Earlier this year, we shared the story of one family’s dispute over a loved one with dementia. That story, originally reported in The New York Times Magazine by Katie Engelhart, won the Pulitzer Prize for feature writing this past week. Today, we're revisiting Katie’s story – and the question at the heart of it: When cognitive decline changes people, should we respect their new desires?
Guest: Katie Engelhart, a contributing writer for The New York Times Magazine.
Background reading:
25 Days to Go
The Parents Aren’t All Right
How NAFTA Broke American Politics
The Year Since Oct. 7
The Sunday Read: ‘The Blind Side’ Made Him Famous. But He Has a Different Story to Tell.
'The Interview': Al Pacino Is Still Going Big
Four Weeks to Go
Iran Retaliates
The Walz-Vance Debate: Civility and Then a Clash
Hurricane Helene’s 600 Miles of Destruction
Alliance vs. Isolation: Harris and Trump’s Competing Views on Foreign Policy
The Deserter: Parts 4 and 5
The Deserter: Parts 1-3
'The Interview': John Oliver Is Still Working Through the Rage
The Criminal Indictment of New York City’s Mayor
The Profitable Business of Holding Patients Against Their Will
The Slide Toward War in Lebanon
How the Cost of Housing Became So Crushing
How Telegram Became the Underworld’s Favorite App
'Book Review': Robert Caro on 50 Years of 'The Power Broker'
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