When Daniel Jones started the Modern Love column in 2004, he opened the call for submissions and hoped the idea would catch on. Twenty years later, over a thousand Modern Love essays have been published in The New York Times, and the column is a trove of real-life love stories.
Dan has put so much of himself into editing the column over the years, but as he tells our host, Anna Martin, the column has influenced him, too. Today, Dan shares three Modern Love essays that have changed the way he thinks about love and relationships in his own life.
Also, Anna announces the beginning of a special series of episodes celebrating Modern Love’s 20th anniversary.
The Modern Love essays mentioned in this episode are:
One Bouquet of Fleeting Beauty, Please
Nursing a Wound in an Appropriate Setting
My First Lesson in Motherhood
First Love Mixtape, Side B
A Couple Walks Into City Hall
Right Swipes, Big City
Confessions of a Late Bloomer
A Mother’s Wild, Extravagant Love
Beyond Girlfriend-Boyfriend
When You Think You Know Your Parents
Married to a Deal Breaker
The ‘Ham Sandwich’ Effect
First Love Mixtape
Loving Across Borders
The Upside of Our Parents' Divorce
When His Shorts Are Just Too Tight
When Two Open Marriages Collide
The Right to Fail at Marriage
Was It Me or Our Astrology?
Trapped in a Romance Scam
Meet Cute at Zero Years Old
She Left Me There
Why Do People Get Married?
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