Mapping Home
Sarajevo, Chicago, and the memory of cities old and new.
Sarajevo, Chicago, and the memory of cities old and new.
Aleksandar Hemon New Yorker Dec 2011 25min Permalink
Thirty-three years ago, a Chicago man was sentenced to death for murder. In 1999, another man confessed to the crime. Today, they are both free.
Matthew Shaer The Atavist Magazine Sep 2015 1h Permalink
Fear, racism, and the historically troubling attitude of American pioneers.
Eula Biss The Believer Feb 2008 30min Permalink
The story of Tyrone Hood, who served 21 years for a murder he didn’t commit, and the Chicago criminal justice apparatus that allowed a serial killer to go free.
Nicholas Schmidle New Yorker Jul 2014 40min Permalink
A Japanese photographer examines the scene of the St. Valentine's Day massacre; a story from the author of The Black Hour.
"Was it the worst I’d seen? I turned to the camera, viewing the scene anew. Four men lay in a row, as though they had been tucked into a large bed. One slept at their feet, face down. The last hunched on his knees at a round-backed wooden chair. Blood ran toward the center of the room. Later that day when I returned to the newsroom, I would release the image from the machine in my hands, like a dragon from a cage. The city would see the blood, black, and no one would remember that someone—call him Togo or call him Fujita, the name will not be printed—had stood in the dust of men’s bones to face the dragon so that they did not have to."
Lori Rader-Day Time Out Chicago Feb 2008 10min Permalink
A Chicago housing project resident reports intruders breaking into her apartment through a medicine cabinet. Days later, she’s found dead.
Steve Bogira Chicago Reader Sep 1987 40min Permalink
Inside the criminal operation illegally buying, selling and killing tigers – and selling their meat at the local butcher.
Jon Yates, Maurice Possley Chicago Tribune Nov 2002 15min Permalink
On the “queer roots” of Disco, House, and beyond.
Luis-Manuel Garcia Resident Advisor Jan 2014 1h Permalink
When an antsy tech entrepreneur takes over a struggling newspaper.
Bryan Smith Chicago Magazine Oct 2013 30min Permalink
How Chicago is key to a business moving tons of drugs for billions of dollars.
Jason McGahan Chicago Oct 2013 Permalink
An unemployed banker drifts along Occupy protests, his crumbling life, and a crime scene.
"Against the bleachers’ far end, beyond the scope of the cameras, Michael was thinking again about Brussels. The bullet had rung out with plunky subtlety he knew to expect but found disappointing, still. He remembered a cathedral there and the sound he had heard inside of it. This was years ago. The sound he recalled was a cane that he’d heard falling onto the cathedral’s marble floor. The way sound survives inside a cathedral. He remembered looking across the aisle to a hairless woman with earrings dangling halfway down her neck. In the darkness of Chicago, the boy’s body called to him for a closer look, he still had his phone after all, a camera. He could hear the sirens approaching."
Kyle Beachy Five Chapters May 2012 25min Permalink
How the foreclosure crisis ignited a new form of activism in Chicago’s vacant homes.
Ben Austen New York Times Magazine May 2013 Permalink
How companies and large temp agencies benefit from—and tacitly collaborate with—an underworld of labor brokers, known as “raiteros,” who charge workers fees, pushing their pay below minimum wage.
Michael Grabell ProPubica Apr 2013 20min Permalink
On the brick stackers of Chicago.
Tori Marlan Chicago Reader Jan 1999 1h Permalink
How a Chicago drug organization did business.
Mick Dumke Chicago Reader Feb 2013 25min Permalink
The decline and fall of Cabrini-Green, Chicago’s infamous public housing development.
Ben Austen Harper's May 2012 Permalink
A coffee shop owner finally gets to shut down his store.
Neal Pollack Chicago Reader Sep 2000 10min Permalink
As Playboy magazine moves to Los Angeles, the writer considers its place in the Midwest.
No other general interest magazine tried to reach readers in the wide swathe of land between New York and California. “It was a Midwestern magazine, designed for people there. If you wanted it to be hip, edgy, go toe-to-toe with GQ, you were making a mistake,” said Chris Napolitano, a former executive editor who began at Playboy in 1988.
Rachel Shteir Prospect Apr 2012 15min Permalink
Forty years ago, a man was killed in Chicago because he was black. The daughter he never met is still searching for clues about his death.
Steve Bogira Chicago Reader Mar 2012 45min Permalink
A history of Soul Train’s Chi-town origins.
Jake Austen Chicago Reader Oct 2008 20min Permalink
Life inside the original Playboy Mansion.
Bryan Smith Chicago Magazine Jul 2009 Permalink
On a particularly bloody April weekend in 2008 when 40 people were shot, seven fatally. Not one has faced charges.
Frank Main, Mark Konkol The Chicago Sun-Times Jul 2010 Permalink
When Chicago’s Stevens Hotel opened in 1927, it was the biggest hotel in the world. By the time it was closed, it had bankrupted and caused the suicide of a member of the Stevens’ family (which included a seven-year-old future Justice John Paul Stevens), and changed the city forever.
Charles Lane Chicago Magazine Aug 2006 Permalink
A veteran reporter investigates his own beating.
John Conroy Chicago Magazine Sep 2009 Permalink
On the enduring racial segregation in Chicago and why it’s an issue no mayoral candidate is willing to touch.
Steve Bogira Chicago Reader Feb 2011 Permalink