Free 1 min read

On Novocain

Michael Clune | Paris Review | 6th March 2023

Recovering addict, having been clean for 17 years, is prescribed opiates for a dental procedure. The presence of drugs in his life puts him into the grip of what he terms the "Pain Medication Paradox". Should addicts be denied pain relief, because it increases the chance of relapse and, ultimately, death, even though to make people suffer when an easy solution exists seems horribly inhumane? (2,634 words)


Mystified by cryptic crosswords? We at The Browser are here to help. Pick up the ultimate guide, by Dan Feyer and Uri Bram, and let us guide you through the meaning of those clues - so you can get on with puzzling.

Sainsbury's Packaged A Nation’s Dreams

Ruby Tandoh | Vittles | 6th March 2023

When the British grocery chain Sainsbury's switched in 1950 from old-fashioned counter service to the "less theatrically deferential way of selling food" that persists today, design suddenly became a crucial part of shopping. It was no longer enough for food to be packed safely, it needed to be packaged cleverly to feed the consumer's aspirations of fresh food and a fresh start after WW2 (2,580 words)


Would you prefer to be personally handed your shopping in a theatrically deferential manner? Well those days may be gone, but we can personally hand you your reading. The full Browser will deliver five outstanding articles, a video and a podcast daily, straight to your inbox.

Free 1 min read

Interview With Colonel Oleh Shevchuk

Olha Kyrylenko & Dmytro Larin | War Translated | 1st March 2023

Jaw-dropping throughout. How Ukraine's army leveraged social media against Russia's invasion. "We called civilians and asked: 'Do you see this section of road? If a shell hits in a minute and a half, can you tell us roughly where it exploded?' The person would describe the place of the explosion, we would open a Google map and see: Yes, there is such a place behind the vegetable garden" (5,700 words)


When Ian Fleming Finally Started Writing

John Higgs | CrimeReads | 8th February 2023

It took Fleming five years to start work on the first James Bond novel. It was his misery at impending marriage to his long-time paramour Ann that finally did it. A BDSM-based affair was all to the good, but commitment demanded "a level of emotional maturity which he did not possess". He escaped into 007, a man whose girlfriends rarely survived the novel in which he seduced them (2,673 words)


If you'd like your reading list shaken up, without you having to stir... then I have great news. The full Browser recommends five outstanding articles a day, plus a video and a podcast. Sit back, relax, read better.

Free 1 min read

A Claxonomy Of Mexico City

Lachlan Summers | Allegra Lab | 2nd March 2023

Just when I was starting to think there was nothing new that was true, and nothing true that was new, here out of blue sky comes a wonderful piece of writing on a subject that had only a genius would have recognised as a possible subject in the first place, namely, a taxonomy of car-honking in Mexico City. The mere existence of this piece is a marvel, the reading of it sheer pleasure (2,600 words)


Mystified by cryptic crosswords? We at The Browser are here to help. Pick up the ultimate guide, by Dan Feyer and Uri Bram, and let us guide you through the meaning of those clues - so you can get on with puzzling.

The End Of Gravity’s Rainbow

Ted Gioia | Honest Broker | 1st March 2023

The fifty years between Ulysses and Gravity's Rainbow were The Age Of Difficulty in fiction. Critics and readers demanded "a certain degree of hardship" from great works. Gravity's Rainbow was the ultimate test: "Once you entered, there were no guarantees you would ever emerge". You never quite knew what the book was even about. The explanation was always "just around the corner" (1,400 words)


Do you prefer knowing what your reading's about? The Browser recommends five outstanding articles every day, with a handy summary - so you don't get lost in the maze.

Free 1 min read

Loneliness Reshapes the Brain

Marta Zaraska | Quanta | 28th February 2023

The feeling of loneliness may well be "an evolved adaptation, similar to hunger". Brain scans support this similarity, and suggest that if loneliness persists too long parts of the brain may actually shrink from lack of use. Research suggests that loneliness is "unpleasant but not necessarily negative" — unless it becomes a constant state. Magic mushrooms are one possible treatment (2,378 words)


Browser classified:

Book Clubs are stressful. Join Article Club, a community of kind readers. We discuss one great article every month on race, education, or culture.

Can We Make Bicycles Sustainable Again?

