The Revolution Will Probably Wear Mom Jeans
The politics behind the anti-trend trend known as “Normcore” turn out to be as conservative as ever.
The politics behind the anti-trend trend known as “Normcore” turn out to be as conservative as ever.
Eugenia Williamson The Baffler Mar 2015 15min Permalink
An innocent man was executed – in 1761. Voltaire got on the case.
Ken Armstrong The Marshall Project Mar 2015 15min Permalink
Academics are convinced it’s an intelligent satire.
Abraham Riesman New York Mar 2015 15min Permalink
Miriam Carey died at the hands of the Secret Service. Over a year later, her family has no real answers about what happened to her.
Jennifer Gonnerman Mother Jones Mar 2015 20min Permalink
The writer Alfred Chester, who died alone in a Jerusalem apartment in 1971 at just 37, was brilliant. He was also insane.
Blake Bailey Vice Mar 2008 15min Permalink
Rumor had it that a teenager had cut off a man’s penis, and the cops happened to have a murder victim that answered that description. Nothing else lined up.
Jordan Smith The Intercept Mar 2015 35min Permalink
The quest to create a friction-free Disney World.
Cliff Kuang Wired Mar 2015 15min Permalink
Reprints Sponsored
Two days after the Japanese tsunami, after the waves had left their destruction, as rescue workers searched the ruins, news came of an almost surreal survival: Miles out at sea, a man was found, alone, riding on nothing but the roof of his house.
Excerpted from Love and Other Ways of Dying and including a new interview with the author.
“It took me 32 years to come out. This is what happened when I did.”
Barney Frank Politico Magazine Mar 2015 25min Permalink
Headed to SXSW? Come say hi!
Locals on the Outer Banks are arguing about whether climate change is real. Meanwhile, their islands are disappearing.
Mac McClelland Audubon Mar 2015 10min Permalink
“Ikea, it seems, is a genius at selling Ikea.”
Beth Kowitt Fortune Mar 2015 15min Permalink
A Norwegian writer with an eye for detail visits Newfoundland.
A Norwegian writer with an eye for detail visits Minnesota.
Karl Ove Knausgaard New York Times Magazine Mar 2015 1h20min Permalink
Two friends found a literary magazine; fantastical complications and potentials ensue. From Aira's newest collection, The Musical Brain.
"So, predictably, we began to consider a first issue that would be thirty-six-fold, so to speak. An issue made up of numbers 1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8-9-10-11-12-13-14-15-16-17-18-19-20-21-22-23-24-25-26-27-28-29-30-31-32-33-34-35-36. That would allow for an almost total flexibility. Why hadn’t we thought of it before? Why had we wasted our time with 'triples' and 'quadruples' and 'decuples' when there was such an obvious solution right under our noses? The printer’s 'sheet' should have shown us the way right from the start, from the moment we discovered its existence, the famous “sheet” that was unfolding now before our eyes, like a rose in time."
César Aira Electric Literature's Recommended Reading Mar 2015 15min Permalink
He was a fixture in the kitchen of one of Seattle’s most celebrated restaurants, with plans to move to New York City to further his career. Then he robbed a bank.
Allecia Vermillion Seattle Met Mar 2015 20min Permalink
Perhaps because your people have always hunted them. But also because there’s demand in New York fashion circles for their pelts.
Ross Perlin The Guardian Mar 2015 20min Permalink
Besieged by pirates, and youngsters unused to paying to watch sex, the porn industry just isn’t what it used to be.
Molly Lambert Grantland Mar 2015 45min Permalink
Erik Larson is the author of several books, including The Devil in the White City. His latest is Dead Wake: The Last Crossing of the Lusitania.
"I realized then and there, that afternoon: the thing that was going to make this interesting was the juxtaposition of light and dark, good and evil. This monument to civic goodwill versus this monument to the dark side of human nature. ... But that was really hard to pull off. And, frankly, on the eve of publication I was pretty convinced my career was over. I'd violated every single concept of good narrative."
Thanks to TinyLetter, Wealthfront, and Love and Other Ways of Dying, the new collection from Michael Paterniti, for sponsoring this week's episode. If you would like to support the show, please leave a review on iTunes.
Mar 2015 Permalink
How Alphonse “Buddy” Fletcher Jr., an openly gay hedge fund star, came to marry Ellen Pao, a partner at a powerful Silicon Valley firm, before they “went to war with their elite worlds.”
Adam Lashinsky, Katie Benner Fortune Oct 2012 15min Permalink
Robert Marbut is in the business of helping cities criminalize homelessness.
Arthur Delaney Huffington Post Mar 2015 20min Permalink
A French reporter went undercover as potential “caliphette” and recieved a marriage proposal from a senior ISIS commander.
Margarette Driscoll Sunday Times of London Mar 2015 10min Permalink
Giving up the iPhone ghost, and other forays into knock-off technology.
John Herrman Matter Mar 2015 15min Permalink
Sponsored
Our sponsor this week is Random House, which has just released a fantastic new collection of stories by Longform regular Michael Paterniti, Love and Other Ways of Dying.
In the remote Ukranian countryside, Paterniti picks apples (and faces mortality) with a real-life giant; in Nanjing, China, he confronts a distraught jumper on a suicide bridge; in Dodge City, Kansas, he takes up residence at a roadside hotel and sees, firsthand, the ways in which the racial divide turns neighbor against neighbor. (You can hear Paterniti talking about many of these pieces on Longform Podcast #93.)
George Saunders has described Paterniti's writing as “expansive and joyful” and Dave Eggers has called him “one of the best living practitioners of the art of literary journalism.” Needless to say, everyone here at Longform is a huge fan.
Buy the Book:</a></em>
Amazon • Barnes & Noble • Powell's • Kindle • iBooks
Twelve columns about the boxer’s descent, originally published in the Chicago Daily News and the Chicago Sun-Times.
John Schulian Deadspin Mar 2015 55min Permalink
“Some of the best lines — and I’ve been lucky to hear really nutso lines over the years — are not in response to any kind of question. It’s in response to, ‘I don’t know.’”
Alex Pappademas Grantland Mar 2015 20min Permalink