Katie Bacon

Katie Bacon is a former executive editor at The Atlantic. Her blog is Eating With Bisi.

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The Great Irish-Dutch-American Novel

Joseph O'Neill, an Irishman raised in Holland, talks about The Great Gatsby, post-9/11 New York, and his new novel, Netherland.

The All-American Kitchen

Steven Gdula, the author of The Warmest Room in the House, talks about home cooking, how we eat, and the evolution of the American kitchen

The Dark Side of the Gilded Age

Jack Beatty, the author of Age of Betrayal, talks about the poverty, inequality, and corrupt politics that marred America's past and set us on a course toward today

Issue April 2007

Girls Gone Studious

Lynn Peril talks about the evolution of girls' college experiences, and her new book, College Girls: Bluestockings, Sex Kittens, and Co-Eds, Then and Now.

The American War Machine

James Carroll, the author of House of War, on the inexorable momentum of the Pentagon.

Tight-Knit, Loose-Lipped

Elizabeth Strout on her new novel, Abide With Me—a story of small-town gossip and a minister's unraveling

An Atlantic Scandal

A tale of one of the most notorious journalistic forgeries of the twentieth century

Master Among Men

Doris Kearns Goodwin, the author of Team of Rivals, talks about Lincoln and the unlikely band of colleagues he rallied to his cause.

Issue October 2005

Commander in Grief

Joshua Wolf Shenk on how melancholy both tore Abraham Lincoln apart and gave him strength

Issue September 2005

The Limits of Tolerance

Salman Rushdie talks about his new novel, Shalimar the Clown, the Islamic moral universe, and the crushing of Kashmir

Clinton Reconsidered

John Harris, the author of The Survivor, on why Clinton and his legacy will be debated for decades to come.

Managing China

Robert D. Kaplan looks ahead to the great military and diplomatic challenge of the twenty-first century

Write What You Like

Curtis Sittenfeld, the author of Prep, on literary page-turners and the problem with too much cleverness

Issue January/February 2005

Fatal Vision

Richard Clarke talks about his frightening scenario of an America hobbled by terrorism—and what we can do to avoid it

The Pristine Myth

Charles C. Mann, the author of "1491," talks about the thriving and sophisticated Indian landscape of the pre-Columbus Americas

An African Voice

Chinua Achebe, the author of one of the enduring works of modern African literature, sees postcolonial cultures taking shape story by story

The Architecture of Daily Life

The Architecture of Daily Life Tracy Kidder discusses his new book, Home Town, and the power of true stories about ordinary people.

The Other Side of War

Paul Fussell—historian, literary critic, and veteran—wants to change the way Americans remember World War II

The Biggest Story in Photos

Finland in World War II

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