In the latest issue of the magazine that Vogue called the pinnacle of literary and political writing , a celebrated writer makes an anonymous confession and defends a habit: his son supplies him with Ecstasy. Nicholas Shakespeare discovers the evil of his ancestors, Alexander Stille examines the godlike role of poets in Somalia, and David Feuer writes on trying -- and failing -- to be a shrink in a Hasidic community. Also included is new fiction from A. M. Holmes and Judith Hermann.
In the latest issue of the magazine that Vogue called the pinnacle of literary and political writing , a celebrated writer makes an anonymous confession and defends a habit: his son supplies him with Ecstasy. Nicholas Shakespeare discovers the evil of his ancestors, Alexander Stille examines the godlike role of poets in Somalia, and David Feuer writes on trying -- and failing -- to be a shrink in a Hasidic community. Also included is new fiction from A. M. Holmes and Judith Hermann.
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