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Seven Reads for a Summer Weekend
Seven Reads for a Summer Weekend

Atlantic

time5 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Atlantic

Seven Reads for a Summer Weekend

This is an edition of The Atlantic Daily, a newsletter that guides you through the biggest stories of the day, helps you discover new ideas, and recommends the best in culture. Sign up for it here. On your Sunday, explore stories about the one book everyone should read, what McKinsey did to the middle class, and more. Teens Are Forgoing a Classic Rite of Passage Fewer young people are getting into relationships. By Faith Hill The One Book Everyone Should Read The Atlantic 's staffers on the books they share—again and again By The Atlantic Culture Desk Why South Park Did an About-Face on Mocking Trump The show's creators once said they had nothing more to say about the president. What changed their minds? By Paula Mejía A Defense Against Gaslighting Sociopaths If you can recognize their signature move, then forewarned is forearmed. By Arthur C. Brooks 10 'Scary' Movies for People Who Don't Like Horror You can handle these, we promise. (From 2022) By David Sims How McKinsey Destroyed the Middle Class Technocratic management, no matter how brilliant, cannot unwind structural inequalities. (From 2020) By Daniel Markovits Homes Still Aren't Designed for a Body Like Mine Why is it so hard for disabled people to find safe, accessible places to live? By Jessica Slice The Week Ahead Greetings From Your Hometown, a new album by the Jonas Brothers (out Friday) People Like Us, by the National Book Award winner Jason Mott, a novel about two Black writers trying to live a world filled with gun violence (out Tuesday) Ted Bundy: Dialogue With the Devil, a new Ted Bundy docuseries that features newly uncovered interviews and recordings (out Thursday on Hulu) Essay Memoir of a Mailman By Tyler Austin Harper 'Delivering the mail is a 'Halloween job,' ' Stephen Starring Grant observes in Mailman: My Wild Ride Delivering the Mail in Appalachia and Finally Finding Home. 'An occupation with a uniform, immediately recognizable, even by children.' What to call Grant's book is harder to say. It is an unusual amalgam: a pandemic memoir, a love letter to the Blue Ridge Mountains, a participant observer's ethnography of a rural post office, an indictment of government austerity, and a witness statement attesting to the remarkable and at times ruthless efficiency of one of our oldest federal bureaucracies. Not least, Mailman is a lament for the decline of service as an American ideal—for the cultural twilight of the Halloween job: those occupations, such as police officer, firefighter, Marine, and, yes, postal worker, whose worth is not measured first and foremost in dollars but in public esteem. Or should be, anyway. More in Culture Catch Up on The Atlantic Photo Album Included in The Atlantic 's photos of the week are images of a freestyle-motocross trick, a robot-boxing match in Shanghai, a performing-dog show in Canada, and more. Rafaela Jinich contributed to this newsletter.

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