A Missouri Town's Sweet Dreams Turn Sour
How the town of Moberly, population 14,000, got conned.
How the town of Moberly, population 14,000, got conned.
Susan Berfield Businessweek Jan 2011 15min Permalink
The author tracks down a former Peace Corps volunteer who murdered a fellow worker in 1976.
Philip Weiss New York May 2005 15min Permalink
Steven Donziger, an American lawyer, headed up a successful lawsuit against Chevron on behalf of Ecuadorans. Then the legal tables turned on him.
Patrick Radden Keefe New Yorker Jan 2012 35min Permalink
A little after 9 a.m. on Sept. 15, 1990, the owner of a steel-products company pulled up to her office in Vinegar Hill, near the Brooklyn Navy Yard, and spotted a black garbage bag sitting on the sidewalk out front. She parked her car and went to move the bag when she noticed it leaking blood. The woman called 911. Within the hour, Ken Whelan, a homicide detective from the 84th Precinct, peered into the bag. It was full of human body parts.
Nicholas Schmidle New York Times Magazine Jan 2012 20min Permalink
A travelogue of a three-month tour of Muay Thai boxing camps in Thailand. The author, 28, died in a hit-and-run shortly after returning to the U.S.
Neil Chamberlain The Classical Dec 2011 1h5min Permalink
A profile of the Russian spy-turned-Maxim covergirl.
Brett Forrest Capital New York Jan 2012 25min Permalink
A profile of Rick Santorum published early in his final campaign for the U.S. Senate, a race widely considered a stepping stone to the White House before he lost.
Mike Newall Philadelphia City Paper Sep 2005 25min Permalink
The main thing that attracts me to Buddhism is probably what attracts every artist to being an artist—that it’s a godlike thing. You are the ultimate authority. There is no other ultimate authority. Now, for some artists that’s difficult, because they want to have the art police. They want to have the critic who hands out tickets and says, “That’s too loose.”
Amanda Stern, Laurie Anderson The Believer Jan 2011 20min Permalink
A suburban dad. A fictional television blowhard. And now a political money launderer. How one funny guy became three.
Charles McGrath New York Times Magazine Jan 2012 25min Permalink
How an increase in the earth’s temperature could wipe out a continent.
Jeff Goodell Rolling Stone Oct 2011 30min Permalink
A profile of legendary Houston socialite Becca Cason Thrash.
Skip Hollandsworth Texas Monthly Sep 2002 25min Permalink
How information replicates, mutates, and evolves.
James Gleick Smithsonian May 2011 8h25min Permalink
A profile of celebrity astrophysicist Neil Tyson.
Carl Zimmer Playboy Jan 2012 Permalink
A memory of interviewing the late great songwriter Townes Van Zandt shortly before his death.
The dissolution of Brooklyn softcore skin-mag Jacques and the marriage of the couple that created it.
Jonathan Tayler Brooklyn Ink Jan 2012 10min Permalink
The phrase “knew how to wear clothes” is a loaded one. To “know how to wear clothes” is another way of saying that Cary Grant embodied class, which is to say high class: Grant wore well-tailored clothes, and he knew how to hold himself in them. But he came from nothing, and the way he wore clothes was just as much of a performance as his refined trans-Atlantic accent, his acrobatic slapstick routines, and his masterful flirtation skills.
Anne Helen Petersen The Hairpin Dec 2011 15min Permalink
On “If You Are the One”, the smash hit Chinese dating show that raised the ire of censors.
Edward Wong New York Times Jan 2011 10min Permalink
A profile.
Because business ebbs and flows with the seasons and the economy, Holmes, who lives in Upper Marlboro, has always kept a variety of sidelines, including a job driving a limousine for nine years to put his oldest daughter through a private high school and college. These days, at gigs, he hands out a stack of million-dollar "bills" printed with his image and his current enterprises: bandleader, commercial mortgage broker, hard money lender (slogan: "Hard Money with a Soft Touch").
Lauren Wilcox Washington Post Magazine Feb 2010 15min Permalink
A step-by-step proposal for fixing the broken economics of big-time college sports.
Joe Nocera New York Times Magazine Dec 2011 20min Permalink
The writer contemplates beauty and identity following reconstructive surgery.
There was a long period of time, almost a year, during which I never looked in a mirror. It wasn’t easy, for I’d never suspected just how omnipresent are our own images. I began by merely avoiding mirrors, but by the end of the year I found myself with an acute knowledge of the reflected image, its numerous tricks and wiles, how it can spring up at any moment: a glass tabletop, a well-polished door handle, a darkened window, a pair of sunglasses, a restaurant’s otherwise magnificent brass-plated coffee machine sitting innocently by the cash register.
Lucy Grealy Harper's Feb 1993 Permalink
How an up-and-coming Boston surgeon became best known for leaving a patient on the operating table while he skipped out to cash a check.
Neil Swidey The Boston Globe Mar 2004 1h5min Permalink
Over at Readability, our editors highlight the best classic stories that resurfaced on Longform this year. See their picks.
Tim Masters becomes the main suspect in a gruesome Colorado murder; he’s eventually convicted thanks the work of a revered detective. Then the case unravels: DNA proves another man committed the crime.
Mitch Gelman 5280 Jan 2012 45min Permalink
The story of eight young people who died in a New Orleans squat fire.
Danelle Morton Boston Review Jan 2012 30min Permalink
The transcript from an lecture presented by In-Q-Tel, the CIA’s venture-capital arm, on the ethics of drones, military robots, and cyborg soldiers.
Patrick Lin The Atlantic Dec 2011 20min Permalink