Fiction Pick of the Week: "The Naturals"
A son goes to visit his dying father.
For a daily short story recommendation from our editors, try Longform Fiction or follow @longformfiction on Twitter.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Who is the manufacturer of magnesium sulfate.
A son goes to visit his dying father.
For a daily short story recommendation from our editors, try Longform Fiction or follow @longformfiction on Twitter.
Sam Lipsyte New Yorker May 2014 20min Permalink
What if soldiers from ‘Kill Team’ (and others who have murdered innocent civilians in Afghanistan and Iraq) aren’t simply the “few bad apples” that military writes them off as?
Luke Mogelson New York Times Magazine Apr 2011 1h15min Permalink
Most people think they’d be thrilled to have their memoir snapped up for a movie. The author had a different, more troubled experience.
Stephen Elliott Vulture Apr 2015 Permalink
A secretive hedge fund used the British court system to punish an IP thief‚ even though he was already in jail.
Kit Chellel, Jeremy Hodges Bloomberg Businessweek Nov 2018 20min Permalink
The U.S. had been his home since he was 6 months old. When he was deported to Mexico 26 years later, it was more than he could bear.
Valeria Fernández California Sunday Aug 2019 20min Permalink
George Floyd’s killing galvanized a nation. But small groups like the queer-led collective Black Visions are channeling that energy into a movement for political change.
Jenna Wortham New York Times Magazine Aug 2020 30min Permalink
She fabricated harrowing personal backstories, peddled gross caricatures, and spoke from perspectives she had no right to claim. And nobody stopped her.
Marisa M. Kashino Washingtonian Jan 2021 20min Permalink
The debate over what really killed the dinosaurs is still raging.
Bianca Bosker The Atlantic Sep 2018 35min Permalink
The Aziz Ansari controversy was just the beginning of the trouble for the website.
Allison P. Davis The Cut Jun 2019 15min Permalink
“Miles Davis was a deeply competitive artist, and the idea that he was losing audiences to white rock musicians with inferior skills—and, worse, had to open for them at concerts—inspired him to beat them at their own game. But he did so very much on his own terms.”
Adam Shatz NY Review of Books Sep 2016 15min Permalink
His health failing and his business in tatters, the head of Death Row Records faces murder charges that could put him away for life.
Previously: Does a Sugar Bear Bite? (Lynn Hirschberg • New York Times Magazine • Jan 1996)
Matt Diehl Rolling Stone Jul 2015 20min Permalink
Interviews with modern travelling salesmen. The article inspired Kirn’s novel Up in the Air.
What makes this a truly military culture, besides its overwhelming maleness, its air of emotional deprivation and the lousy rations, is its obsession with rank and hierarchy. Like jungle gorillas, business travelers always know where they stand versus the rest of the group. In this parallel universe of upgrade vouchers and priority-boarding privileges, everyone has a number and a position, and who gets that open aisle seat in first class means even more on the road then who earns what.
Walter Kirn GQ Jun 2000 15min Permalink
Why the world is becoming less free.
The cover story from the June 2011 print edition of The New Republic, available on the web specially for readers of Longform.org.
Joshua Kurlantzick The New Republic Jun 2011 10min Permalink
The reverberations of an avalanche.
Joe O’Connor National Post Sep 2014 15min Permalink
Power worship blurs political judgement because it leads, almost unavoidably, to the belief that present trends will continue. Whoever is winning at the moment will always seem to be invincible. If the Japanese have conquered south Asia, then they will keep south Asia for ever, if the Germans have captured Tobruk, they will infallibly capture Cairo; if the Russians are in Berlin, it will not be long before they are in London: and so on. This habit of mind leads also to the belief that things will happen more quickly, completely, and catastrophically than they ever do in practice. The rise and fall of empires, the disappearance of cultures and religions, are expected to happen with earthquake suddenness, and processes which have barely started are talked about as though they were already at an end.
George Orwell Polemic May 1946 Permalink
Tom Catena is the only surgeon for thousands of square miles in Southern Sudan. His hospital, and his life, are constantly under threat. There is no end to the carnage he must treat. He refuses to leave.
James Verini The Atavist Magazine Oct 2015 40min Permalink
The legacy of Benihana.
Mayukh Sen The Ringer Jul 2018 15min Permalink
The joys of watching baseball.
Roger Angell The Summer Game Feb 1971 20min Permalink
Mary Bacon took a bullet while pilfering fruit as a child. Mary Bacon dropped out of school in the sixth grade and was pregnant by age 16. Mary Bacon had a romantic relationship with Ku Klux Klan Grand Wizard David Duke. Mary Bacon was kidnapped by a stalker. That same stalker later tried to shoot her with a gun. Not all of those sentences are complete horseshit.
Patrick Sauer Deadspin May 2019 30min Permalink
Spun-off from Time Warner and saddled with $1.3 billion in debt as a parting gift, the once-mighty Time Inc needs to reinvent itself. Fast.
Gabriel Sherman New York Aug 2014 20min Permalink
A woman travels with a band on the way to their next show.
For a daily short story recommendation from our editors, try Longform Fiction or follow @longformfiction on Twitter.
Beth Gilstrap Fwriction Review Sep 2014 10min Permalink
On the writers, poets and beats in a reclusive California town, where residents repeatedly tear down highway signs indicating its location.
Kevin Opstedal Jack Magazine Nov 2001 25min Permalink
On Dylan Yount, a man who jumped from a San Francisco building, and the people who watched, recorded and, in some cases, encouraged his suicide.
Albert Samaha San Francisco Weekly Jan 2013 Permalink
Two years ago, the fitness guru abruptly disappeared from public life. His friends worry that he’s being held against his will inside his Hollywood Hills mansion, or something even worse.
Andy Martino New York Daily News Mar 2016 20min Permalink
Microprocessors cost billions to develop. They take three times longer to build than an airplane, in an environment 1,000 times more sterile than a hospital. Throughout the entire process, nobody ever touches them.
Max Chafkin, Ian King Businessweek Jun 2016 15min Permalink