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The 3.19.23 Issue

Highlights

  1. Black, Evangelical and Torn

    With America’s white conservatives increasingly drawn to Christian nationalism, many Black believers feel caught between their faith and the long shadow of history.

     By

    The Rev. John Onwuchekwa, former pastor of the Cornerstone Church in Atlanta.
    CreditRuddy Roye for The New York Times
  1. Our Granddaughter Is Rude and Ungrateful. What Can We Do?

    The magazine’s Ethicist columnist on failures to acknowledge financial generosity.

     By

    CreditIllustration by Tomi Um
    The Ethicist
  2. To Fall in Love With Cabbage, Do This

    In Yotam Ottolenghi’s cabbage rolls with walnuts and sour cream, the dreaded vegetable becomes a star.

     By

    CreditChris Simpson for The New York Times. Food stylist: Maggie Ruggiero. Prop stylist: Sophia Pappas.
    Eat
  3. The Trump Juror Who Got Under America’s Skin

    Behind our institutions are ordinary people. Emily Kohrs is their new face.

     By

    CreditPhoto illustration by Vanessa Saba
    Screenland
  4. The Subversive Wisdom of ‘Old Wives’ Tales’

    Women’s care has always depended on women’s sharing stories with one another.

     By

    CreditIllustration by Vartika Sharma
    Letter of Recommendation
  5. Poem: [All things now remind me]

    This poem is a heartbreaker for all who know or will know soon enough what it is like to once have been “young and desirous” and to be those things no more.

     By Diane Seuss and

    CreditIllustration by R. O. Blechman
    Poem
  1. Judge John Hodgman on Mom’s Military Time

    A family has trouble syncing into a schedule on the 24-hour clock.

     By

    CreditIllustration by Louise Zergaeng Pomeroy
    Judge John Hodgman

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