In this essay for The American Scholar, Jess Love recounts receiving a neighbor’s collection of 92 DVDs, containing “practically every major kid’s cartoon movie from the last 20 years.” She then tells her family that they’re “going analog,” hoping to free themselves from a life of streaming. Love’s piece explores nostalgia, choice, and why parents often want to connect their children to their own past.

“When you invent the ship, you also invent the shipwreck,” said the philosopher Paul Virilio. Here’s the thing: I grew up when it still felt possible that we could invent the ship and then put our heads together to avoid the shipwreck. In the world bequeathed to my children, it can seem like there is no avoiding the wreck. And in this world, in this widening gyre of uncertain outcomes and frictionless gratification, DVDs are shiny and real and the same shape as life preservers. DVDs are the last unambiguously good thing: the last technology that arrived and only made things better and would never ever let us down.

More picks on nostalgia

The Hardy Men

Daniel Lefferts | The New York Review of Books | April 16, 2026 | 3,368 words

“Why is a right-wing press reissuing century-old adolescent mystery novels?”

Our Longing for Inconvenience

Hanif Abdurraqib | The New Yorker | April 17, 2026 | 2,879 words

“The modern world has made us ill-equipped for the nuisances of past technologies, even as it has fuelled nostalgia for things that might transport us back to calmer times.”

25 Years of iPod Brain

Molly Mary O’Brien | The Dial | February 25, 2026 | 1,552 words

“Changed for good.”

Pizza Supreme

Luke Winkie | Slate | January 31, 2026 | 2,843 words

“Pizza Hut Classic is fast becoming a cultural obsession. I spent a day at one to find out why.”

Recurring Screens

Nora Claire Miller | The Paris Review | May 20, 2025 | 1,904 words

“A screen saver periodically smokes the locusts out, thereby saving the screen from the disfigurement of monotony.”

The Department of Everything

Stephen Akey | The Hedgehog Review | June 21, 2024 | 1,903 words

“Dispatches from the telephone reference desk.”

Cheri has been an editor at Longreads since 2014.