A new two-part anthology about Vietnam chronicles the few positive legacies of a terrible war: the literary excellence and moral outrage of the writing it inspired.
“For me, Dorothy Day was the most engaging and engaged person I have ever met. Even now, seventeen years after her death in 1980, I think of her almost daily, with deep affection.
In abandoning effective, sustainable, and proportionate sanctions, the U.S. made a fundamental error—an error that will have geopolitical and moral ramifications for generations to come.