A Sense of Where You Are
Bill Bradley was a Rhodes scholar, a three-term U.S. Senator and a presidential candidate. But before all that, he was the best college basketball player in the country.
Bill Bradley was a Rhodes scholar, a three-term U.S. Senator and a presidential candidate. But before all that, he was the best college basketball player in the country.
John McPhee New Yorker Jan 1965 1h5min Permalink
Dzhokhar Tsarnaev’s friends didn’t realize what he’d done until they saw his image on television.
Masha Gessen Buzzfeed Apr 2015 10min Permalink
Coastal erosion is leading more than a few Britons to watch their homes crumble into the sea.
Patrick Barkham The Guardian Apr 2015 20min Permalink
Kamel Daoud’s celebrated retelling of Albert Camus’s The Stranger came within two votes of winning the Prix Goncourt. It has also made him a target of radical Islamists.
Adam Shatz New York Times Magazine Apr 2015 35min Permalink
A home for troubled children in California comes undone.
Joaquin Sapien ProPublica, California Sunday Apr 2015 45min Permalink
The rise of the Peoples Temple through the lens of an earlier group: Father Divine’s Peace Mission.
Adam Morris The Believer Apr 2015 25min Permalink
He was one of Israel’s greatest spies. Then he brought his own country to the brink of war.
Ronen Bergman The Atavist Magazine Apr 2015 1h10min Permalink
The death of Bobby Phills, an NBA player who made one terrible mistake.
Jonathan Abrams Grantland Mar 2015 25min Permalink
On fishing, physics, and life's intangibles.
<p>“Back when his girls were girls, with fluffy pink rugs on their bathroom floor, Burgundy wasn’t much of a second-guesser. He was a richly confident physicist with work at the university. He golfed. They went to the club. Even when there were questions of the girls smoking or skipping school (and there were always questions, wink-wink), Burgundy hadn’t worried about His Girls. They weren’t that kind of a family. And anyway (so lovely were His Girls) if they would have been that kind of family they would have worn it well. Being well-paid, occupied and cohesively married does wonders for a man’s confidence.”</p>
Jill Barth Gravel Magazine Apr 2015 10min Permalink
Old India and new, viewed through the prism of the writer’s hometown.
Amitava Kumar Granta Apr 2015 15min Permalink
Scott Anderson is a war correspondent and novelist. He’s written for The New York Times Magazine, Harper’s, Vanity Fair, and more.
“I really feel that what’s at the root of so many wars now, modern wars, unconventional wars, it really just comes down to a bunch of young guys with access to guns coming up with a pretext to rape and murder and pillage and steal from their neighbors.”
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Apr 2015 Permalink
“None of this should have ever happened. It makes absolutely no sense at all. It’s truly crazy.”
Matt Stopera Buzzfeed Mar 2015 20min Permalink
She teaches directors to direct.
Starlee Kine California Sunday Apr 2015 Permalink
A man in Puerto Rico stumbles on a brick of cocaine, and rather than sell it he decides to bury it. Others, hearing his story, cook up a plan to retrieve it.
Daniel Riley GQ Mar 2015 Permalink
A profile of Judy Clarke, the publicity-shy anti-death-penalty attorney, who has defended the Unabomber, Susan Smith, and Jared Loughner.
Mark Bowden Vanity Fair Mar 2005 25min Permalink
“The regular average layman couldn’t see what I see. And the way they’re painting the trainer is all wrong. Look at him there, screaming, Do this! and Do that! I never had anyone telling me what to do. I did it. Shouting at the fighter like that makes him look like an animal, like a horse to be trained.”
Roger Ebert Chicago Sun-Times Jul 1979 10min Permalink
The events that led the writer to spend 60 days in jail.
Alexis Paige The Rumpus Mar 2015 15min Permalink
The drugs did not entirely deliver on their promise of anxiety reduction.
Conor Creighton Vice Mar 2015 15min Permalink
Has global warming made it harder for environmentalists to care about conservation?
Jonathan Franzen New Yorker Mar 2015 30min Permalink
On loving Taco Bell, as a half-Mexican. A James Beard Award nominee.
John Devore Eater Nov 2014 10min Permalink
Paleram Chauhan, a 52-year-old Indian farmer, was shot dead during the summer of 2013. The reason: his opposition to a gang of criminals stealing his village’s sand to sell on the black market.
Vince Beiser Wired Mar 2015 15min Permalink
Beatrice Munyenyezi told her New Hampshire neighbors that she was refugee from the Rwandan genocide. Half of that was true.
Michele McPhee Boston Magazine Apr 2015 25min Permalink
Ronnie O’Sullivan is the best snooker player in the world. He’s also the most tormented.
Sam Knight New Yorker Mar 2015 25min Permalink
The making of an all-time great video game.
Blake J. Harris Read-Only Memory Mar 2015 25min Permalink
Harry Shaughnessy was a suburban dad and a lifelong Catholic. Then he and his family gave up on God.
Daniel Burke CNN Mar 2015 10min Permalink