The Pleasures of Procrastination
Wasting time can feel morally suspect—but it’s essential to the creative process.
![a painting of a woman lounging asleep in a bed](https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/zZp3H-3BWw6KhgWpKL0VZcLq_OY=/1056x0:3756x2700/80x80/media/img/mt/2024/07/HR_1309918913/original.jpg)
Wasting time can feel morally suspect—but it’s essential to the creative process.
The feeling can’t be cured—but sometimes, the words of others can help.
Revisiting the magazine’s early reviews of classic books
Adam Higginbotham’s new book on the tragedy manages to add depth to a well-known story.
We take the workings of wide, complicated technological systems on faith. But they depend on people—and, sometimes, people fail.
The author Ruby Tandoh argues for the freedom to cook—and eat—for pleasure.
Publishing and film have long had a special relationship.
Does it matter if writers turn their back on their work?
When I moved to D.C., I turned to reading to help me understand the history, and the spirit, of my new home.
The number of titles you finish in a year says little about your actual reading habits.