Nothing Says "Sorry Our Drones Hit Your Wedding Party" Like $800,000 and Some Guns
Untangling the aftermath of a United States drone strike in Yemen.
Untangling the aftermath of a United States drone strike in Yemen.
Gregory D. Johnsen Buzzfeed Aug 2014 30min Permalink
The story of a naïve fisherman, a boat headed for Spain and 1.5 tons of cocaine.
Noah Richler The Walrus Jun 2014 35min Permalink
Two truckers talk on a wintry Alaskan highway.
For a daily short story recommendation from our editors, try Longform Fiction or follow @longformfiction on Twitter.
Ryan W. Bradley Corium Aug 2014 10min Permalink
To understand why a 64-year-old man would try and break the land speed record by traveling hundreds of miles per hour, you need to know a little something about his family.
Ann O'Neill CNN Aug 2014 20min Permalink
Rand Paul as the movement’s Pearl Jam.
Robert Draper New York Times Magazine Aug 2014 25min Permalink
A five-part series on the instant gratification economy.
Liz Gannes Re/Code Aug 2014 50min Permalink
Sandra Bridewell, a Dallas socialite, and the people around her who keep dying.
Eric Miller, Skip Hollandsworth D Magazine May 1987 45min Permalink
Following Muammar Qaddafi’s death in 2011, Libya had hundreds of billions of dollars. This is the story of how it was erased.
David Samuels Businessweek Aug 2014 25min Permalink
The World Cup and Argentina’s “Dirty War.”
Wright Thompson ESPN the Magazine Jun 2014 10min Permalink
“My mother kept scrapbooks of everything any of her children did all their lives, and among my scrapbooks are newspapers that I wrote on the typewriter at the age of six, The Hersey Family News, with ads offering my older brothers for various kinds of hard labor at very low wages.”
John Hersey, Jonathan Dee The Paris Review Jun 1986 50min Permalink
On Stewart Butterfield, the founder of Flickr and now Slack, a wildly popular, difficult-to-describe messaging service that has 38,000 paying subscribers just a few months after launching.
On the private, for-profit probation industry.
Sarah Stillman New Yorker Jun 2014 40min Permalink
Adam Higginbotham has written for Businessweek, Wired and The New Yorker. His latest story is A Thousand Pounds of Dynamite, for The Atavist.
"There's always a narrative in a crime story. Something has always gone wrong. These guys are always in prison, because they all fucked something up or trusted the wrong person. They always get caught in the end. Because if they hadn't, you wouldn't be reading about it."
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Aug 2014 Permalink
Partying with a lost tycoon on his birthday.
Adam Higginbotham The Independent Jul 2000 15min Permalink
A profile of Garry Kasparov, who exiled himself from Russia last year and is running for president of FIDE, the governing body of chess. The election has become the dirtiest in FIDE history and a proxy debate over freedom and Russia’s future; Kasparov’s opponent has the full backing of Vladimir Putin.
Steven Lee Myers New York Times Magazine Aug 2014 20min Permalink
On the history of masturbation.
Stephen Greenblatt The New York Review of Books Apr 2004 20min Permalink
The 3-part story of Ethan Arbelo, 11 years old and diagnosed with a terminal illness, on a journey to fulfill his dreams.
His boyhood dreams.
“How do you tell a Marine to stop fighting?”
Ethan Arbelo takes the last stand.
Jessica Lipscomb Naples Daily News Aug 2014 10min Permalink
“I write this with a baseball bat by the bed.”
Helen DeWitt London Review of Books Aug 2014 15min Permalink
A six-part series on a Minnesota farm family facing with the worst U.S. agricultural crisis since the Depression. Winner of 1986 Pulitzer Prize for feature writing.
John Camp St. Paul Pioneer Press May–Dec 1985 1h20min Permalink
Louis Scarcella was a star New York City detective in the ’80s and ’90s, cracking cases no one else could. Now it appears that many of the people he put away were innocent, forced into false confessions and convicted with testimony from flimsy witnesses. Scarcella maintains that he did nothing wrong, despite evidence against him much stronger than in many of his cases.
Sean Flynn GQ Aug 2014 25min Permalink
On the coast of Abu Dhabi, gilded outposts of the Louvre, the Guggenheim and New York University are being built by foreign workers who cannot leave and are paid half of what they were promised.
Molly Crabapple Vice Aug 2014 20min Permalink
In 2004, Cameron Todd Willingham was executed for starting a fire that killed his three daughters. The case hinged on the testimony of a jailhouse informant named Johnny E. Webb. Today, Webb says he lied.
Maurice Possley The Marshall Project Aug 2014 20min Permalink
What U.S. Ambassador Michael McFaul has seen in Russia since he arrived two and a half years ago.
David Remnick New Yorker Aug 2014 45min Permalink
A profile of celebrity cat Lil BUB and the man who was contemplating bankruptcy before he found her.
Camille Dodero Spin Aug 2014 20min Permalink
Barack Obama on Africa, Putin and the gap between what CEOs tell him over lunch and what they tell their lobbyists.
John Micklethwait, Edward Carr The Economist Aug 2014 20min Permalink