Better to have loved and lost; best to have written an essay about it. Surviving the Russian melodrama of young love.
Love You Mean It
Better to have loved and lost; best to have written an essay about it. Surviving the Russian melodrama of young love.
Love of food can be love’s most sincere form—especially when avocados are involved—but also bittersweet if paired with departure.
Where there’s smoke, there’s smuggling. Before the Ukrainian border became a dangerous war zone, it was a profitable bootlegging arena.
Because the blinders were on last year, a 2015 resolution to become more culturally aware: to read more books, watch more movies, and listen to more albums.
When a Country Is Not a Country
Punxsutawney gets the spotlight, but it’s Groundhog Day every day in Woodstock, Ill., where Groundhog Day was filmed, and where hundreds of fans gathered this year—and every year, year after year— to celebrate their favorite movie.
How a book, booze, and a guilty hangover brought an admittedly non-athletic man to the starting line, and what happened next.
Even a fake history of blogging—going back to the Old Internet, when HTML templates were so raw—offers insight.
Micro-living is no longer just for the very poor and the very bohemian. But how much space do we really deserve?
Everything you need to know—in cartoon form—about debt-ceiling fiascos, from McKinley’s war with Spain to Obama getting punk’d.
Another bag goes in, more waste goes in the landfill. A startling look at America’s capacity for making garbage.
Better to have loved and lost; best to have written an essay about it. Surviving the Russian melodrama of young love.
Five years ago, I was in a classroom lit with long fluorescent rods, staring at a tall blond boy sitting across the empty square formed by the edges of four rectangular desks. It was an orientation session for our college’s summer study abroad program in Russia, and when he asked questions—and he posed many questions—he did so with an air of authority and condescension that gave me the impression he already knew the answers. He chose each word as carefully as a chef chooses a fish at the market, and gestured with long, capable-looking fingers. I tried to catch his swimming-pool-blue eyes; they eluded me.
II.The next time I saw him was a week or two later at an end-of-the-school-year party in a crowded room limned with Christmas lights. I was holding, but not really drinking, a sticky red Solo cup of vodka-and-something. He was involved in an animated conversation with a boy I didn’t know. Through a process of casual but wide-ranging questioning—of friends on my floor, acquaintances in his dorm, fellow students of the Russian language—after that first sighting at orientation,... Continue Reading