| Sponsored by University of California Press Our March 26 issue is now online, with Anne Enright on a day in Jeffrey Epstein’s life, Jacob Weisberg on the Great Crash, Ingrid D. Rowland on Giorgia Meloni alla fresco, Robert G. Kaiser on Citizen Bezos, Marilynne Robinson on two-party tyranny, Catherine Nicholson on the first diarist, Nathan Thrall on a lost Hebrew classic about the Nakba, David Cole on the fate of affirmative action, Aaron Matz on satire, Orville Schell on Chiang Kai-shek, Mark Lilla on a nineteenth-century protofascist, a poem by Patricia Lockwood, and much more. Jacob Weisberg |
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A Day in Jeffrey Epstein’s Life
| Sponsored by the University of California Press In the Review’s March 26 issue, Anne Enright descends into the Epstein archives and, hoping to “capture the feeling of normalized perversion that I sense in his demotic, automated ‘Sorry for all the typos’ tone,” she decides “to spend one day with him, to look at twenty-four hours of his correspondence, and then go offline.” So Enright scrolls through Epstein’s emails from Tuesday, July 19, 2011, beginning at midnight, when he was at his mansion in New York City writing furiously to contractors at work on his island house, and ending twenty-four hours later at the island house, where he is emailing his staff back in New York about installing a stair runner. In between, Epstein seems never to sleep, instead spending his time writing emails to staff, bankers, friends and family, Ghislaine Maxwell, Soon-Yi Previn, and more. Much of the correspondence is “oddly dull,” although “even the most banal of Epstein’s communications…contain the whole story”: “These bantering, randomly selected emails seem to show that Epstein wasn’t depraved, corrupt, or dodgy some of the time. He was depraved, corrupt, and proud of it all day long.” Below, alongside Enright’s essay, are five articles from our archives about Epstein, oligarchy, and the depraved lives of the powerful. Anne Enright |























