SHOP EXCLUSIVE SUBSCRIBE Four celebrated—and surpassingly brave—former Olympic athletes really stuck the landing on Wednesday, and it's almost time for Christopher Wray to go. Outside of the carnival of corruption that was the FBI's Boston field office in the good old days of Whitey Bulger and Zip Connolly and Paul Rico and Steve Flemmi, it's hard to come up with a more egregious example of FBI malfeasance and nonfeasance than its treatment of the gymnasts who came to it to accuse team physician Larry Nassar of being the child-molesting monster that the world now knows he was.
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In recent decades, classical mythology has been rightly criticized as too white, too male, too heteronormative, too inaccessible, too exclusionary, too played out. Now, a new wave of novels are reclaiming familiar stories and excavating unknown ones to reveal mythology like you've never seen it before: inclusive and accessible, capable of page-turning thrills and edge-of-your-seat surprise, even if the spoilers are thousands of years old. These retellings are challenging our assumptions about some of the world's most well-worn narrative building blocks, inviting readers to ask centuries-old questions. At the heart of it: Who gets to tell mythological stories? Who is mythology even for?
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Thursday, September 16, 2021
This Was the Worst FBI Malfeasance in Decades
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