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Publications

New Yorker

Science

Creating a Better Leaf

Could tinkering with photosynthesis prevent a global food crisis?

Elizabeth Kolbert New Yorker Dec 2021 25min Permalink

Food Media

Alison Roman Just Can’t Help Herself

A food-world star’s method and mess.

Lauren Collins New Yorker Dec 2021 Permalink

Politics World

The Accidental Revolutionary Leading Belarus’s Uprising

How Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya came to challenge her country’s dictatorship.

Dexter Filkins New Yorker Dec 2021 Permalink

Reexamining the Legacy of Race and Robert E. Lee

The historian Allen C. Guelzo believes that the Confederate general deserves a more compassionate reading.

Isaac Chotiner New Yorker Nov 2021 20min Permalink

The Secretive Prisons That Keep Migrants Out of Europe

Tired of migrants arriving from Africa, the E.U. has created a shadow immigration system that captures them before they reach its shores, and sends them to brutal Libyan detention centers run by militias.

Ian Urbina New Yorker Nov 2021 35min Permalink

Arts

Virgil Abloh, Menswear’s Biggest Star

A profile of the designer, who died Sunday at 41.

Doreen St. Félix New Yorker Mar 2019 Permalink

Travel

The New Luxury Vacation: Being Dumped in the Middle of Nowhere

The joys—and absurdities—of finding oneself abandoned in a desolate landscape.

Ed Caeser New Yorker Nov 2021 Permalink

Crime Science

Family Secrets

How your family tree could catch a killer.

Raffi Khatchadourian New Yorker Nov 2021 50min Permalink

Crime Food

The Great Organic-Food Fraud

There’s no way to confirm that a crop was grown organically. Randy Constant exploited our trust in the labels—and made a fortune.

Ian Parker New Yorker Nov 2021 Permalink

History Music

The Education of a Part-Time Punk

Learning to love music—and to hate it, too.

Kelefa Sanneh New Yorker Sep 2021 Permalink

Crime

When a Witness Recants

At fourteen, Ron Bishop helped convict three innocent boys of murder. They’ve all lived with the consequences.

Jennifer Gonnerman New Yorker Oct 2021 30min Permalink

Crime

How an Adoption Broker Cashed In on Prospective Parents’ Dreams

In just a few years, a Michigan woman took in millions of dollars, faking adoptions and ruining families’ lives along the way.

Sheelah Kolhatkar New Yorker Oct 2021 Permalink

Crime Religion

The Shadow Penal System for Struggling Kids

The Christian organization Teen Challenge, made up of more than a thousand centers, claims to reform troubled teens. But is its discipline more like abuse?

Rachel Aviv New Yorker Oct 2021 Permalink

Health

A Botched Circumcision and Its Aftermath

The constant discomfort of a genital injury creates a covenant of pain. It is impossible to think about anything else.

Gary Shteyngart New Yorker Oct 2021 30min Permalink

The Ship That Became a Bomb

Stranded in Yemen’s war zone, a decaying supertanker has more than a million barrels of oil aboard. If—or when—it explodes or sinks, thousands may die.

Ed Caeser New Yorker Oct 2021 35min Permalink

Best Article Arts

Neo Rauch’s Antagonistic Art

German painting’s arch-traditionalist has a brush with controversy.

Thomas Meaney New Yorker Sep 2021 Permalink

Music

My Time with Kurt Cobain

“Befriending a rock star isn’t necessarily as cool as you’d think—particularly when tragedy happens.”

Michael Azerrad New Yorker Sep 2021 30min Permalink

Music

After a Year Without Crowds, Caroline Polachek Takes the Stage

The singer-songwriter tries to hold down an uncertain moment.

Jia Tolentino New Yorker Sep 2021 20min Permalink

World

How a Syrian War Criminal and Double Agent Disappeared in Europe

In the bloody civil war, Khaled al-Halabi switched sides. But what country does he really serve?

Ben Taub New Yorker Sep 2021 50min Permalink

Science

Can Progressives Be Convinced That Genetics Matters?

The behavior geneticist Kathryn Paige Harden is waging a two-front campaign: on her left are those who assume that genes are irrelevant, on her right those who insist that they’re everything.

Gideon Lewis-Kraus New Yorker Sep 2021 40min Permalink

Best Article World

The Other Afghan Women

In the countryside, the endless killing of civilians turned women against the occupiers who claimed to be helping them.

Anand Gopal New Yorker Sep 2021 40min Permalink

Best Article Crime

Crowded House

They thought that they’d found the perfect New York apartment. They weren’t alone.

Tad Friend New Yorker May 2013 30min Permalink

Movies & TV

The Real C.E.O. of “Succession”

How the writer Jesse Armstrong keeps the billionaire Roy family trapped in its gilded cage.

Rebecca Mead New Yorker Aug 2021 25min Permalink

Health

Finding a Way Back from Suicide

A journey of recovery through electroconvulsive therapy.

Donald Antrim New Yorker Aug 2021 30min Permalink

Science

The Lost Canyon Under Lake Powell

Drought is shrinking one of the country’s largest reservoirs, revealing a hidden Eden.

Elizabeth Kolbert New Yorker Aug 2021 25min Permalink

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