Life Isn’t Like the Movies (Even if You Write the Movies)
A director of romantic comedies finds herself attending weddings with her ex-husband. Who wrote this script?
A director of romantic comedies finds herself attending weddings with her ex-husband. Who wrote this script?
Divided by race, politics and pasts, they found a place with each other … until they didn’t.
Agreeing to see him again would require a minor miracle. A minor miracle is exactly what happened.
A young woman struggling with an eating disorder tries to shift from self-loathing to self-loving.
A motorcycle accident brings together four lives that had been kept intentionally separate.
My grandmother was getting married for the third time — to her former brother-in-law, of all people. I didn’t expect to envy them.
The loss of a loved one can complicate family math.
Sometimes it’s the uneventful stretches of marriage that can be the real stress test.
My father’s midlife transition taught me that if life is about change, love is about constancy.
How can a spurned lover make his case? In this essay — the first Modern Love column ever published, exactly 15 years ago — one writer counts the ways.