Kris De Decker | Low-Tech Magazine | 28th February 2023

Cycling is environmentally friendly, but the modern manufacture of bicycles is far from sustainable. The US only makes 60,000 bikes a year; the vast majority are manufactured in Asia and shipped around the world. Bikes are also not necessarily made to last or to be easily repairable. A locally-made bicycle that lasts a lifetime with repairs should be the norm, but isn't (4,895 words)


The Browser is delightfully sustainable. Sustain your interest, with five great articles, a video and a podcast daily.

Free 1 min read

Oberammergau’s Broken Vow

Joy Clarkson | Plough | 23rd February 2023

Theologian reviews the famous Passionsspiele Oberammergau, which has been performed roughly once a decade since 1634. The script was finally rewritten in 1990, in part to expunge some "anti-Semitic overtones". It remains "astonishing", but its emotional impact has been blunted. "What seemed strange to me was an unwillingness to call the story what it is: deeply depressing" (2,849 words)


Black Swans

Harmony Holiday | Black Music And Black Muses | 27th February 2023

Lyrical tribute to Nina Simone, "who wanted to be a concert pianist and ended up a diva". "She was obstinate and delicate at the same time and seemed to always and never get her way. She mastered devastations’s hymn and devastation’s exuberance. Her singing ranged from limber flutter to the blunted acridity of moaning to gain momentum for a scream that never comes" (1,286 words)


Today's full Browser also covered Ukraine, the Oscars, dinosaurs, railroads and snowscapes. Sign up for the full picture: five outstanding articles, a video and a podcast, every day.

Free 1 min read

Jeff Koons Goes To The Moon

Daniel Riley | GQ | 23rd February 2023

Well-rounded profile of Jeff Koons incorporating all of the reservations any reasonable person might have about his art-works and his business model, while still finding time for the qualities — candour, consistency, optimism, resilience, perfectionism — which have made him America's most successful living artist. Which you don't get to be without having some kind of genius (6,700 words)


From The Perspectives Of Objects

Ceridwen Dovey | Sydney Review Of Books | 20th February 2023

Children's fiction is full of inanimate narrators, yet adult fiction rarely experiments with this trope. Why not? Partly because "the spectre of ridiculousness" haunts any such attempt. But research reveals this to be an idea of good pedigree (John Berger, Italo Calvino and Jorge Luis Borges all approved). Perhaps your next novel will be narrated by the toaster, rather than the toaster's owner (4,900 words)


New perspectives are always interesting. Try the full Browser for new perspectives every day: we recommend five outstanding articles, a video and a podcast, to freshen up your view.

Free 1 min read

Dreaming In More Than One Language

Sophie Hardach | BBC Future | 17th February 2023

Inconclusive but intriguing. Anecdotal evidence suggests that people who speak more than one language tend to mingle languages in their dreams, to encounter fragments of other languages while dreaming, and even to create new fantasy-languages within dreams. Could it be that the brain uses dreams to explore how languages work, and how known languages might be connected? (2,700 words)


Browser classified:

Yakread merges all your content—newsletters, bookmarks, tweets, and more—into a single intelligently curated feed. It's great for keeping up with all your subscriptions without feeling overwhelmed. Give it a try.

Flesh And Page

Bruce Holsinger | Lapham's Quarterly | 22nd February 2023

How to make parchment. First, skin your goats. Next, set aside a couple of weeks to soak, lime, dehair and scrape the hides. Expect to work mainly by trial and error. Surviving recipes from antiquity are hopelessly inexact. Medieval ones are little better, more like schematic accounts than concrete instructions. The trickiest bit is the final scraping which gives the parchment its texture (2,800 words)


Struggling to get your parchment right? Never mind, there's loads of other places to store writing now; the tricky bit is finding the good ones. We can help with that - the full Browser recommends five outstanding articles, a video and a podcast daily. (We can't help with the parchment though, sorry.)

Free 1 min read

Introduction to The Communist Manifesto

Tariq Ali | Verso | 21st February 2023

To mark the 175th anniversary of Marx and Engels' work, Ali looks again at it. History vindicates "very few" of its predictions about the future of capitalism, and it contains no blueprint for the communist society that might follow a successful revolution. Its "strength lay in its broad sweep, a call to transform the world," and after the Russian Revolution, everybody wanted to read it (2,976 words)


Mystified by cryptic crosswords? We at The Browser are here to help. Pick up the ultimate guide, by Dan Feyer and Uri Bram, and let us guide you through the meaning of those clues - so you can get on with puzzling.

