March 2013 marks the tenth anniversary of The Believer. Originally named The Optimist, The Believer was founded by McSweeney’s with the intent to be a positive presence in the literary world. No snark here, in other words. I came across the journal a short while after I moved to Hawaii and joined a contemporary fiction reading group.
The biggest draw of the journal for me was Nick Hornby’s mostly-consistent “Stuff I’ve Been Reading” column. Each month, the writer of books like A Long Way Down and Juliet, Naked wrote through the best of what he had been reading that month (and inspired me to finally read Great Expectations). Authors I met through other means would drop by the journal often, too. It’s because of The Believer that I read things like The Book of Disquiet and Mr. Penumbra’s 24-Hour Bookstore. So I’m glad to hear that the journal has made it to the ten-year mark.
If you have some free time today, here are three articles from The Believer‘s ten-year catalog that I’ve enjoyed and been challenged by:
- From the November 2003 issue, an article about Smallville, Jesus, and America;
- From the October 2011 issue, a brilliant essay from Jonathan Lethem titled “Postmodernism as Liberty Valance”;
- And from the February 2013 issue, an interesting look at eastern monasticism’s struggle with the 21st century.
I may not always agree with The Believer, but I have always appreciated its optimism and sense of engagement with a culture we all-too-often don’t hear because of the clammer of today’s pop culture. I think it’s well worth our time to listen to its voice a little more.





I remember your buying the back-issues shortly after discovering this. I’ve been meaning to check it out ever since, but wow. It’s been ten years? Dang.