
Down the homestretch with the impossible nominee.

The U.S. government’s report has ruled the attack an accident. But mounting evidence suggests that Afghans’ mistrust for the nonprofit medical group might have set the tragedy in motion.

The British-by-way-of-Jerusalem chef assembles a Middle Eastern banquet in London that is as visually stunning as it is delicious.

Now playing at the multiplex: Me. Just me.
Americans used to agree on how someone who wanted to run the country should behave. Not anymore.
Looking back at our coverage of the big deals, bigger attitude and TV fame that warned us we weren’t in for a conventional presidential run.
The app can be confusing for people over a certain age, but it returns something vital to our correspondence.
The political analyst on what Clinton gets wrong about income inequality and how the media failed to take Donald Trump seriously.
The author doubles down on his life in the Netherlands by getting engaged in the cubicle of a government clerk.
Readers respond.
Begin with the voice. Don’t take yourself too seriously.
Selected by Matthew Zapruder.
All possible realities converge on one decision to seize a vegetable biryani.
The magazine’s Ethicist columnist on whether to break the news of a new love affair to a faraway partner, fund-raisers who double dip and what to do when you suspect malpractice in your pet’s death.
Willis’s adoration of her mother, Demi Moore, proves that you can be an imperfect parent and still have an exceptional bond with your daughter.
Readers share their stories.