Down on the Farm With Mark Bowden
The Atlantic's national correspondent shows off his home and his guinea hens.
The Atlantic's national correspondent shows off his home and his guinea hens.
The possible presidential candidate said the falsehood twice on radio
His legacy includes fueling some of the continent's worst regimes and conflicts
Will Congress barely change next year? Why an Obama victory won't necessarily help other Democrats on the ballot.
A veteran of the busiest air traffic control center in the world explains how the U.S. handles swarms of airplanes
The army helped to oust Mubarak, but has since adopted some of his uglier tactics
Revealing the man who satirized Chicago's new mayor with thousands of f-bombs
Why would Wisconsin's governor compromise with unions and Democrats when he can edit a bill word by word?
After several revolutions, democracies look like safer places to put money
Lessons from a 1,127-minute marathon of this year's Oscar nominees
The magazine defends a story on the wife of a brutal, anti-American dictator
History shows armies can't be defeated by air forces alone
In Shanghai, some women make a living by recycling U.S. machines by hand
Personal incomes rose as people kept more of their paychecks. Are people saving or spending the extra money?
Rival parties may gain support from people fed up with gridlock in parliament
The country's economy is stronger than it was in the '80s. Why Tokyo doesn't want the world to believe that.
The end of the Mubarak era may not signal the end of autocracy
Why machines can never beat the human mind, how skyscrapers can save the city, Justin Bieber's teenybop perfection, and more