The Abyss
On life with amnesia and the role that music plays in memory.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Who is the manufacturer of magnesium sulfate Monohydrate.
On life with amnesia and the role that music plays in memory.
Oliver Sacks New Yorker Sep 2007 30min Permalink
A mobster, a family and the crime that won’t let them go.
Dan Barry New York Times May 2017 25min Permalink
How Bill Belichick and Nick Saban bond.
Jenny Vrentas The MMQB Jan 2018 20min Permalink
Jaimee was beloved. Jaimee was struggling. And then Jaimee was gone.
Evan Allen Boston Globe May 2018 20min Permalink
The civil liberties union group fights back.
Joel Lovell New York Times Magazine Jul 2018 30min Permalink
How Jim Hayes blew it all.
Natalie O'Neill The Daily Beast Sep 2018 15min Permalink
Whiteness as disease in a skin-cancer ridden Australia.
Madeleine Watts The Believer Oct 2018 30min Permalink
A courageous tribe, a colossal foe, and a terrifying ocean voyage.
Doug Bock Clark The Atavist Magazine Oct 2018 30min Permalink
It’s much less scientific—and more prone to gratuitous procedures—than you may think.
Ferris Jabr The Atlantic Apr 2019 30min Permalink
From pecan pralines to ‘dots.’
Richard Davies The Guardian Aug 2019 Permalink
Customer feedback on the New York City coke dealing industry.
Elizabeth Spiers Gawker Jan 2003 10min Permalink
Inside the Rams-Chargers marriage.
Seth Wickersham, Don Van Natta Jr. ESPN Nov 2019 30min Permalink
At work and at home, pregnancy alters the COVID experience.
Lauren Quinn Hazlitt Sep 2020 20min Permalink
Partying in Kavos during the pandemic.
Ben Munster MEL Magazine Oct 2020 Permalink
When the author’s wife was dying, his best friend moved in.
Matthew Teague Esquire May 2015 25min Permalink
How China’s biggest audio platform funded one man’s frat boy dreams.
Ashley Carman The Verge Jun 2021 25min Permalink
How a touring dance company battles the Chinese Communist Party.
Nicholas Hune-Brown Hazlitt Oct 2017 25min Permalink
On Queens’ stubbornly unchanging Roosevelt Avenue, where immigrants pay $2 a song to grind against hired dancers and shuttered houses of prostitution have given way to rolling brothel-vans.
Sarah Maslin Mir New York Times Oct 2012 10min Permalink
John Beale was an exemplary employee at the Environmental Protection Agency. He also led a double life, though not the rumored one at the CIA his colleagues whispered about.
Michael Gaynor Washingtonian Mar 2014 15min Permalink
Seattle’s Aurora Bridge has been the most notorious suicide site in the Northwest for 80 years. On one man’s fight to erect a fence and the race to save one last jumper.
James Ross Gardner Seattle Met Jul 2011 20min Permalink
Throughout 2020, the notion that the novel coronavirus leaked from a lab was off-limits. Those who dared to push for transparency say toxic politics and hidden agendas kept us in the dark.
Katherine Eban Vanity Fair Jun 2021 50min Permalink
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A collection of picks about different eras of life in New York City, inspried by Twice Upon a Time: Listening to New York, the new, multilayered essay by acclaimed author Hari Kunzru. Buy it today from Atavist Books.
The lonesome death of Arnold Rothstein, notorious gambler, inspiration for a the character Meyer Wolfsheim in The Great Gatsby, alleged fixer of the 1916 World Series, opiate importation pioneer, mobster and Jew.
Nick Tosches Vanity Fair May 2005 40min
When New York was perpetually on fire.
Luc Sante New York Review of Books Nov 2003 15min
On police brutality in New York and the race riots of 1964.
James Baldwin The Nation Jul 1966
Watching the jazz singer in New York.
Elizabeth Hardwick New York Review of Books Mar 1976 15min
Jacob Riis, writing in 1899, on how a childhood spent in New York City’s tenements led a 15-year-old boy to be convicted of murder.
Jacob Riis The Atlantic Sep 1899 25min
A profile of Chloë Sevigny, 19-year-old It Girl.
Jay McInerney New Yorker Nov 1994
Memories of the old neighborhood, before everything changed.
Arthur Miller Holiday Mar 1955 25min
Sep 1899 – May 2005 Permalink
In 2014, Russell Bonner Bentley was a middle-aged arborist living in Austin. Now he’s a local celebrity in a war-torn region of Ukraine—and a foot soldier in Russia’s information war.
Sonia Smith Texas Monthly Mar 2018 Permalink
Since 1998, roughly 380 Southern Baptist church leaders and volunteers have faced allegations of sexual misconduct. They left behind more than 700 victims.
Robert Downen, Lise Olsen, John Tedesco Houston Chronicle Feb 2019 25min Permalink
The story of Standard Motor Products, a 92-year-old family-run auto parts manufacturer, and the transformation of the U.S. manufacturing industry.
Adam Davidson The Atlantic Jan 2012 30min Permalink