Murder on the Appalachian Trail
Twenty-five years later, the deaths of a couple on the Trail remain shocking – and mostly unexplained.
Twenty-five years later, the deaths of a couple on the Trail remain shocking – and mostly unexplained.
Earl Swift Outside Sep 2015 30min Permalink
“It’s an old book!” Harper Lee told a mutual friend of ours who’d seen her while I was in Monroeville. “But if someone wants to read it, fine!”
Paul Theroux Smithsonian Jun 2015 25min Permalink
The author boards the Costa Atlantica for several days of line dancing, burlesque and buffets as part of the cruise industry’s new foray into China.
Christopher Beam Businessweek Apr 2015 20min Permalink
A mystery embedded deep within the Amazon.
David Grann New Yorker Sep 2005 1h20min Permalink
“None of this should have ever happened. It makes absolutely no sense at all. It’s truly crazy.”
Matt Stopera Buzzfeed Mar 2015 20min Permalink
A last-minute trip to Sri Lanka.
Leslie Jamison Afar Jan 2015 Permalink
A Norwegian writer with an eye for detail visits Newfoundland.
A Norwegian writer with an eye for detail visits Minnesota.
Karl Ove Knausgaard New York Times Magazine Mar 2015 1h20min Permalink
Visiting Disney World during times of loss and sorrow.
Sam Thielman The Toast Nov 2014 15min Permalink
The eccentric inhabitants of the world’s largest rock—Giant Rock, a humongous boulder deep in the Mojave Desert.
Sasha Archibald Cabinet May 2014 15min Permalink
On July 22, 2013, 66-year-old Gerry Largay began hiking a 32 mile section of the Appalachian Trail. She hasn’t been heard from since.
Kathryn Miles Boston Globe Dec 2014 15min Permalink
Reporting on the “American Way of Life,” two years after the end of World War II.
Martha Gellhorn New Republic Jan 1947 10min Permalink
A man arrives in the US from Hong Kong in search of his mistress; family and medical complications arise.
"At sixty, Boss Yeung had completed what the ancients deemed a full span of life. Now the cycle would start over, and he’d be born again in time to guide his heir, who would conquer China and then the world. He had outlived his father, his grandfather, possibly every male in the long line of ancestors that had led to him. Against his protests, his eldest daughter, Viann, was planning a lavish celebration in Hong Kong, with longevity peach cakes gilded in twenty-four-carat gold flakes and fireworks over the harbor. He wasn’t eager to publicize his age, to give off the impression that he was close to retiring and no longer possessed the fire that had lit the ambitions of his youth."
Vanessa Hua Guernica Dec 2014 Permalink
Aboard the JoCo Cruise Crazy, a ship captained by singer-songwriter Jonathan Coulton and built for nerds.
Adam Rogers Wired Dec 2014 30min Permalink
To be a foreigner is to be perpetually detached, but it is also to be continually surprised.
Pico Iyer Lapham's Quarterly Dec 2014 15min Permalink
Two fictions about yearning, morphing, and instincts.
"The stewardess needed time to figure out what protocol she should follow or what precedent the man and his possessions had set. The man preferred not to wait and ran as fast as he could through the door to boarding, past passengers who had already gone through and formed a line inside the tube with the little windows, waiting like blood in a syringe, now followed at an animal’s pace by the little suitcase on legs, ridden like a horse by the passport with the long fingers, a sight that both fascinated and terrified and caused personnel, propelled by some odd sense of duty, to stand in the way of the trio and block their path, to protect the plane and its pilots and cabin crew from what they couldn’t define."</p>
Deepak Unnikrishnan Guernica Nov 2014 Permalink
A single mother and her children attend an Alaskan cruise ship magic show.
"The magician from Luxembourg did his tricks, which seemed more sophisticated than those of his predecessors. Maybe because they involved roses? Before him there had been merely carnations. The roses, this was a step up. Women holding roses appeared in boxes, boxes on wheels, and the man from Luxembourg turned these boxes around and around. Then he opened the boxes, and the women were not there; they were somewhere else. Behind screens! In the audience!"
Dave Eggers The New Yorker Nov 2014 20min Permalink
A sumo wrestling tournament. A failed coup ending in seppuku. A search for a forgotten man. How one writer’s trip to Japan became a journey through oblivion.
Brian Phillips Grantland Nov 2014 10min Permalink
A widower takes his children to visit relatives under vague, suspicious circumstances.
"One day he said he was taking us on a trip to meet his people in Missouri, relatives we hadn’t known existed. They were farmers of German descent, with exotic-sounding names like Fritzi and Helga and Smit. We loaded up the car and just drove, right out into the country. If our mother had been alive, she’d pack a cooler full of bologna sandwiches and Mars bars, but there was none of that. The windows were down and hot bursts of wind boxed our cheeks and made the Cubs cap on our father’s head twitch."
Kathy Fish The Economy Magazine Oct 2014 10min Permalink
Visiting the site of the Chernobyl meltdown.
George Johnson National Geographic Oct 2014 10min Permalink
Trials and dangers abound for an interplanetary social worker.
"The Planetary Tourism Agency always compensated the family members of the unlucky victims of dematerialization, giving the evergreen excuse that on Earth they didn’t have enough experience managing such advanced equipment, because extraterrestrial technicians were reluctant to train human crews to run teleport booths. Maybe there was a bit of truth in that. Surely newly trained human teletransport specialists would get off the planet as fast as they could: artists, scientists, athletes—they all ran from their birth world as soon as extraterrestrial credits made them understand where true happiness could be found."
Yoss, David Frye Guernica Sep 2014 30min Permalink
A woman travels in a band on the way to their next show.
"With raised eyebrows, Jay crouched down, turned his hand up, and motioned wide. From the flat top, we could see oil rigs in the distance. A pair of buzzards looped in a slow figure eight. I wondered what kind of body lay out there on that red expanse, just out of my eye line, drying out under the sun into those bleached desert bones people put on fireplaces. They disgusted me, sure, but something about them called for touch, to feel those natural cracks in skulls, how similar we are to porcelain on the inside. Once we lose our connective tissue, we can show softer to those that put their hands on us."
Beth Gilstrap Fwriction Review Sep 2014 10min Permalink
A trip to The Villages, a booming retiremement community outside Orlando, where the golf is free, casual sex is everywhere, and there is no cemetery.
Alex French Buzzfeed Aug 2014 35min Permalink
Navigating the alligator-infested rivers of North Florida.
Wells Tower Outside Mar 2009 20min Permalink
The travels and migrations of a troubled young woman.
"Women made warnings of my peasant blouse and pouting thumb to children grown past frightened, but not yet ripened with rebellion. Men offered me rides. Maybe I took the rides. Maybe I left before they offered, tripped on a stone and tended to my bleeding knee."
Kathie Jacobson Necessary Fiction Aug 2014 Permalink
A conversation between two truckers on a wintry Alaskan highway.
"Even at twenty-five miles an hour the snowfall looks like a TV left on through dawn. French is on the radio, letting the checkpoint know how fucked the storm is. There’s nothing we can do but watch the path of the road to not end up in a ditch, or worse, the pipeline. Of course, the checkpoint’s still timing us, that’s the rules and breaking the haul road’s speed limit is the kind of thing that’ll get you shit-canned. French hangs the mic on the dash. 'Hey, G.P.,' he says, picking up where he left off, “how’s a Green Peace turd like yourself do with the ladies?'"
Ryan W. Bradley Corium Aug 2014 10min Permalink