »
What is neuroscience doing to art -- explaining away its mystery or, as Eric Kandel would have it, aiding our sense of art's wonder?... more »
“Nightmarish and impolite.” Andrea Dworkin’s critics accused her of gender essentialism, histrionics, and dogmatism. She was undaunted... more »
When early natural philosophers wrote a book, it might be read by 500 people. Then came Bernard le Bovier de Fontenelle and a revolution in pop-science writing... more »
Jeff Koons creates banal ceramics and quasi porn and skillfully separates rich people from their money. But his real gift: deflecting criticism... more »
On display at the KGB Museum: a single-shot lipstick gun, suitcase phones, and other spy paraphernalia. Not shown: the politics... more »
Every year, rafts of research suggest that some animals have consciousness. To absorb the significance of these findings, consider Jainism... more »
Andy Warhol emerged from the commercial ooze, confining himself largely to the surface of life. Yet his gifts were substantial, especially his ability to make synthetic, mechanized art feel authentic... more »
A talent for unhappiness. Sylvia Plath’s letters to her analyst, composed in the depths of rage, are a triumph of eloquence... more »
“Tiki taka,” “guzuguzu,” “ribuy-tibuy” — ideophones are words whose sound evokes a meaning. Once dismissed as oddities, they are now reshaping linguistics... more »
A middling writer, Mikhail Sholokhov somehow rose to fame at the age of 22. Critics said it was too good to be true. They were right... more »
Stoicism teaches us how to face adversity with equanimity. As a philosophy, it's appealing. But not for our age... more »
Ursula K. Le Guin gravitated toward science fiction in part because it was a “despised, marginal” genre. Unsupervised by literary criticism, its authors remained free... more »
Social media have spawned a generation that regards punctuation as optional, and grammar as something for the elderly. Benjamin Dreyer is here to help... more »
After a cruel imprisonment that sought to subdue his “weak mind,” Diderot sought revenge against the state. His revolutionary weapon: the Encyclopédie... more »
What's new about today's conservative critique of the academy? It’s the populist suggestion that universities reinforce class hierarchies... more »
Since the end of the Cold War, economics has enjoyed a kind of intellectual hegemony, first among equals in the social sciences. That reign is over... more »
Marlon James misses the bygone era of bookish braggadocio. Think Norman Mailer and Philip Roth. “When did we get so nerdy?”... more »
Who has the authority, in a democracy, to determine what counts as truth? This epistemological concern feels timely — but is, in fact, timeless... more »
Once you start making money, writing becomes work and ceases to be fun, said Russell Baker, who died last week. But “when writing is fun, it’s not very good"... more »
The term “liberalism“” first appeared around 1812. Its evolution has been marked by ruptures, setbacks, and cringe-worthy instances of hypocrisy... more »
From his description of cypress trees as candles to his meditation on the shoulders of a kangaroo, D.H. Lawrence remains our perpetual contemporary... more »
During World War II, the Nazis stole millions of books. Many of them are still hiding in plain sight on library shelves throughout Europe... more »
Intelligent design has been dismissed by scientists and courts as "creationism in a cheap tuxedo.” But its advocates persevere. They're just getting dumber... more »
The “Invisible College,” a secret brain trust of scientists and billionaires, is embracing a new religious mode: belief in UFOs... more »
The poet Letitia Elizabeth Landon died in 1838 in a castle in Africa. She was 36, an emblem of insipid girlishness. The truth was far darker... more »
What the American West really means. A “limitless frontier,” a “safety valve” for the nation? Greg Grandin unpacks our euphemisms... more »
Oft satirized and generally considered a “dry old stick,” Walter Gropius, founder of the Bauhaus, actually had a touch of charisma... more »
Alfred Stieglitz offered “new ways to see the world.” His vision attracted Georgia O’Keeffe and wove a tangle of personal and professional ambitions... more »
Between 1917 and 1923, anti-Semitism mutated into something new: the myth of Judeo-Bolshevism. It was a toxic gloss on an ancient hatred. It made Adolf Hitler... more »
Isaac Newton’s interest in alchemy was long regarded as an embarrassment. Now it's seen as the very foundation of all his endeavors... more »
Editing Isaiah Berlin: “You will surely by now not be surprised by my total inaccuracy, vagueness and tremendous distortion of quotations"... more »
Misogyny is often treated as a question of psychology. But for Kate Manne, the problem is one not of motivation, but of politics... more »
The internet was shaped by utopian-minded intellectuals who valued respect and transparency. So how did we end up with the internet of today?... more »
When America read. In the 1940s, people of all backgrounds devoured plays, novels, poems. One hundred million paperbacks went to soldiers alone... more »
For his Stoner, John Williams has been called "the man who wrote the perfect novel.” So why are his other books so resoundingly terrible?... more »
The unobtainable lightness of being. For Plato, thinness was tied to lofty goals. But, as a cultural history of fat reveals, bigger was traditionally better... more »
History has been unkind to John Ruskin, he of the beard and the wedding-night disaster. In fact, he was a prophet for our times... more »
