The Day the Dinosaurs Died
A young paleontologist may have discovered a record of the most significant event in the history of life on Earth.
A young paleontologist may have discovered a record of the most significant event in the history of life on Earth.
Douglas Preston New Yorker Mar 2019 30min Permalink
It was just a kayaking trip. Then it upended their lives.
Jon Mooallem New York Times Magazine Mar 2019 40min Permalink
Where words fail, there is music.
Shuja Haider Popula Mar 2019 30min Permalink
During the Great Floods of 2011, the Mississippi unleashed deadly currents and a flow rate that could fill the Superdome in less than a minute. Defying government orders, the author and two friends canoed 300 miles from Memphis to Vicksburg. This is their story.
W. Hodding Carter Outside Aug 2011 25min Permalink
People who are short on relatives can hire a husband, a mother, a grandson. The resulting relationships can be more real than you’d expect.
This article, which was #1 on Longform’s top articles of 2018 list, just won the National Magazine Award for feature writing. Hear Batuman discuss it on the Longform Podcast.
Elif Batuman New Yorker Apr 2018 40min Permalink
On JFK and the 1960 Democratic National Convention.
Norman Mailer Esquire Nov 1960 55min Permalink
On medical acting and real pain.
Leslie Jamison The Believer Feb 2014 35min Permalink
A trip to the Iditarod.
Brian Phillips Grantland Apr 2013 20min Permalink
Can a good mother abandon her child?
Wil S. Hylton GQ Mar 2009 25min Permalink
Steve Jobs, age 29.
"It’s often the same with any new, revolutionary thing. People get stuck as they get older. Our minds are sort of electrochemical computers. Your thoughts construct patterns like scaffolding in your mind. You are really etching chemical patterns. In most cases, people get stuck in those patterns, just like grooves in a record, and they never get out of them. It’s a rare person who etches grooves that are other than a specific way of looking at things, a specific way of questioning things. It’s rare that you see an artist in his 30s or 40s able to really contribute something amazing. Of course, there are some people who are innately curious, forever little kids in their awe of life, but they’re rare."
David Sheff, Steve Jobs Playboy Feb 1985 1h Permalink
The secret lives of Facebook moderators in America.
Casey Newton The Verge Feb 2019 30min Permalink
Alex French and Maximillian Potter chased the story of a Hollywood pedophile ring only to have Esquire cancel it without explanation. It eventually landed at The Atlantic.
Rodrigo Rosenberg, a highly respected corporate attorney in Guatemala, began, in the spring of 2009, to prophesy his own murder. The unraveling of a political conspiracy.
David Grann New Yorker Jan 2012 55min Permalink
A profile of the designer, who died on February 19, 2019.
Vanessa Grigoriadis New York Feb 2006 20min Permalink
On the 1998 crash of Swissair Fight 111 into the sea off a small Nova Scotia fishing village.
Michael Paterniti Esquire Jun 2009 30min Permalink
In 2015, my friend and I went to Disney World. Three years later, she went on a solo trip to prison.
Elena Nicolaou Refinery29 Feb 2019 15min Permalink
On the grief that comes with losing livestock.
E.B. White The Atlantic Jan 1948 15min Permalink
An investigation into the crash of the USS Fitzgerald.
T. Christian Miller, Megan Rose, Robert Faturechi ProPublica Feb 2019 1h10min Permalink
When New Yorkers lived knee-deep in trash.
Hunter Oatman-Stanford Collectors Weekly Jun 2013 20min Permalink
The life of Robert Earl Hughes, who at more than 1,000 lbs. was named largest man on earth by the Guinness Book of World Records.
Robert Kurson Chicago Magazine Jun 2001 25min Permalink
The decades-long saga of Michael Morton, who was wrongfully convicted of killing his wife.
Pamela Colloff Texas Monthly Dec 2012 1h50min Permalink
From Driving Miss Daisy to Green Book.
Not knowing what these movies were “about” didn’t mean it wasn’t clear what they were about. They symbolize a style of American storytelling in which the wheels of interracial friendship are greased by employment, in which prolonged exposure to the black half of the duo enhances the humanity of his white, frequently racist counterpart. All the optimism of racial progress — from desegregation to integration to equality to something like true companionship — is stipulated by terms of service.
Wesley Morris New York Times Jan 2019 15min Permalink
How two Jewish American political consultants helped create the world’s largest anti-Semitic conspiracy theory.
Hannes Grassegger Buzzfeed, Das Magazin Jan 2019 20min Permalink
When Sonia Vallabh lost her mother to a rare disease, then was diagnosed with it herself, she and her husband set out to find a cure.
Kelly Clancy Wired Jan 2019 25min Permalink
The excerpts from a diary of an anonymous Russian special-forces officer who served twenty tours of duty in Chechnya during the Second Chechen War (1999-2009).
Anonymous The Sunday Times Oct 2010 15min Permalink