Scott Stossel

Scott Stossel is the editor of The Atlantic magazine and the author of the New York Times bestseller My Age of Anxiety: Fear, Hope, Dread, and the Search for Peace of Mind and the award-winning Sarge: The Life and Times of Sargent ShriverMore

Scott StosselScott Stossel has been associated with the magazine since 1992 when, shortly after graduating from Harvard, he joined the staff and helped to launch The Atlantic Online. In 1996, he moved to The American Prospect where, over the course of seven years, he served as associate editor, executive editor, and culture editor. He rejoined the Atlantic staff in 2002.

His articles have appeared in a wide array of publications, including The New Yorker, The New Republic, The New York Times, The Washington Post, and The Boston Globe. His 2004 book, Sarge: The Life and Times of Sargent Shriver, inspired The Boston Globe to write, "Scott Stossel's superb new biography is an extraordinary achievement," while Publisher's Weekly declared, "This is a superbly researched, immensely readable political biography." His most recent book, My Age of Anxiety: Fear, Hope, Dread, and the Search for Peace of Mind, became a top-ten New York Times bestseller in its first week of publication.

Within the Atlantic offices, Scott will be forever remembered as the managing editor who oversaw the magazine's 2005 move to Washington from Boston, where it had been based since its founding in 1857. Under Scott's supervision, the magazine shifted all of its operations from Boston's North End to the Watergate building, all the while producing issues that were later nominated for National Magazine Awards.

Along with writing and editing, Scott has taught courses in the American Studies Department at Trinity College. He lives with his family in Washington, D.C.

Bill Maher on Masturbation and National Security Reuters

Bill Maher on Masturbation and National Security

The comedian has just launched the twelfth season of Real Time and is about to hit the road for a tour of stand-up dates in red states. More »

Issue January/February 2014

Performance Anxiety in Great Performers

What Hugh Grant, Gandhi, and Thomas Jefferson have in common

Issue January/February 2014

Surviving Anxiety

I've tried therapy, drugs, and booze. Here’s how I came to terms with the nation's most common mental illness.

Issue Special JFK Commemorative Issue

Knifed

How a Kennedy brother-in-law, Sargent Shriver, fell victim to the jealous acolytes of a political dynasty in mourning

Issue May 2013

What Makes Us Happy, Revisited

A new look at the famous Harvard study of what makes people thrive

Issue November 2012

Robert Spitzer

Retired Professor of Psychiatry. He didn’t have to do it. Robert Spitzer was retired. He was weak from Parkinson’s disease. As the chair of the task force that had developed the third edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders—the version of the mental-health establishment’s bible that had, in 1980, famously pried psychiatry loose from its Freudian underpinnings—his enshrinement in the history of…

'An Optimist's Eye and a Skeptic's Squint': Remembering Robert Manning Boston Globe

'An Optimist's Eye and a Skeptic's Squint': Remembering Robert Manning

Remembering the longtime Atlantic editor, who guided the magazine through a critical era of war, protest, and cultural change. More »

Arnold Schwarzenegger on Denial, the Shrivers, and Having It All Reuters

Arnold Schwarzenegger on Denial, the Shrivers, and Having It All

Before he ran for office, he had a lot to say about work-life balance and the legendary family he married into. More »

The Good Works of Sargent Shriver John F. Kennedy Presidential Library/Wikimedia

The Good Works of Sargent Shriver

The founder of the Peace Corps and leader of the War on Poverty has died. His biographer reflects on a remarkable legacy. More »

Eunice the Formidable

Eunice Shriver thoroughly terrified her husband's biographer—and inspired his profound admiration. A reminiscence.

Issue July/August 2005

North Korea: The War Game

Dealing with North Korea could make Iraq look like child's play—and the longer we wait, the harder it will get. That's the message of a Pentagon-style war game involving some of this country's most prominent foreign-policy strategists

Issue May 2004

“Knifed”

In 1968 the Kennedy family essentially blackballed a brother-in-law, Sargent Shriver, who was very close to being chosen as Hubert Humphrey's running mate. In doing so, they may have accidentally thrown the election to Richard Nixon

As American as Women’s Soccer?

Everything about the new professional women's soccer league is unorthodox—which is why it may succeed

The Next Left

Richard Rorty, the eminent philosopher and author of Achieving Our Country, argues that the American Left, if it is to recapture its relevance, must take pride in its past.

The Biggest Story in Photos

The Ancient Ghost City of Ani

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