Gandhi: compassionate unifier, public intellectual, holder of classist and racist ideas. As he held, every “case can be seen from no less than seven points of view”... more »
Isaiah Berlin’s impostor syndrome. “I remain unshakeably convinced that I have all my life been overestimated,” he confessed. “All I write … is by nature dishevelled"... more »
Humans are by nature violent, yet also cooperative. How did we evolve this way? By killing off the most violent among us, argues a new book... more »
Frederick the Great thought little of historians who merely compiled facts. He preferred architects of history, like himself... more »
Ten years ago, Roberto Bolaño was the height of literary fashion. Then the “Bolaño Bubble” burst. His work continues to limp out into the market... more »
John Stuart Mill is routinely seen by liberals and conservatives as a secular saint. Turns out he was decidedly less secular than we thought... more »
Can a theory based on evidence from a half-dozen continents, a dozen disciplines, several dozen species, and two million years explain the origins of morality?... more »
All of American intellectual history in 200 pages? "Even if it is a gateway drug for heftier works of intellectual history, it’s still a pretty decent hit"... more »
Bitter cold, hunger, and trips in packed freight trains did not create a literary ambiance. Still, Józef Czapski delivered prison-camp lectures on Proust... more »
The relationship between Catherine the Great and Diderot shows how the Enlightenment was both opposed and fostered by the monarchies it undermined — one of history’s ironies... more »
Happiness, trust, and life expectancy are on the decline — or so we're told. Doom-mongering is in fashion. Why?... more »
"The peculiar burden of nonrecognition, of invisibility, that is the condition of being an Asian man in America." Wesley Yang on the bitterness of being ignored... more »
The understated Nietzsche. Far from a bombastic prophet, he was mild-mannered, “uncomplicated,” a perfect gentleman... more »
Middlemarch turns on the beating of a squirrel’s heart; Dickens turns dogs into social commentary — what was it about Victorians and animals?... more »
A new book attempts to defend Henry Miller. But despite his talents, an insurmountable hurdle remains: He did not think hard enough about women... more »
An anthropologist sets out to prove Why Women Have Better Sex Under Socialism. Was architecture better under socialism, too?... more »
Mikhail Sholokhov is remembered as a Soviet hack, ungenerous crank, and mouthpiece for Stalin. He was all of that, and a genuine literary talent... more »
“Cheer up,” implore the New Optimists — human history is full of progress. But that progress often results from pessimism and discontent... more »
“This age has always displeased me.” Petrarch cultivated a crotchety reputation to keep visitors away and his focus on the distant past... more »
When did campy misandry become contemporary shorthand for communicating one’s feminist bona fides?... more »
Jill Abramson’s new book is not a serious reckoning with journalism. It’s a poor swan song for the era of pre-internet news reporting... more »
When Chopin died, at the age of 39, it was after a lifetime of dodging close calls. How did physical frailty shape his creative choices?... more »
Robert Conquest enjoyed poetry, pornography, and palling around with Amis and Larkin. This was good training for becoming a Sovietologist... more »
Dissidents are always a little crazy by definition. Solzhenitsyn, a bold and eccentric man of ideas, was no exception... more »
In defense of Instagram poetry. As Samuel Johnson said, “to circumscribe poetry by a definition will only show the narrowness of the definer”... more »
Murdering to Mozart. Once, classical music was the backbone of popular entertainment. Now it's portrayed as a handmaiden to sadism and psychopathic violence... more »
Vonnegut’s moral clarity. More than any other writer, he cut through cant and sophistry to expose self-deceptions for what they are... more »
Richard Rorty took a therapeutic approach to philosophy. Indeed, he wanted to transform it into therapy. We're still dealing with the political implications... more »
The idea of a "good death" is commonplace, as if death were something at which we succeed or fail, something to achieve. Better to think of a "fitting death"... more »
Art forces us to consider the experience of others — but it that a good thing? For Paul Bloom, empathy is selfish and shortsighted. For Knausgaard, it's banal... more »
It's been said that if nature could write, it would write like Tolstoy. It's his unsurpassed realism that makes reading War and Peace unlike reading any other book... more »
The rise of the pedantic professor. When academic self-regard becomes an intellectual style, no nit is too small to pick... more »
The “female Byron.” With her amorous poetry and drug addiction, Letitia Elizabeth Landon was ill-suited for her increasingly Victorian times... more »
Philosophers tend to speak to one another. But so-called public philosophy aspires to liberate the field from the academy. Is that a good thing?... more »
Lionel Trilling is known foremost as a critic and professor. Turns out he didn't want to be either. He yearned to be a novelist... more »
Jordan Peterson’s collection of Soviet-era artworks, comprising more than 300 pieces, has taught him something: "Nothing is powerful enough to stand in the way of art"... more »
The film project Dau began simply enough, as a biopic about a physicist. It became something else entirely — either a work of genius or total madness... more »
Failure is at the heart of both learning and moral complexity. It was David Foster Wallace’s master theme, his tool for evoking irony and tragedy... more »
