How Isis Crippled al-Qaida
The inside story of the coup that has brought the world’s most feared terrorist network to the brink of collapse.
The inside story of the coup that has brought the world’s most feared terrorist network to the brink of collapse.
Shiv Malik, Ali Younes, Spencer Ackerman, Mustafa Khalili The Guardian Jun 2015 25min Permalink
Madeleine Fullard is on a mission to locate the remains of apartheid’s murdered activists. She needs the help of Eugene de Kock, a former police squad leader known as “Prime Evil,” to do so.
Justine van der Leun The Guardian Jun 2015 30min Permalink
On being held hostage by Somali pirates.
Michael Scott Moore The Guardian Jun 2015 30min Permalink
The story of Ota Benga, captured in the Congo, displayed at the World’s Fair, and brought to the Bronx Zoo in 1906.
Pamela Newkirk The Guardian Jun 2015 25min Permalink
The humanitarian crisis the rest of the world has already forgotten about.
Carole Cadwalladr The Guardian May 2015 20min Permalink
On the Aran islands of Ireland.
Anne Enright The Guardian May 2015 15min Permalink
The last all-male clubs in Britain are contemplating admitting women. But a significant proportion of their members still want to preserve the spaces as male-only.
Amelia Gentleman The Guardian Apr 2015 20min Permalink
A profile of the favorite to become the next UK prime minister.
Rafael Behr The Guardian Apr 2015 25min Permalink
Nearly 20 years ago in a remote California town, a 16-year-old named Karen Mitchell disappeared. The case went cold, but last month local law enforcement started looking at it again after the arrest of a former resident: Robert Durst.
Michelle Dean The Guardian Apr 2015 15min Permalink
A writer befriends a street addict in the Bronx—and then takes her back to her mother in Oklahoma.
Beauty turns herself in on outstanding prostitution charges, and ends up back at Rikers.
Chris Arnade The Guardian Feb–Apr 2015 25min Permalink
On the parallel sadness of Thom Gunn and Elizabeth Bishop.
Colm Tóibín The Guardian Apr 2015 10min Permalink
Fake news stories. Doctored photographs. Staged TV clips. Armies of paid trolls.
Peter Pomerantsev The Guardian Apr 2015 20min Permalink
Why do all those rugged coastlines, moors and stone buildings make England seem haunted?
Robert Macfarlane The Guardian Apr 2015 15min Permalink
Coastal erosion is leading more than a few Britons to watch their homes crumble into the sea.
Patrick Barkham The Guardian Apr 2015 20min Permalink
The long arm of the DEA reaches into Liberia to bust a cocaine trafficker.
Yudhijit Bhattacharjee The Guardian Mar 2015 20min Permalink
Perhaps because your people have always hunted them. But also because there’s demand in New York fashion circles for their pelts.
Ross Perlin The Guardian Mar 2015 20min Permalink
The East India Company was once “too big to fail.”
William Dalrymple The Guardian Mar 2015 25min Permalink
The British and Irish have coined some fabulous terms to describe nature and landscrape. “Doofers” is the Scots’ term for horse-shit; “clinkerbell” means icicle in Hampshire.
Robert Macfarlane The Guardian Feb 2015 15min Permalink
A leading Guantanamo interrogator was once a Chicago police detective accused of police brutality.
Spencer Ackerman The Guardian Feb 2015 20min Permalink
It’s not just the virus that stands in the way, it’s bureaucratic logistics, and the frightening look of those hazmat suits.
Sarah Boseley The Guardian Feb 2015 20min Permalink
A draft dodger invents a pop music career for himself – without recording any songs.
Jon Ronson The Guardian Feb 2015 10min Permalink
Trolls are frustrating, cruel and frightening creatures of the internet deep. But something surprising happens when one writer tries to deal with the worst of hers: He turns out to have a conscience.
Lindy West The Guardian Feb 2015 10min Permalink
Alex Malarkey co-wrote a bestselling book about a near-death experience. Last week he admitted he made it up. Why wasn’t anyone listening to a quadriplegic boy and a mother who simply wanted to tell the truth?
Michelle Dean The Guardian Jan 2015 15min Permalink
Since exposing the Neapolitan mafia by publishing Gomorrah at age 27, Roberto Saviano has lived for nearly a decade under armed guard, shuttling between anonymous hotels and army barracks.
Roberto Saviano The Guardian Jan 2015 15min Permalink
“‘It’s like a novel,’ a newspaper editor once told me, shaking his head. When I recently asked Ruggeri, the chief investigator, to sum up the case, she stared at her desk and just said ‘incredible’ four times.”
Tobias Jones The Guardian Jan 2014 20min Permalink