Hammer in Her Hand
At 76, Atlanta’s Beverly “Guitar” Watkins still lives for the blues.
At 76, Atlanta’s Beverly “Guitar” Watkins still lives for the blues.
Rachael Maddux Oxford American Feb 2016 Permalink
A shipwreck, a mythical creature.
Ramona Ausubel Oxford American Jan 2016 20min Permalink
Looking for the ghosts of the Allman Brothers Band in Macon.
Amanda Petrusich Oxford American Jan 2016 20min Permalink
The producer of Big Star’s Third and piano player on ‘Wild Horses’ recounts a life of music in Memphis.
Jim Dickinson Oxford American Dec 2013 1h10min Permalink
The life of a trans woman on the border between El Paso and Juárez.
Jonathan Blitzer Oxford American Sep 2015 Permalink
On what’s in a name.
Harrison Scott Key Oxford American Jul 2015 10min Permalink
A convergence of sex, fears, and family drama.
"Beside the bed the baby monitor flashed, as it had been doing all night, a blue light racing up and down to accompany the sounds: breathing, snoring, faint clicking, the mewl of one or another of the cats. If Angela held it to her ear she would also hear the ticking of the mantel clock. These new monitors! So much more sophisticated than those of yore. Nineteen years ago, when last she’d tuned into one, the monitor would occasionally pick up the cell phone call of some stranger in a passing car, some weird adult voice suddenly blaring from the baby’s room."
Antonya Nelson Oxford American Jun 2015 20min Permalink
Memories of her father and her time in Tennessee.
Rosanne Cash Oxford American Nov 2013 20min Permalink
Following a storm that took 72 lives in Alabama.
Justin Nobel Oxford American Apr 2015 50min Permalink
The complicated class politics of American eating habits.
Chris Offutt Oxford American Apr 2015 Permalink
On old Texas newspapers and a pair of men who shaped the story of civil rights.
John Jeremiah Sullivan, Joel Finsel Oxford American Feb–Mar 2015 50min Permalink
An ode to Roy Orbison.
Rachel Monroe Oxford American Jan 2015 10min Permalink
"Here’s God’s truth about it: being a groupie wasn’t about sex, it was about access. I wanted to live in the stage life, dazzled by color and sound, constantly in motion, driven by excitement and power, loved by the stage lights, part of the story."
Margaret Moser Oxford American Dec 2014 Permalink
“‘Have you ever killed anybody?’”
Patsy Sims Oxford American Nov 2014 45min Permalink
Walking the East Tennessee woods with a Carol, aka “The Forest Granny,” a woman who lives off the land.
Holly Haworth Oxford American Oct 2014 10min Permalink
Meet the people decomposing on a body farm.
Alex Mar Oxford American Sep 2014 45min Permalink
A former Eagle Scout attends the National Boy Scout Jamboree, aka Jambo, held at a brand-new, $100 million scouting wonderland called The Summit.
Rosecrans Baldwin Oxford American Jun 2014 40min Permalink
A trip to a Louisiana leper colony.
Barry Hannah Oxford American Oct 1995 Permalink
The legacy of the Scopes trial on one Tennesse town.
Rachael Maddux Oxford American May 2014 10min Permalink
Some passions are more dangerous than others.
Wendy Brenner Oxford American Dec 2005 20min Permalink
What really happened in the West, Texas fertilizer plant explosion?
Rachel Monroe Oxford American Mar 2014 30min Permalink
Investigating ska’s moment of conception.
John Jeremiah Sullivan Oxford American Feb 2014 30min Permalink
The rocky career and enduring appeal of country legend Charlie Rich, “the missing link between Elvis Presley and Ray Charles.”
Joe Hagan Oxford American Jan 2014 30min Permalink
A Southern defense attorney's complicated family Christmas, told through the point of view of his child.
"Every Christmas Daddy throws a 'Taking the Christ Out of Christmas' party and invites everybody. Everybody loves my Daddy except for a small percentage that want to take their revenge, so it's lots of people, old clients, other criminal defense attorneys, Rey Mason from the feed store, everybody. No Jesus cause it makes Daddy angry and both his hands already broke."
Lucy Alibar Oxford American Dec 2013 15min Permalink
An analysis of Let Us Now Praise Famous Men and Cotton Tenants, the original manuscript.
Leslie Jamison Oxford American Oct 2013 30min Permalink