Solitude and Leadership
A speech on the value of being alone with your thoughts, delivered to the plebe class at West Point.
A speech on the value of being alone with your thoughts, delivered to the plebe class at West Point.
William Deresiewicz The American Scholar Apr 2010 25min Permalink
The creator of Wonder Woman makes the case for superheroes.
William Moulton Marston The American Scholar Dec 1933 15min Permalink
A Marine veteran of the Iraq War on battle and faith.
Phil Klay The American Scholar Dec 2017 20min Permalink
The writer investigates her late husband Ted Streshinsky, whose photographs documented the 1960s, and J. Edgar Hoover’s attempts to label him a Soviet spy.
Shirley Streshinsky The American Scholar Jun 2016 25min Permalink
A voyage to North Sentinel island, home to one of the last entirely isolated populations on Earth.
Adam Goodheart The American Scholar Sep 2000 1h5min Permalink
A cornucopia of endearments and insults.
Phyllis Rose The American Scholar Jun 2015 10min Permalink
Maintaining the manual On Writing Well.
William Zinsser The American Scholar Apr 2009 20min Permalink
A utopian German settlement in Chile had already turned darkly cultish by the time it became a secret torture site for enemies of the Pinochet regime.
Bruce Falconer The American Scholar Sep 2008 40min Permalink
The author examines his closest relationships.
Edward Hoagland The American Scholar Feb 2013 25min Permalink
On leaving New York for Portland.
William Deresiewicz The American Scholar Dec 2012 30min Permalink
In 1968, the author revisits remote British Columbia, which he traveled two years earlier.
Edward Hoagland The American Scholar May 2006 30min Permalink
A radical new treatment for auditory hallucinations.
T. M. Luhrmann The American Scholar Aug 2012 25min Permalink
On the ground with U.S. troops in Afghanistan.
Neil Shea The American Scholar Apr 2012 10min Permalink
What happens when top universities focus on careers rather than minds.
William Deresiewicz The American Scholar Jun 2008 20min Permalink
A pre-recession essay on becoming extremely wealthy.
Pamela Haag The American Scholar Jun 2006 15min Permalink
A flurry of interactions in a doctor's office hint to varieties of unnamed medical problems and domestic unhappiness.
"Why wasn’t the doctor coming out? I could give her a ride, but not to another state, not to Wheeling, West Virginia. Beyond the glass doors, a vacuum started loudly. Suddenly, the woman who’d drawn my blood walked quickly past us, tears streaming, mouth tight, clutching a pink piece of paper."
Ann Beattie The American Scholar Jan 2007 10min Permalink
Afternoons with Altman and Allen.
For a year or two during the mid-1970s, living in New York, I was a moviegoer. I was in my early 20s then, working off and on, driving a cab, setting up the stage at rock shows, writing occasional pieces for The Village Voice. But there were also long empty spells. I tried to write some fiction and couldn’t, tried to read and could—but only for so long. I ended up going to the movies.
Mark Edmundson The American Scholar Jan 2008 20min Permalink
On witnessing the transformation of George W. Bush over 25 years.
Walt Harrington The American Scholar Sep 2011 30min Permalink
The strange life of Boston Corbett, the soldier who killed John Wilkes Booth in 1865.
Ernest B. Ferguson The American Scholar Apr 2009 15min Permalink
After the 1919 Black Sox scandal, Ring Lardner, America’s first great sportswriter, walked away from the game.
Douglas Goetsch The American Scholar Apr 2011 25min Permalink
The shooting death of the last wild Passenger Pigeon, atomic energy, mastodon watering holes, and other footnotes in Ohio history.
Geoffrey Sea The American Scholar Jan 2004 55min Permalink
Night raids by the “Hash Monster” and other perils facing American soldiers at a remote base in the wilderness of the Paktya Province as they attempt to turn over power to the Afghan Army.
Neil Shea The American Scholar Jun 2010 10min Permalink