Introducing Longform Fiction
A new, standalone section on Longform featuring one fiction pick per day. Edited by Jeremy Bushnell and Jamie Yates. Also available in the Longform App and on Twitter @longformfiction.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Magnesium Sulfate Monohydrate Manufacturers in China.
A new, standalone section on Longform featuring one fiction pick per day. Edited by Jeremy Bushnell and Jamie Yates. Also available in the Longform App and on Twitter @longformfiction.
An actor, fresh from prison, attempts to reconnect with his son in 1950s California.
For a daily short story recommendation from our editors, check out Longform Fiction or follow @longformfiction on Twitter.
Molly Antopol Joyland Jan 2014 40min Permalink
Today, in the electronic age of instantaneous communication, I believe that our survival, and at the very least our comfort and happiness, is predicated on understanding the nature of our new environment, because unlike previous environmental changes, the electric media constitute a total and near-instantaneous transformation of culture, values and attitudes.
Marshall McLuhan Playboy Mar 1969 1h10min Permalink
In the early years of the Iraq war, the U.S. military developed a technology so secret that soldiers would refuse to acknowledge its existence, and reporters mentioning the gear were promptly escorted out of the country. That equipment—a radio-frequency jammer—was upgraded several times, and eventually robbed the Iraq insurgency of its most potent weapon, the remote-controlled bomb.
Noah Shachtman Wired Jun 2011 25min Permalink
"His friends remembered when Richard became famous. It was the year the hippies came to San Francisco. Richard had published one novel, A Confederate General from Big Sur, but it had sold miserably 743 copies and his publisher, Grove Press, had dropped its option on Trout Fishing in America."
Lawrence Wright Rolling Stone Apr 1985 30min Permalink
On a group of teenage believers raised in settlements on the West Bank:
They say it takes one generation to found a new language. These girls are a new language, believing that they belong to the land on which they were born, and sponsored by the government they despise, which pays for their roads and electricity.
Elizabeth Rubin Tablet Sep 2011 Permalink
How Warren Buffett’s public image has aided his success.
As a successful investor, he merely moved markets; but as the charismatic, reassuring, quotable prototype of the honest capitalist (a sort of J. P. Morgan with a moral sense), he's capable of influencing elections, galvanizing rock-concert-size crowds, and in general defining how we Americans feel about the system that underlies our wealth.
Walter Kirn The Atlantic Nov 2004 25min Permalink
On Taylor Swift’s passive-aggressive lyrics, the life of the writer, and the pain of middle school.
Taffy Brodesser-Akner The Paris Review Jun 2015 15min Permalink
Oskar Groening, an SS officer whose duties included counting confiscated money, describes his time posted to Auschwitz.
Editor’s note: At age 94, Groening was convicted yesterday of 300,000 counts of accessory to murder and sentenced to four years in prison.
Laurence Rees Politico Jul 2015 25min Permalink
He created the template for contemporary hit-making, made Ace of Base the biggest group in the world, and mentored the most successful songwriter since the Beatles. Why have you never heard of Denniz Pop? Excerpted from The Song Machine: Inside the Hit Factory.
John Seabrook Slate Oct 2015 1h Permalink
David Carr, the New York Times media reporter and a friend, died Thursday night in the newsroom.
Here is one of our favorite Carr pieces, "Me and My Girls," an excerpt from his 2008 memoir The Night of the Gun.
What led to the 1970 explosion of a Greenwich Village townhouse, in which three members of the Weather Underground were killed, and what happened to the group after.
Excerpted from Days of Rage.
Bryan Burrough Vanity Fair Mar 2015 30min Permalink
“The White House still maintains that the mission was an all-American affair, and that the senior generals of Pakistan’s army and Inter-Services Intelligence agency (ISI) were not told of the raid in advance. This is false, as are many other elements of the Obama administration’s account.”
Seymour M. Hersh London Review of Books May 2015 40min Permalink
Before the market crashed and home prices tumbled, before federal investigators showed up and hauled away the community records, before her property managers pled guilty for conspiring to rig neighborhood elections, and before her real estate lawyer allegedly tried to commit suicide by overdosing on drugs and setting fire to her home, Wanda Murray thought that buying a condominium in Las Vegas was a pretty good idea.
Felix Gillette Businessweek Dec 2011 20min Permalink
On literary tourism:
Dickens World, in other words, sounded less like a viable business than it did a mockumentary, or a George Saunders short story, or the thought experiment of a radical Marxist seeking to expose the terminal bankruptcy at the heart of consumerism. And yet it was real.
Sam Anderson New York Times Magazine Feb 2012 Permalink
As the hip-hop group Odd Future rose to fame, their sixteen-year-old breakout star Earl Sweatshirt mysteriously disappeared.
(After a stretch at a school in Samoa, he seems to have reappeared yesterday.)
Kelefa Sanneh New Yorker May 2011 35min Permalink
Diamond heists, LonelyGirl15, and a trip to compete in the U.S. Open sumo championships—Joshua Davis on Longform.
Inside the ultra-Orthodox Jewish rally at Citi Field to discuss the dangers of the internet:
A man in a black fur hat asked him what, exactly, was an app, and he explained it to him. The man grimaced and walked away.
Sean Patrick Cooper The Awl May 2012 10min Permalink
“I turned to see Eva padding around the room, naked, dipping a small plastic wand into the bottle of bubble soap she’d bought at the market… Sometime in the far future, when I was lying on my deathbed, I said, this was the moment I wanted to remember.”
On the relationship between travel and photography.
Rolf Potts Places Journal May 2012 Permalink
Reprints Arts World Movies & TV
After two years of filming Lawrence of Arabia, Peter O'Toole returns to his childhood home in Ireland.
Plus: 50 years later, Gay Talese remembers the late Peter O'Toole.
Gay Talese Esquire Aug 1963 15min Permalink
Brooklyn, Illinois has one of the most dense clusters of strip clubs and rubdown parlors in the entire country, drawing patrons from nearby St. Louis and its suburbs. Inside the clubs with the dancers, a strip club scholar, the mayor, and the regulars whose dollars keep the depressed local economy afloat.
Scott Eden Maisonneuve Dec 2004 50min Permalink
“Jeffrey Levitt stole and misappropriated a grand total of fourteen million, six hundred ninety-nine thousand, nine hundred forty-seven dollars and fifty-eight cents. He stole all that. It was the largest single white-collar crime in Maryland history, almost bringing down the state’s entire savings and loan industry.” And it still wasn’t enough.
Tony Kornheiser Washington Post Oct 1986 25min Permalink
Twelve years ago, a Saudi Arabian man, whom federal authorities had long suspected of having ties to terrorism, was sentenced to life in prison on multiple counts of unlawful sexual contact. To this day, al-Turki has maintained that he’s innocent and was instead the target of post-9/11 anti-Muslim sentiment.
Chris Outcalt 5280 Aug 2018 25min Permalink
The aforementioned “twist” is that while dinner is free for the black residents of the neighborhood, the prices for white visitors are listed on a pledge form at their seats: $100 for one piece of chicken; $1,000 for four pieces. For a whole bird, with sides, you must donate the deed to a property in North Nashville.
Brett Martin GQ Mar 2019 Permalink
“This is the story of those 10 days, the new and relentless strain of gun violence in America, and the desperate need for us not to look away.”
Michael Paterniti GQ Apr 2016 30min Permalink