The Sound of Madness
Can we treat psychosis by listening to the voices in our heads?
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Suppliers of Magnesium sulfate heptahydrate.
Can we treat psychosis by listening to the voices in our heads?
T. M. Luhrmann Harper's May 2018 25min Permalink
What happened at OneTaste?
Ellen Huet Bloomberg Business Jun 2018 20min Permalink
Heartbreak and heroics at the World Ploughing Championships
Sophie Elmhirst The Guardian Nov 2018 25min Permalink
Nathan Phillips wants to talk about Covington.
Julian Brave NoiseCat The Guardian Feb 2019 20min Permalink
It’s time to bury the world’s most misleading measure.
Peter Wilson 1843 Mar 2019 25min Permalink
Scandals. Backstabbing. Resignations. Record profits. Time Bombs.
Nicholas Thompson, Fred Vogelstein Wired Apr 2019 40min Permalink
The long fight against racism in romance novels.
Lois Beckett The Guardian Apr 2019 30min Permalink
How an obsession with school shooters led to a murder plot.
Rachel Monroe The Guardian Aug 2019 30min Permalink
In Kansas, girls didn’t have a wrestling championship. Mya Kretzer changed that.
Liz Clarke Washington Post Nov 2019 15min Permalink
“It’s like I’m risking my life for a dollar.”
Shirin Ghaffary, Jason Del Rey Recode Jun 2020 30min Permalink
On the pioneering New Yorker cartoonist.
Ben Schwartz Vanity Fair Apr 2016 25min Permalink
A dispatch from the World Clown Association Convention.
Leigh Cowart Buzzfeed Jul 2014 30min Permalink
The episode that changed The Simpsons.
Scare stories on “left-wing illiberalism” display a familiar pattern.
Michael Hobbes Confirm My Choices Oct 2021 20min Permalink
A series of one-sided international love letters.
For a daily short story recommendation from our editors, try Longform Fiction or follow @longformfiction on Twitter.
Fayroze Lutta Specter Magazine Apr 2014 15min Permalink
A classic profile of Thelonious Monk, a look at Edward Snowden's life in Moscow and a dispatch from Ferguson — the week's top stories on Longform.
Meet Adam.
Luke Malone Matter Aug 2014 30min
“What transpired in the streets appeared to be a kind of municipal version of shock and awe.”
Jelani Cobb New Yorker Aug 2014
A profile of Thelonious Monk.
Lewis Lapham The Saturday Evening Post Apr 1964 15min
How the GOP took control of state politics in Alabama, leaving black lawmakers — and their constituents — powerless.
Jason Zengerle The New Republic Aug 2014 30min
Catching up with Edward Snowden in Moscow.
James Bamford Wired Aug 2014 10min
Apr 1964 – Aug 2014 Permalink
Catch shares are touted by the government and environmental groups as the solution to overfishing. But for a new generation under the system, the economics consist mainly of “absentee landlords, brokers and bankers, [and] fish quota that costs more than your house.”
Lee van der Voo Seattle Weekly Jan 2013 Permalink
The story of Thor Holm Hansen—”Norwegian country singer, a former Outlaws motorcycle chieftain, and an ‘ambassador at large’ to a rebel Haitian government”—who claims to be back in Florida to locate his missing daughter.
Terrence McCoy New Times Broward-Palm Beach Feb 2013 20min Permalink
Billy Dillon was about to sign a contract with the Detroit Tigers. Instead he was convicted–wrongly–of first-degree murder and spent the next 27 years in prison.
Brandon Sneed SB Nation Aug 2013 35min 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
Most of the men were in their 60s and 70s, with heart conditions, diabetes, and replacement hips. They made off with millions in cash and jewels, only to give themselves up by not understanding how technology works.
Mark Seal Vanity Fair Mar 2016 30min Permalink
Sallie Belling was an inspirational figure in her community for having overcome a childhood of abuse, drugs, and prostitution — a childhood her sister Rachel says is pure fiction.
Stephanie Wood The Sydney Morning Herald Feb 2016 15min Permalink
Forgiveness and the lives of two young men caught in Stockton street gangs.
Daniel Alarcón California Sunday Aug 2016 20min Permalink
Anti-aging medicine has been an epicenter of quackery for more than a century, but an MIT scientist is waging his reputation on a new pill.
Benjamin Wallace New York Aug 2016 20min Permalink
Will Lacey was just a baby when doctors diagnosed a rare form of cancer and told his family there was only one end. Nobody then could imagine the journey ahead, from hospital rooms to board rooms, research labs to government offices, a furious race between hope and death.
Billy Baker Boston Globe Dec 2016 50min Permalink