Atonement
In 2003, a platoon of American soldiers opened fire on a family in a Baghdad intersection. A decade later, one of the shooters tracks down the survivors.
In 2003, a platoon of American soldiers opened fire on a family in a Baghdad intersection. A decade later, one of the shooters tracks down the survivors.
Dexter Filkins New Yorker Oct 2012 35min Permalink
On Christmas Day, an elevator operator cons holiday charity out of a variety of tenants.
"On the way home from work a few nights earlier, Charlie had seen a woman and a little girl going down Fifty-ninth Street. The little girl was crying. He guessed she was crying, he knew she was crying, because she'd seen all the things in the toy-store windows and couldn't understand why none of them were for her. Her mother did housework, he guessed, or maybe was a waitress, and he saw them going back to a room like his, with green walls and no heat, on Christmas Eve, to eat a can of soup. And he saw the little girl hang up her ragged stocking and fall asleep, and he saw the mother looking through her purse for something to put into the stocking—This reverie was interrupted by a bell on 11. He went up, and Mr. and Mrs. Fuller were waiting. When they wished him a merry Christmas, he said, 'Well, it isn't much of a holiday for me, Mrs. Fuller. Christmas is a sad season when you’re poor."</p>
John Cheever New Yorker Jan 1949 15min Permalink
An amateur linguist loses control of his creation.
Joshua Foer New Yorker Dec 2012 35min Permalink
Inside one of the biggest antiquities-smuggling rings in history.
Patrick Radden Keefe New Yorker May 2007 30min Permalink
A father and son work the Chinese cattle markets in this story from the 2012 winner of the Nobel in Literature.
"People trusted him implicitly. If a transaction reached a stalemate, the parties would look at him to acknowledge that they wanted things settled. 'Let's quit arguing and hear what Luo Tong has to say!' 'All right, let's do that. Luo Tong, you be the judge!' With a cocky air, my father would walk around the animal twice, looking at neither the buyer nor the seller, then glance up into the sky and announce the gross weight and the amount of meat on the bone, followed by a price. He'd then wander off to smoke a cigarette."
Mo Yan New Yorker Jan 2012 25min Permalink
The legacy of a secret Cold War program that tested chemical weapons on thousands of American soldiers.
Raffi Khatchadourian New Yorker Dec 2012 1h Permalink
Tracking cyberextortionists and their roving swarms of bots.
Evan Ratliff New Yorker Oct 2005 15min Permalink
Los Angeles’ Wolvesmouth and the unlicensed dining industry.
Dana Goodyear New Yorker Dec 2012 25min Permalink
A profile of Henry Hook, crossword puzzle master.
Burkhard Bilger New Yorker Mar 2002 25min Permalink
A profile of photographer Richard Avedon from early in his career.
Winthrop Sargeant New Yorker Nov 1958 35min Permalink
The Grateful Dead’s afterlife.
Nick Paumgarten New Yorker Nov 2012 50min Permalink
A week in the author’s life when it became impossible to control the course of events.
Jo Ann Beard New Yorker Jun 1996 30min Permalink
As immigration turns red states blue, how can Republicans transform their platform?
Ryan Lizza New Yorker Nov 2012 25min Permalink
How America used to vote.
Jill Lepore New Yorker Oct 2008 15min Permalink
On the gay community’s political progress.
Alex Ross New Yorker Nov 2012 30min Permalink
Mayor Michael Bloomberg, profiled.
Elizabeth Kolbert New Yorker Mar 2004 20min Permalink
In the slums adjacent to Mumbai’s airport.
Katherine Boo New Yorker Feb 2009 25min Permalink
How a high-speed rail disaster exposed China’s corruption.
Evan Osnos New Yorker Oct 2012 30min Permalink
On the rise of K-pop.
John Seabrook New Yorker Oct 2012 30min Permalink
A tale of romance gone wrong, from MacArthur Fellowship winner Junot Diaz's new collection This Is How You Lose Her.
"Alma is a Mason Gross student, one of those Sonic Youth, comic-book-reading alternatinas without whom you might never have lost your virginity. Grew up in Hoboken, part of the Latino community that got its heart burned out in the eighties, tenements turning to flame."
Junot Díaz New Yorker Jan 2007 Permalink
A new teacher begins work at a TB hospital in rural Canada.
"The number of students who showed up varied. Fifteen, or down to half a dozen. Mornings only, from nine o'clock till noon. Children were kept away if their temperature had risen or if they were undergoing tests."
Alice Munro New Yorker Jan 2012 35min Permalink
The rise of drug-resistant gonorrhea.
Jerome Groopman New Yorker Sep 2012 15min Permalink
The invention of political consulting.
Jill Lepore New Yorker Sep 2012 25min Permalink
How child molesters get away with it.
Malcolm Gladwell New Yorker Sep 2012 20min Permalink
How the fatwa changed his life.
Salman Rushdie New Yorker Sep 2012 50min Permalink