The.Ink

The.Ink

Blood feuds, bad jobs, making meaning

Weekend reads for September 13, 2025

The Ink's avatar
The Ink
Sep 13, 2025
∙ Paid
23
2
8
Share

Happy Saturday, Ink readers!

As we do each weekend for our supporting subscribers, we’ve collected the most intriguing, challenging writing and thinking we’ve come across in our reading and research this week. Among the links you’ll find in today’s edition of Weekend Reads:

  • The real story behind America’s most notorious blood feud — and the country’s history of violence

  • What do jobs mean anymore? Should they mean anything?

  • Can we understand the universe?

  • If we lose our ability to describe nature, do we still know ourselves?

  • How do we make peace with a broken world?

  • And as always, more music you need to add to your playlist

You won’t want to miss any of it. Thank you so much to our supporting subscribers for making this newsletter possible. If you haven’t yet joined our community, why not become part of this and help us build the future of independent media today?


In The Ink this week

A tennis player's lesson for Democrats

Anand Giridharadas
·
Sep 8
A tennis player's lesson for Democrats

Read full story

WATCH: The first amendment vs. fascism

Anand Giridharadas and Jameel Jaffer
·
Sep 10
WATCH: The first amendment vs. fascism

Read full story

Share


And now, your Weekend Reads

Blood feud

Despite the glut of media, folks generally know the names Hatfield and McCoy in the same way they know Paul Bunyan, John Henry, or Johnny Appleseed: through the osmotic absorption of American folklore. It is via such stories that the past becomes real to us denizens of the present, and how places like Appalachia take sorry, stereotypical shape in the eyes of city slickers who refuse to leave New York. In the mainstream account, the feud is a fable about the backwardness of the backcountry: a fight over a stolen hog that resulted in a decade of bumblefuck warfare until the government intervened to restore peace to the Tug River Valley. But history rarely bequeaths us so straightforward a story. [The Baffler]

Keep reading with a 7-day free trial

Subscribe to The.Ink to keep reading this post and get 7 days of free access to the full post archives.

Already a paid subscriber? Sign in
© 2025 Anand Giridharadas
Privacy ∙ Terms ∙ Collection notice
Start writingGet the app
Substack is the home for great culture