Fiction Pick of the Week: "Selkie Stories Are for Losers"
A woman reels in the wake of her mother’s absence.
For a daily short story recommendation from our editors, try Longform Fiction or follow @longformfiction on Twitter.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_What is the price of magnesium sulfate heptahydrate.
A woman reels in the wake of her mother’s absence.
For a daily short story recommendation from our editors, try Longform Fiction or follow @longformfiction on Twitter.
Sofia Samatar Strange Horizons Jan 2013 15min Permalink
Scenes from a local bar in winter.
For a daily short story recommendation from our editors, try Longform Fiction or follow @longformfiction on Twitter.
Daniel DiFranco Wyvern Lit Aug 2014 Permalink
A story of bird and human patterns.
For a daily short story recommendation from our editors, try Longform Fiction or follow @longformfiction on Twitter.
Robyn Ryle Luna Luna Oct 2014 10min Permalink
Separated from his older brother at a train, five-year-old Saroo Munshi Khan found himself lost in the slums of Calcutta. In his 20s, living in Australia, he began his search for his birth home armed with nothing but hazy memories and Google Earth.
David Kushner Vanity Fair Oct 2012 20min Permalink
How social psychologist Diederik Stapel committed and rationalized an audacious academic fraud, and what his lies reveal about the culture of scientific research.
Yudhijit Bhattacharjee New York Times Magazine Apr 2013 20min Permalink
On Japanese writer Gengoroh Tagame, who creates gay manga work “in the artistic tradition of Pasolini, de Sade, Yukio Mishima and Lolita.”
Chris Randle Hazlitt Jun 2013 10min Permalink
By day, Dan Brown runs the seafood counter at SuperFresh. By night, he does his life work: clearing, dressing, and sharing road-killed deer.
Hank Stuever Washington Post Dec 1999 10min Permalink
Two pairs of identical twins mismatched in a hospital happen upon each other in their twenties.
Susan Dominus New York Times Magazine Jul 2015 45min Permalink
Or, the perils of promoting a middle schooler’s basketball skills. An excerpt from Play Their Hearts Out.
George Dohrmann Sports Illustrated Sep 2010 Permalink
Inside a world where a user named Pizza can amass millions of followers, transform internet humor, get caught peddling diet pills in get-rich-quick schemes, and have her blog shut down—all before graduating high school.
Elspeth Reeve The New Republic Feb 2016 15min Permalink
His savvy on a longboard earned him trophies. His burglary of the Natural History museum in New York earned him headlines. And his brutality on a Florida boat 50-odd years ago earned him a lifetime in prison. Now: What does penance get you?
Brian Burnsed Sports Illustrated Apr 2020 Permalink
For a decade, Dustin Stockton and Jennifer Lawrence had surfed the wave of populist-right politics like few other people in America. Then came Jan. 6.
David Freedlander Politico Nov 2021 40min Permalink
On Witanhurst, the dilapidated London mansion whose ownership is cloaked in mystery.
Ed Caesar New Yorker Jun 2015 30min Permalink
The criminologist/lawyer who created Perry Mason unravels the Boston Strangler case, in which eleven women were murdered by an assailant they willingly let into their homes.
Erle Stanley Gardner The Atlantic May 1964 25min Permalink
When the business icon died in a fire last week, questions abounded. The answers seem rooted in a Covid-period spiral, where he turned to drugs and shunned old friends.
Angel Au-Yeung, David Jeans Forbes Dec 2020 Permalink
Patients say the “Rock Doc” helped them like no one else could. Federal prosecutors say his “help” often amounted to dealing drugs for sex.
Olga Khazan The Atlantic Jan 2021 30min Permalink
Megan Lundstrom understands more than most the conditions that force women into dangerous situations—she also has the key to help them escape.
John H. Tucker Elle Aug 2021 20min 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
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
The house at 114 Lake Avenue in Bristol, CT that kept calling Aaron Hernandez, a NFL star by 20, back to “a volatile underworld of guns, drugs, and violence.”
Bob Hohler Boston Globe Aug 2013 10min Permalink
The authors spend time in Concord, Mass., with people who impersonate Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, Louisa May Alcott and Nathaniel Hawthorne.
Eric Pomerance, Laurie Gwen Shapiro Los Angeles Review of Books Oct 2013 35min Permalink
A profile of Perry Fellwock, a.k.a. Winslow Peck, who exposed the NSA in an 1972 article for Ramparts magazine.
Adrian Chen Gawker Nov 2013 35min Permalink
How a 40-year-old IT consultant became nod, one of Silk Road’s highest volume heroin dealers, who turned informant and then fugitive.
Patrick Howell O'Neill The Daily Dot Jan 2014 20min Permalink
A portrait of Speidi today, complete with crystals, tequila and a vacillation “between having no regrets and having many.”
Andrew Gruttadaro Complex Oct 2015 Permalink
When a longtime resident started stealing her neighbors’ Amazon packages, she entered a vortex of smart cameras, Nextdoor rants, and cellphone surveillance.
Lauren Smiley The Atlantic Nov 2019 35min Permalink