Modern Medicine Changed the Way We Die, and Not Always for the Better
On what you do and don’t learn in medical school.
On what you do and don’t learn in medical school.
Atul Gawande New York Oct 2014 10min Permalink
The aftermath of a sudden death.
Linda Vaccariello Cincinnati Magazine Oct 2014 20min Permalink
“I want to tell a different story, the more common yet strangely hidden one, which is that I don’t feel guilty and tortured about my abortion. Or rather, my abortions. There, I said it.”
Laurie Abraham Elle Nov 2014 Permalink
How a small group of gamers has been able to “set the terms of debate in a $100 billion industry, even as they send women like Brianna Wu into hiding and show every sign that they intend to keep doing so until all their demands are met.”
Kyle Wagner Deadspin Oct 2014 20min Permalink
Profiling the sleepy reality tv star.
Sarah Miller Cafe Oct 2014 15min Permalink
“I have a big cock in my living room.”
John Waters Interview Apr 1990 20min Permalink
Reconsidering Virginia Woolf’s novel, Orlando.
Colin Dickey Lapham's Quarterly Oct 2014 15min Permalink
How a surfing writer kidnapped by Somali pirates was freed.
Joshua Hammer Outside Oct 2014 25min Permalink
Wendy MacNaughton is a graphic journalist and the co-author of Pen & Ink: Tattoos and the Stories Behind Them.
"We mostly hear stories from big personalities who already have a spotlight on them. I think that everybody carries stories that are just as profound as the ones we hear from celebrities or whoever. I’m interested in the stories of people who don’t usually get to tell them. I think those are sometimes the most interesting."
Thanks to TinyLetter for sponsoring this week's episode.
Oct 2014 Permalink
Want to come work at Longform? We’re hiring a managing editor.
The bungled theft of a $6 million violin.
Buzz Bissinger Vanity Fair Nov 2014 20min Permalink
When American and Iraqi soldiers were exposed to leftover chemical munitions from Saddam Hussein’s war against Iran, the Pentagon kept silent.
C.J. Chivers The New York Times Oct 2014 Permalink
Relief pitcher Donnie Moore is best known for giving up a crucial home run during Game 5 the 1986 ALCS. It’s not what led to his suicide a few years later.
Michael McKnight Sports Illustrated Oct 2014 10min Permalink
Inside the stronghold of Commander Pigeon, “collector of lost and exiled men.”
Jen Percy The New Republic Oct 2014 20min Permalink
A dispatch from Lima, Ohio.
Janet Reitman Rolling Stone Oct 2014 45min Permalink
The Nigerian schoolgirls who escaped Boko Haram.
Sarah A. Topol Matter Oct 2014 Permalink
The cost of Alzheimer’s.
Tiffany Stanley National Journal Oct 2014 40min Permalink
A journalist’s memories of covering the great Baltimore fire of 1904.
H.L. Mencken Newspaper Days Jan 1941 30min Permalink
A plane that fell from the sky, Zadie Smith's love-hate relationship with Manhattan, and the underground network that powers America's Chinese food restaurants — the most read articles this week in the new Longform App, available free for iPhone and iPad.
America’s underground Chinese restaurant workers.
Lauren Hilgers New Yorker 25min
The story of TWA Flight 841.
Buzz Bissinger St. Paul Pioneer Press May 1981 25min
On loving and hating and living in Manhattan.
“I am having a moment, but I only want more. I need more. I cannot merely be good enough because I am chased by the pernicious whispers that I might only be ‘good enough for a black woman.’”
Roxane Gay VQR 10min
Jamie Smith said he was a co-founder of Blackwater and a former CIA officer. He appeared on cable news as a counterterrorism expert and he received millions in goverment contracts to train personnel. The money was real. The resume wasn’t.
Ace Atkins, Michael Fechter Outside 35min
May 1981 Permalink
A mom on hitting menopause as her daughter hits adolescence.
Marina Benjamin Aeon Oct 2014 15min Permalink
A profile of Laura Poitras.
George Packer New Yorker Oct 2014 35min Permalink
A story of regret and the contemporary art market.
Vernon Silver, James Tarmy Businessweek Oct 2014 10min Permalink
Operations gone wrong, how the media covered for spies, and the story that became Argo — a collection of our favorite articles about the CIA.
How the CIA used a fake science fiction film to sneak six Americans out of revolutionary Iran. The declassified story that became Ben Affleck’s Argo.
Joshuah Bearman Wired Apr 2007 20min
Throughout the ’50s and ’60s, media outlets including the New York Times and CBS News provided the CIA with information and cover for agents. Then everyone decided to pretend it had never happened.
Carl Bernstein Rolling Stone Oct 1977 55min
Erik Prince, the boyish CEO of America’s largest and most controversial mercenary force, Blackwater, also happened to be a CIA agent.
Adam Ciralsky Vanity Fair Jan 2010 25min
The story of William Morgan: American, wanderer, Cuban revolutionary, possible spy.
David Grann New Yorker May 2012 1h25min
When a CIA operation in Pakistan went bad, leaving three men dead, the episode offered a rare glimpse inside a shadowy world of espionage. It also jeopardized America’s most critical outpost in the war against terrorism.
Matthew Teague Men's Journal Jun 2011
On the CIA’s early operations.
Jason Epstein New York Review of Books Apr 1967
A spy takes on his own agency.
David Wise Smithsonian Oct 2012
A three-part series on the U.S. intelligence system post-9/11.
Apr 1967 – Oct 2012 Permalink
Jamie Smith said he was a co-founder of Blackwater and a former CIA officer. He appeared on cable news as a counterterrorism expert and he received millions in goverment contracts to train personnel. The money was real. The resume wasn’t.
Ace Atkins, Michael Fechter Outside Oct 2014 35min Permalink
A trip to the U.S. Open of ping-pong.
Eric Nusbaum Deadspin Oct 2014 25min Permalink