The Edit: The Best of 2023
The Edit

The Edit: The Best of 2023

Our selection of the best articles, podcasts and videos from 2023.

6 minute read

21st Dec 2023

As we approach the end of 2023, we’re taking stock of the year gone by. While the world continues to be plagued by war and uncertainty, there’s one thing we’re striving to hold onto: hope.

In Rebecca Solnit’s essay Difficult is not the same as impossible, she writes that “hope is not like a lottery ticket you can sit on the sofa and clutch, feeling lucky … hope is an axe you break down doors with in an emergency.”

We featured this essay in the most recent issue of our biannual print magazine The Beautiful Truth, which you can now buy in select UK shops and worldwide from our online shop. This year we also hosted some live events: our panel to celebrate the release of Issue 02 of the magazine, and a discussion with the CEO of Arcelik Hakan Bulgurlu to launch our film Peak: Lessons from Chomolungma, raising £1700 for the Turkey earthquake. 

We’ll be taking the next few weeks to recharge for the year ahead and we hope that you can do the same. In the meantime, we want to leave you with some of our favourite content from across the internet from the last 12 months – a mixture of stories, podcasts and videos from creatives around the world. 

From The Beautiful Truth Magazine, we wish you a happy and restful holiday period.

To read 

The secret power of the 8-minute phone call

Jancee Dunn    |   January 2nd     |     The New York Times

The goal is to think of a person you love: someone you miss, someone you wish you connected with more often. Invest the time now for the people you care about.

Why leaders should be open about their flaws

Li Jiang et al.    |   January 11th     |     Harvard Business Review

Leaders often struggle to come across as authentic. New research finds that one reason is they frequently choose to present their strengths and intentionally avoid disclosing their weaknesses. This is a mistake.

Illustration by Harriet Lee-Merrion, @harrietleemerrion

Climate leaders on what brings them hope

Daisy Greenwell    |    August 7th    |     Positive News

If you’re working on the frontlines of the climate crisis, how do you stay positive? Positive News asked activists, scientists, lawyers, politicians and business leaders ‘what brings you hope today?’

The essential skills for being human

David Brooks     |    October 19th     |     The New York Times

It’s a moral act to truly see someone, says David Brooks. How can we better understand the people around us and create stronger and more fulfilling connections, especially for those who feel unseen? 

The business case for love

Marcus Buckingham     |    October 12th     |     Harvard Business Review

When someone says they “love” doing a certain activity, this isn’t a careless exaggeration – it means that when doing the activity, the person is flourishing. Employees who love what they do feel at ease, in control, deeply absorbed in what they’re doing, and are more productive. 

In the Middle East, despair is not an option

David Remnick    |    November 4th    |     The New Yorker

A source of inspiration is that era of history, not so distant, when leaders and movements, for all their flaws and failures, agree to agree.

TIME’s top 100 photos of 2023

TIME Photo Department    |    November 21st     |     TIME

As we draw close to the end of another year punctuated by grief and conflict, but also records broken and breathtaking moments of human achievement, photographers continue to astound us by offering new ways of seeing the world.

To listen

“To Be Made Whole” 

Ada Limón     |    February 16th     |    On Being with Krista Tippett

An electric conversation with Ada Limón’s wisdom and her poetry – a refreshing, full-body experience of how words, sound and silence can teach us about being human.

Why we all need daily doses of awe

Dacher Keltner     |    February 27th     |    At a Distance

UC Berkeley psychology professor Dacher Keltner talks about human emotion as a tool for making sense of the world, the extraordinary acts of kindness that take place around us all the time, and moral beauty as a way of life.

Introverts can be leaders too

Alice Boyes     |    July 5th     |    HBR on Leadership

We all have preconceived notions about the personality types associated with good leadership – like confidence or emotional intelligence. But what about shyness? If you’re more reserved but truly competent, can you become a leader?

The Great Resignation is over

Natalie Kitroeff     |    July 12th     |    NY Times: The Daily

Over the past two years, tens of millions of Americans have quit their jobs – called ‘the Great Resignation’. Now, that seems to be ending. 

The perils of maximising the good that you do

Toby Ord     |    September 8th     |    80,000 Hours Podcast

Rather than “doing the most good that we can,” perhaps we should be happy with a more modest and manageable goal: “doing most of the good that we can”. 

To watch

Peak: Lessons from Chomolungma

The Beautiful Truth   |   January 1st    |     The Beautiful Truth

Three years ago, Arçelik CEO Hakan Bulgurlu reached the summit of the highest peak in the world – and came down with a renewed perspective on tackling the climate crisis. Peak: Lessons from Chomolungma tells his story.

The Book of Leaves

Brett Foxwell    |   January 2nd     |     bfophoto

Created by placing 2,400 different leaves in a stop-motion sequence, The Book of Leaves flickers through a collection of hues, shapes and species. The result draws out the rich diversity, shared traits and natural beauty of the leaves we so often step over or take for granted.

How Hubble Images Are Made

Miranda Chabot    |   February 21st    |     NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center 

As a cosmic photographer, NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope has taken over a million snapshots documenting the universe. These images illustrate, explain, and inspire us with their grandeur.

But how are those images taken and processed?

Freshwater

Dream Hampton   |   July 25th     |     The New York Times

Dream Hampton explores water as a force of harmony and devastation as climate change affects her home city of Detroit.

The sun is always shining

Claudia Biçen   |   April 19th     |     The Beautiful Truth

Visual artist Claudia Biçen conveys a moving depiction of how we construct the self, through ink-and-pencil portraits and the voice of psychologist Dr Daniel Brown.

For all our other #Edits of the year, click here.