The Merchant, the Marriage, and the Treaty Port

Jessa Dahl | Not Even Past | 17th February 2023

Reassessing Ōura Kei, a prominent 19C Japanese businesswoman, one of Nagasaki’s most famous residents, and an early exporter of green tea. But recently discovered documents show she also helped to arrange marriages between very young Japanese girls and much older Chinese men, showing that she was "not only a victim, but also an enabler of unequal power relations" (3,066 words)


From Marx to merchants, we've got you covered. And we also cover things not beginning with M. Get curious all over the alphabet with the full Browser: five outstanding articles, a video and a podcast daily.

Free 1 min read

Wide Awake During My Brain Surgery

Harry Forestell | CBC | 20th February 2023

Gripping account of a six-hour session of "deep brain stimulation", written by the patient. "There was no feeling to it as the brain has no pain sensors. But as the probes slid into place, there were tell-tale signs that gave away what was happening — most commonly a tingling feeling in an arm or leg — as the surgeons carefully threaded the electrodes through my brain" (1,880 words)


Browser classified:

Yakread merges all your content—newsletters, bookmarks, tweets, and more—into a single intelligently curated feed. It's great for keeping up with all your subscriptions without feeling overwhelmed. Give it a try.

For The Love Of Losing

Marina Benjamin | Granta | 9th February 2023

Memoir of a former professional gambler. When you're playing for eight, ten hours a day, losing starts to feel better than winning. "In losing there can be tremendous relief, even rebirth, in that only once you have lost everything can you walk away... Winning is far more problematic, because there is responsibility in the win – what to do with all that money! It’s the opposite of release" (4,683 words)


Are you losing brain? Aren't we all, eh. There's only one known cure: five outstanding articles, plus a video and a podcast, consumed daily. Luckily, that's just what the full Browser can provide.

Free 1 min read

Things, Names, And Numbers

James Propp | Mathematical Enchantments | 17th February 2023

What real numbers are, how you get to them by way of rational numbers, and why they are needed in mathematics. A lively and discursive essay that makes a demanding topic more approachable by using lots of helpful analogies and not too much algebra. There is some algebra, and I fell at several fences, but well worth the effort, not least for the insights and asides along the way (6,900 words)


Conspiracies Are The Price Of Freedom

Terry Eagleton | Unherd | 17th February 2023

Conspiracy theories are the insecure person's defense against a confusing world with too many competing narratives. Conspiracy theories allow believers to claim a position of relative strength: They alone know what is going on. This hidden truth is always sinister, not because conspiracy theorists need more to fear, but because they need an explanation for the fear in which they already live (1,500 words)


Here's a conspiracy theory: the full Browser actually has five articles, a video and a podcast daily, but someone is keeping the rest hidden from you in this free edition. Sign up today to see the Whole Truth.

(By 'conspiracy theory' I mean 'factual description', and by 'someone' I mean 'me'. Sorry.)

Free 1 min read

A Wiser Sympathy

Mary Kuhn | Lapham's Quarterly | 15th February 2023

Are plants intelligent? Scientists and writers in the 19C were much preoccupied by this question. Georges Cuvier, Charles Darwin and the botanist Asa Gray all contemplated it. One 1863 article even asked "Is the plant stupid?". For Emily Dickinson, though, the crucial factor was not sentience but sentiment: whether the natural world shared her own ability to have autonomous emotions (2,722 words)


Children Of The Ice Age

April Nowell | Aeon | 13th February 2023

Previously neglected by archaeologists, in part because children's fragile bones are harder to excavate, the question of what childhood was like during the Palaeolithic era is now being answered. There is plenty of evidence that children played an active role in community survival, learning to make stone tools and ceramics. Footprints also show them playing tag and throwing clay balls (4,493 words)


Wiser children read The Browser: get five outstanding articles every day, plus a video and a podcast. 

Join 150,000+ curious readers who grow with us every day

No spam. No nonsense. Unsubscribe anytime.

Great! Check your inbox and click the link to confirm your subscription
Please enter a valid email address!
You've successfully subscribed to The Browser
Welcome back! You've successfully signed in
Could not sign in! Login link expired. Click here to retry
Cookies must be enabled in your browser to sign in
search