The Forger's Story
Searching for (and easily finding) Mark Augustus Landis, the man behind the “longest, strangest forgery spree the American art world has known.”
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Who is the manufacturer of magnesium sulfate heptahydrate large granules.
Searching for (and easily finding) Mark Augustus Landis, the man behind the “longest, strangest forgery spree the American art world has known.”
John Gapper The Financial Times Jan 2011 15min Permalink
David Boies argued Bush v. Gore all the way to the Supreme Court. He lost the case, but in the process gained another client: Harvey Weinstein.
Andrew Rice New York Oct 2018 40min Permalink
The rare Chilean soapbark tree produces compounds that can boost the body’s reaction to vaccines.
Brendan Borrell The Atlantic Oct 2020 25min Permalink
"The kind of stories I've gotten to do have involved fulfilling my childhood fantasies of having an adventurous life."
We are re-airing our February 2013 interview with our friend Matt Power, who died while on assignment in Uganda, to help raise money for The Matthew Power Literary Reporting Award.
Founded by Matt's friends and family, the annual award will support promising writers early in their careers with a stipend of $12,500 to bring forward an unreported story of importance in some overlooked corner of the world.
Oct 2014 Permalink
“Two weeks before Christmas, I was explaining to a friend in town that if I seemed more distressed than usual, it was just because I was trying to accustom myself to the fact that my cat didn’t want to be my cat anymore. ‘No way,’ she said. ‘Here’s what you do: You just call Dawn.’ And then she gave me the cat psychic’s phone number.”
Rachel Monroe Hazlitt May 2016 10min Permalink
“Brace Belden can’t remember exactly when he decided to give up his life as a punk-rocker turned florist turned boxing-gym manager in San Francisco, buy a plane ticket to Iraq, sneak across the border into Syria, and take up arms against the Islamic State. But as with many major life decisions, Belden, who is 27 — “a true idiot’s age,” in his estimation — says it happened gradually and then all at once.”
Reeves Wiedeman New York Apr 2017 25min Permalink
The Constitution and its worshippers.
Jill Lepore New Yorker Jan 2011 25min Permalink
Making bio-diesel is hard. Getting paid $100 million to not make it is surprisingly easy.
Jennifer A. Dlouhy, Bryan Gruley, Mario Parker Businessweek Jul 2016 15min Permalink
During my first weeks in Rogers Park, I was surprised by how often I heard the word “pioneer”. I heard it first from the white owner of an antiques shop with signs in the windows that read: “Warning, you are being watched and recorded.” When I stopped off in his shop, he welcomed me to the neighbourhood warmly and delivered an introductory speech dense with code. This neighbourhood, he told me, needs “more people like you”. He and other “people like us” were gradually “lifting it up”.
Excerpted from Notes From No Man’s Land
Eula Biss The Guardian Apr 2017 20min Permalink
Despite no hurricanes in five years, Florida insurers are demanding yet more money from homeowners. At the same time, the capital that insurers have on hand to pay claims has shrunk. One reporter spent a year trying to figure out why.
Paige St. John The Sarasota Herald-Tribune Dec 2010 1h10min Permalink
Stephen Bannon and Jeff Sessions, the new attorney general, have long shared a vision for remaking America. Now the nation’s top law-enforcement agency can serve as a tool for enacting it.
Emily Bazelon New York Times Magazine Feb 2017 25min Permalink
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After two New Jersey homes were robbed of their silver—only their silver—in the same night, the local police got a call from a detective in Greenwich, Connecticut. “I know the guy who’s doing your burglaries.”
Stephen J. Dubner New Yorker May 2004 35min
The motley gang of L.A. teens that cat-burgled celebrities, sometimes repeatedly, in search of designer clothes, jewelry, and something to do. The story that became The Bling Ring.
Nancy Jo Sales Vanity Fair Mar 2010 20min
Over the last several years, millions of dollars worth of antique rhino horns have been stolen form collections around the world. The only thing more unusual than the crimes is the theory about who is responsible: A handful of families from rural Ireland known as the Rathkeale Rovers.
Charles Homans The Atavist Magazine Mar 2014 1h15min
Dozens of fake identities. More than 1,000 break-ins. A haul of gold, jewelry, and art worth an estimated $40 million. For 16 months, no wealthy Angeleno was safe from Ignacio Del Río.
Luke O'Brien Details May 2010 15min
Magicians, mafiosos, a missing painting and the heist of a lifetime.
Joshua Davis, David Wolman Epic Oct 2014 35min
May 2004 – Oct 2014 Permalink
This guide is sponsored by Gary Shteyngart's Little Failure, the best-seller published this month by Random House. Hailed as a "memoir for the ages" by Mary Karr, Little Failure tells the story of Shteyngart's American immigrant experience, moving back and forth through time and memory with self-deprecating humor, moving insights, and literary bravado. Buy it today.</p>
Should you need further convincing, here is a collection of some of Shteyngart's best non-fiction:</em>
An excerpt from Little Failure.
A trip to Azerbaijan.
Travel & Leisure Sep 2005 15min
Confessions of a Google Glass Explorer.
New Yorker Aug 2013 20min
The author on his love for the Russian language.
The Threepenny Review Apr 2004 20min
A profile of M.I.A.
GQ Jul 2010 25min
The night it all went wrong.
New Yorker Jun 2013 10min
Apr 2004 – Aug 2013 Permalink
How a town of 4,000, defined by aviation catastrophe, produced three Olympic medallists.
Jeff Passan Yahoo Feb 2014 10min Permalink
Florida’s tourism economy crashed, leaving dozens of low-wage workers trapped in a crumbling motel without electricity.
Greg Jaffe Washington Post Sep 2020 20min Permalink
Growth has slowed to a trickle in parts of Manchuria—but some young people are finding new careers online.
Tom Hancock Financial Times Apr 2019 15min Permalink
What it means to be an entrepreneur in Argentina, where economic crashes are a way of life.
Max Chafkin Inc. May 2011 20min Permalink
A profile of Donald Trump’s son-in-law and de facto campaign manager.
Chris Pomorski Tablet Oct 2016 30min Permalink
Uncovered letters reveal ties between the literary magazine and the CIA’s Congress for Cultural Freedom.
Joel Whitney Salon May 2012 25min Permalink
The author investigates the massive wildlife die-off in the Salton Sea by rafting from its tributaries in Mexico.
William T. Vollmann Outside Feb 2002 25min Permalink
After a murder in the California wilderness, the search for the killer raises complicated questions about mental illness.
Ashley Powers California Sunday May 2016 25min Permalink
The U.S. buried nuclear waste in the Pacific after WWII. It’s close to resurfacing.
Susanne Rust Los Angeles Times Nov 2019 25min Permalink
From shipbreakers in India to a plane crash in Brazil, organized crime in Naples to pirates in the Gulf of Aden—16 stories by a master of narrative non-fiction. Our Langewiesche archive.
Makeda Davis emerged from more than seven years in prison to a life that is complicated, unfamiliar, and, sometimes, soul crushing.
Stephanie Clifford Marie Claire Jun 2020 20min Permalink
A profile of Maine’s two U.S. senators, Olympia Snowe and Susan Collins.
Martha Sherrill Washington Post May 2011 25min Permalink