
Is Cohabitation the Feminist Future?
Stories about women living together are proliferating—and offering alternative visions to the nuclear family.
Introducing The Atlantic’s expanded books coverage: essays, criticism, fiction, poetry, and recommendations from our writers and editors

Stories about women living together are proliferating—and offering alternative visions to the nuclear family.

A new biography brings the late photographer’s relationship with the artist Paul Thek to vivid life.

We’ve had Henry David Thoreau the environmentalist, the libertarian, the life coach. To understand his influence, think of him first as a dissident.

A minimally speaking autistic man just wrote a best-selling book. Or did he?

Testing has become so advanced that doctors now miss important elements of diagnosis.
Our culture editors’ weekly guide to the best in books.

Influential novelists are imagining what women’s lives might look like without the demands of partners and children.

People will always experience terrible things, and many will want to write about them.

In a new book, Elaine Pagels searches for the narrative origins of Jesus’s most wondrous acts.

A poem

A short story

Fang Fang’s newly translated novel uncovers the brutal, buried history of land reform in China.

The 25 most consequential collections from the past 25 years

Mariam Rahmani’s debut novel is both charmingly familiar and totally unpredictable.

Wildcat Dome’s characters can’t escape the calamities that marked their lives—and their country’s history.

In Emily St. James’s new novel, three trans women figure out what life to live—and what to sacrifice for it.