The continuing uglification of our world. Modernism, with its place-destroying structures, has transformed architecture. It’s time for a return to aesthetics... more »
It’s time for Diderot, long overshadowed by Voltaire and Rousseau, to receive his due: He was not only a founder of modernity; he was the first postmodernist... more »
Artists may pooh-pooh the idea of being cool, but a few of them had it down pat. Consider Warhol’s catatonic effortlessness or Bukowski’s timeless advice: “Don’t try.”... more »
What do almost all ancient myths and folktales have in common? They deal with danger and death and offer highly pragmatic lessons... more »
Revolutions in science, technology, health, and education have reshaped our world. But can things keep getting better?... more »
Look carefully, attend to people and their situations, learn what is right. For Iris Murdoch, morality was grounded in vision and action, not just metaphysics... more »
"It’s on me. I’ve said that again and again. And that is really all I’m gonna say. OK?" Jill Abramson talks with one of the writers she's accused of plagiarizing... more »
Has the internet made us collectively lose our minds? Patricia Lockwood looks at our tweets and gifs and wonders what the absurd avalanche of details was for... more »
For most of history, translating the Bible has been a religious commitment. For Robert Alter, who did it by himself, it's a literary act... more »
In 1994, Sven Birkerts worried that distractedness would win out, that a diminution of reading would diminish our sense of self. Have his fears come to pass?... more »
Since when is reading James Baldwin out loud in class an academic crime? Randall Kennedy on the anti-intellectualism and illiberal conformity ascendant in parts of the academy... more »
Instagram-friendly, immersive art spaces promise to transport to your happy place. But beyond the confetti dome is a bleak, desperate reality... more »
Beware the surveillance capitalists. “Forget the cliché that ‘if it’s free, you are the product.’ You are not the product; you are the abandoned carcass"... more »
What is most remarkable about the opprobrium heaped on Jonathan Franzen is how little it has to do with his actual work... more »
Studying American history used to mean studying the American nation. Then, in the 1970s, national history fell out of favor. Is it too late to restore?... more »
The unlikely return of Eric Hobsbawm to political fashion in the 1980s obscured the sharp-edged qualities that made him so interesting in the first place... more »
An adjunct professor of art tries to make rent. The result: a Thoreauvian quest for radical simplicity — and the birth of America’s tiny-house movement... more »
Lionel Trilling belonged to the last generation of academics who believed that they had something of social importance to communicate... more »
"He who thinks great thoughts often makes great errors," said Heidegger, who would know. How should we read such dangerous thinkers?... more »
The bad behavior of artists is now used to dismiss their work. Who pays for this new puritanism? The arts consumer, says Lionel Shriver... more »
A mathematician tasked with translating Wittgenstein, Frank Ramsey was a crucial link between pragmatism and analytic philosophy... more »
Gregg Easterbrook wants to make optimism “intellectually respectable again.” First step: Don't confuse optimism with complacency... more »
"For God’s sake, for Dartmouth’s sake, and for everyone’s sake, keep the damned women out." Fifty years of coeducation at American colleges... more »
The philosophy of Josiah Royce: When evaluating your life, don’t ask, “How happy am I?” Ask, “How loyal am I, and to what?”... more »
Modern conservatism was shaped by defectors from left to right: Chambers, Burnham, Kristol. Why the shortage in the other direction?... more »
The New Atheists are no longer new. Long past the movement’s height, its critique of liberalism lives on, with help from friends in the “intellectual dark web”... more »
Journalism is faster, edgier, needier, angrier. As for its future, the problems are well understood, but solutions hard to see... more »
“Electric buttons have become the masters of the world,” complained a French nobleman in 1903. Technophobia has spread, but getting rid of technology isn’t the answer... more »
How Martin Seligman stopped worrying and learned to love writing pop psychology. “‘I’m rich,’ I announced to my mother on the phone”... more »
Is Twitter ruining book publishing? Lionel Shriver hits out at “morality clauses,” which make publishing contracts vulnerable to the whims of online outrage... more »
How do we judge abstract art? Do narratives make us more empathetic? These aesthetic riddles are suddenly the domain of experimental psychology... more »
The re-fructifying of Saul Bellow. After he recovered from a coma incurred in the Caribbean, his 80s may constitute the best final act in American letters... more »
How wide is the circle of ideas not worthy of discussion? Which beliefs should be judged as “out of bounds” — and who gets to be the referee?... more »
Death of the author? Barthes’s 1967 declaration made sense at the time, but authorship has been hard to do away with... more »
The philosopher’s penchant for argument is grounded in a conception of the good life and the duties of good citizenship. It also inevitably makes him come off as an arsehole... more »
A viciously critical review, with finely honed mockery and acid-tipped one-liners, is born of righteous fury. But it can become pure joy... more »
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