Into the Unknown
Our writers’ journeys into new communities, ways of thinking, and ways of being
This is an edition of The Wonder Reader, a newsletter in which our editors recommend a set of stories to spark your curiosity and fill you with delight. Sign up here to get it every Saturday morning.
Gary Shteyngart spent seven nights (or, as he calls them, seven “agonizing” nights) on the Icon of the Seas, the biggest cruise ship that’s ever sailed. In our May 2024 issue, he writes about what he found there. “The ocean is teeming with fascinating life, but on the surface, it has little to teach us,” he writes. “I am constantly told by my fellow passengers that ‘everybody here has a story.’ Yes, I want to reply, but everybody everywhere has a story … Maybe what they’re saying is that everybody on this ship wants to have a bigger, more coherent, more interesting story than the one they’ve been given.”
Shteyngart is the latest Atlantic writer to venture into a place he doesn’t quite understand and tell the tale. Today’s newsletter collects some of our writers’ journeys into new communities, ways of thinking, and ways of being—explorations that left them skeptical, enlightened, or a bit of both.
Explorations
Crying Myself to Sleep on the Biggest Cruise Ship Ever
By Gary Shteyngart
Seven agonizing nights aboard the Icon of the Seas
I Went to a Rave With the 46-Year-Old Millionaire Who Claims to Have the Body of a Teenager
By Matteo Wong
Bryan Johnson wants to build a nation of immortals. Would you join?
I Gooped Myself
By Amanda Mull
I spent $1,279 of The Atlantic’s money on creams, crystals, and a vibrator from Gwyneth Paltrow’s wellness empire. Things got weird.
Still Curious?
- Why is Joe Rogan so popular? The writer Devin Gordon tried to live like Joe Rogan for several weeks. He came away both more comfortable with and more skeptical of Rogan’s vision of masculinity.
- “I went to Disney World”: As the coronavirus pandemic ravaged Florida, the Magic Kingdom welcomed back its most loyal subjects—and our staff writer Graeme Wood.
Other Diversions
- The one big thing you can do for your kids
- Seven books to read in the sunshine
- What’s so bad about asking where humans came from?
P.S.
I’ll leave you with Annie Dillard’s account of her journey to witness a solar eclipse in Washington State.
“It had been like dying, that sliding down the mountain pass … It was like slipping into fever, or falling down that hole in sleep from which you wake yourself whimpering,” she writes in the essay, first published in her 1982 collection, Teaching a Stone to Talk. “We had crossed the mountains that day, and now we were in a strange place—a hotel in central Washington, in a town near Yakima. The eclipse we had traveled here to see would occur early in the next morning.”
— Isabel
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