Recommended by Age of Invention, by Anton Howes
The author, Stuart Ritchie, is one of the world's experts on when science becomes fraudulent, biased, or over-hyped. I especially love the audio versions of this newsletter thanks to to his soothing Scottish accent. I feel we're kindred spirits when it comes to busting myths.
Tomas Pueyo's newsletter is one of only a handful that I pay for. He covers an extraordinary range of topics, with great insight - somehow, he always manages to identify an underlying model that I hadn't noticed before for how things work. And he works out how to apply it too.
If you enjoy the esoteric, this is an essential newsletter. Ned Donovan has a real eye for the weird and wonderful accidents of history, like how India still has a prince, Disney became a nuclear power, and one of the world's largest countries turned into department store.
This newsletter, by Davis Kedrosky, is the "big new thing" when it comes to public-facing economic history. Davis is something of a wunderkind. I don't always agree with him, but he provides expert overviews of the latest academic papers, makes the older literature accessible, and is doing sterling original research too.
When it comes to Matt Clancy's work, I'm something of a hipster. I loved his work "before it was cool". This is essential reading for anyone interested in how innovation works. The newsletter shares his updates to what is already the world's best reference work on innovation research.