Culture

Gross-out

“Deadpool & Wolverine” is revolting, but popular

The film has had the highest-grossing opening of an R-rated film

The sports page

Slow down: longer races offer fans more than sprints do

Middle- and long-distance races have a drama that short ones cannot match

Travel companions

We enjoyed reading these books on holiday. You might, too

A selection of titles chosen by The Economist’s journalists

The empire strikes back

A moving memoir probes the contradictions of modern China

Edward Wong narrates his father’s journey from servant of the party to escapee

A mountainous legacy

Few writers have seen America more clearly than James Baldwin

A century after his birth, Baldwin remains one of the country’s most important authors

Biology

A primer on RNA, perhaps the most consequential molecule of all

“The Catalyst” looks at RNA’s role in life’s origins as well as its medical uses

World in a dish

Tinned fish is swimming against the tide

Once a staple of wartime diets, it is now a social-media phenomenon

Finding the beat

The Paris Olympics are breaking’s one shot to become a global sport

But its inclusion was not without controversy

Spine-tingling

How long would it take to read the greatest books of all time?

The Economist consulted bibliophile data scientists to get an answer

The sports page

The most memorable part of the Paris Olympics may be uncompetitive

Opening ceremonies remain a core part of the Olympic experience

The river runs through it

The Seine may determine athletes’ success at the Paris Olympics

Yet the river plays an even more vital role in the culture and economy of the city

Page-turners

The real theme of J.D. Vance’s and Donald Trump’s memoirs

“Hillbilly Elegy” and “The Art of the Deal” reveal a lot about who the men are—and were