
The Senseless Logic of the Wild
It was just a kayaking trip. Then it upended their lives.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Suppliers of Magnesium sulfate heptahydrate large granules.
It was just a kayaking trip. Then it upended their lives.
Jon Mooallem New York Times Magazine Mar 2019 40min Permalink
The Tacoma Refugee Choir founder didn’t anticipate its impact on her—or her city.
James Ross Gardner Seattle Met Jun 2019 20min Permalink
What prompts a woman to exit society and marry God? Inside a modern convent in Texas.
Alex Mar Oxford American Aug 2013 45min Permalink
A journey to explore the rising authoritarianism in Hungary and its weirdest fringe: the people who believe they’ve descended from Attila the Hun.
Jacob Mikanowski Harper's Jul 2019 25min Permalink
What one funny-looking fish taught us about evolution, the internet, and the monsters we create.
Miranda Collinge Esquire UK Jul 2019 25min Permalink
Transition House had to be true to its principles and then it had to leave them behind.
Larissa MacFarquhar New Yorker Aug 2019 20min Permalink
Uber and Lyft take a lot more from drivers than they say.
Dhruv Mehrotra, Aaron Gordon Jalopnik Aug 2019 30min Permalink
On life after you accomplish your lifelong goal.
Seth Wickersham ESPN Sep 2019 30min Permalink
Prince had grand plans for his autobiography, but only a few months to live.
Dan Piepenbring New Yorker Sep 2019 30min Permalink
One year ago the journalist Jamal Khashoggi walked into the Saudi consulate in Istanbul and never walked out. This is what happened.
Evan Ratliff Insider Oct 2019 45min Permalink
Thomas Joshua Cooper risks his life to document the world’s remotest places.
Dana Goodyear New Yorker Oct 2019 30min Permalink
For years, Mormon Mommy blogger Natalie Lovin curated a picture-perfect life. Then she left the church—and her husband.
Nona Willis Aronowitz Elle Nov 2019 15min Permalink
An insider watches Kink.com prepare to leave the hundred-year-old armory it occupies in San Francisco.
On the fraught relationship between Bolivia’s Evo Morales and the indigenous activists who support him.
Jessica Camille Aguirre n+1 Jan 2018 15min Permalink
How the state’s “restitution program” forces poor people to work off small debts.
Anna Wolfe, Michelle Liu The Marshall Project, Mississippi Today Jan 2020 15min Permalink
The first epicenter is coming back to life, but not as anyone knew it.
Right-wing militias brace for civil conflict.
Mike Giglio The Atlantic Sep 2020 30min Permalink
What happened when 59-year-old Paralympian Angela Madsen set out to row from California to Hawaii.
Andrew Lewis Outside Oct 2020 Permalink
As vaccines roll out, the U.S. will face a choice about what to learn and what to forget.
Ed Yong The Atlantic Dec 2020 25min Permalink
How the writer Jesse Armstrong keeps the billionaire Roy family trapped in its gilded cage.
Rebecca Mead New Yorker Aug 2021 25min Permalink
On the Camino de Santiago, a female pilgrim walks in solitude—utterly vulnerable, utterly free.
Aube Rey Lescure Guernica Jul 2021 20min Permalink
When the Arlee Warriors cleared an astonishing path to the state basketball championship, they brought healing to the community.
Abe Streep Esquire Aug 2021 30min Permalink
“When I was covering the Ebola epidemic in West Africa, was there a real difference between my wanting to get to the village or hospital where people were dying terrible deaths, and my wanting people to be dying terrible deaths in whatever village or hospital I happened to be going to? Every assignment presents some variation of that question.”
Luke Mogelson Literary Hub Jun 2016 10min Permalink
After a botched bank robbery in 1990, Sture Bergwall, aka Thomas Quick, confessed to a string of brutal crimes. He admitted to stabbings, stranglings, incest and cannibalism. He was convicted of eight murders in all, and after the final trial he went silent for nearly a decade. But a few years ago, Bergwall came forward again—there was one more secret he had to tell.
Chris Heath GQ Aug 2013 45min Permalink
Behind-the-scenes stories from The Godfather, The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, and one of the phenomenal flops in Hollywood history. At Slate.