The Torture Colony
A utopian German settlement in Chile had already turned darkly cultish by the time it became a secret torture site for enemies of the Pinochet regime.
A utopian German settlement in Chile had already turned darkly cultish by the time it became a secret torture site for enemies of the Pinochet regime.
Bruce Falconer The American Scholar Sep 2008 40min Permalink
Two teenage girls and a complicated, involved robbery; an excerpt from Landis' forthcoming novel.
"Tina stops. Rainey stops behind her. She imagines Tina stepping closer to the stoop and the man twisting her wrist so that the gun falls to the sidewalk and explodes, shooting someone in the ankle. But she wants that softly gliding cape, which she will wear to school, inciting fabulous waves of jealousy."
Dylan Landis Soho Press Apr 2014 20min Permalink
On then-agent, now-congressman Michael Grimm and what happens when an F.B.I. informant turns out to be a con man.
Evan Ratliff New Yorker May 2011 30min Permalink
A young woman seeks an appropriate way to dispose of the ashes of her father, a fervid design critic.
"He always wished to be a geometric form (so often did he rail against 'the tyranny of the organic') so I could tell myself he’d be happy, but he also hated bric-a-brac and I think right now he’d qualify, being a small object with no function."
Monica McFawn American Short Fiction Nov 2013 Permalink
A horror/mystery story about heart removal, Bed Bath & Beyond, and Chinese food bags.
"It is not easy to remove a heart with a spoon from the chest of a man, nor is it clean. The spoon was purchased 48 hours earlier from the Bed, Bath & Beyond on 9th Street. The Nicole Miller Moments 5 pc Flatware Set was $24.99. The salad fork, dinner knife, dinner fork, and soup spoon were disposed of. Only the teaspoon remained.
Allan Shapiro Hobart Sep 2013 10min Permalink
Interlocking narratives of relationships and a potential murder.
"Metal ran in an extensive and intricate network in streams across the countryside and densely through the city. Metal channeled the blood, and metal screws held Sarah’s glasses together as she left the parking lot and exited Le Roy onto the freeway. She felt sad to have missed a chance to get involved with a crazed dangerous person like Mike. Had he really committed a murder before she picked him up? She thought about the geese and drove home."
William Gillespie PANK Magazine Jul 2013 Permalink
From a Tokyo smash-and-grab to driving a car through the window of a Dubai jewelry shop, how a ragtag band of Balkan thieves set a new bar for audacious heists.
A member of the Pink Panthers, Milan Poparic, escaped from prison yesterday.
David Samuels New Yorker Apr 2010 1h5min Permalink
Confusion and nervousness ensue when items slowly go missing at a nursing home.
"After that conversation, more glasses went missing. Sometimes we found them on the wrong peoples’ faces. Sometimes a pair showed up, perched in the middle of a bowl of oatmeal. Everyone was confused; Miss Marilyn panicked. Even my grandma had her theories—a rat had carried things off and dropped them in sly places. But I knew who was responsible and I kept quiet. I couldn’t break a man’s spirit.
Phyllis Carol Agins Knee-Jerk Jun 2013 10min Permalink
A series of mysterious, dangerous interactions in a Mexican bathhouse.
"In every public bath, there tends to be a fight from time to time. We never saw or heard any there. The clients, conditioned by some unknown mechanism, respected and obeyed every word of the orphan’s instructions. Also, to be fair, there weren’t very many people, and that’s something I’ll never be able to explain, since it was a clean place, relatively modern, with individual saunas for taking steam baths, bar service in the saunas, and, above all, cheap. There, in Sauna 10, I saw Laura naked for the first time, and all I could do was smile and touch her shoulder and say I didn’t know which valve to turn to make the steam come out."
Roberto Bolaño New Yorker Apr 2013 20min Permalink
Inside the most sensational murder in the history of study abroad.
Nathaniel Rich Rolling Stone Jun 2011 30min Permalink
A man encounters the boundaries of knowledge while investigating his father's murder.
"This is maybe still too big for him to know right now, the image too hard for him to see, but eight days ago his father Gerald was found dead in Greenland. He hasn’t talked to his father in three weeks even though his apartment is a mile away, and Rob has no idea what he’d possibly be doing in Greenland. He has no idea why anybody would go to Greenland. Ever."
Patrick Somerville Guernica Jan 2012 10min Permalink
A Parisan eccentric and his friend analytically consider a horrific crime in this classic detective story.
"At the first dawn of the morning we closed all the massy shutters of our old building; lighted a couple of tapers which, strongly perfumed, threw out only the ghastliest and feeblest of rays. By the aid of these we then busied our souls in dreams—reading, writing, or conversing, until warned by the clock of the advent of the true Darkness. Then we sallied forth into the streets, arm and arm, continuing the topics of the day, or roaming far and wide until a late hour, seeking, amid the wild lights and shadows of the populous city, that infinity of mental excitement which quiet observation can afford."
Edgar Allan Poe Jan 1841 55min Permalink
A series of mysterious, interconnected explorations of misdeeds and criminal activities.
"Did we remember anything about the van? White. We knew the color of their van. We thought more about it. Paint. The little girl’s dress. Was the dress white? Check. Now we began to see something. And what else was white? The sneakers. Check. The men were wearing white sneakers. Nothing dark on their feet. The sneakers didn’t have a speck of dark, neither did the van, check, neither did the girl’s dress, check, no dark, these men opposed anything dark and the men were—but we stopped. Dead end. The sack was black. They had put a dark sack over the girl’s head. The sack. How did the dark sack fit together with the white sneakers, white van, white dress? So why wouldn’t they just use a white sack? Black tangled into so much white."
Rob Walsh Conjunctions Jan 2012 20min Permalink
For New Year's Eve, a Times Square encounter chronicled by the author of Open City.
"Low and I stood under the cold blazing lights of Times Square, smoking, and I asked him what he had eaten. Oysters, he said, the pleasure coming back into his voice, in a row on a ridge of ice, eager to be eaten. Fluke, caviar, octopus, some champagne but not a lot."
Teju Cole The Financial Times Jan 2012 10min Permalink
Down in out in an unnamed Californian city: newly-translated Japanese noir from the 1920s.
"First, he was obliged to pretend to search through his pockets. Of course he knew he wouldn't find anything. All he had was the penny he'd found earlier. But if that penny were to show up now, it would only ruin his act. At times like this, Sakuzō could become quite the performer."</blockqoute></p>
Shōson Nagahara Asian American Writers' Workshop Jan 1925 10min Permalink
A Hanukkah story revolving around anarchists, crooks, and vandals. [Free registration required.]
"'Anyway, what's this talk about roots?' he said and immediately regretted it. He could see the magazine covers already. The Return to Religion: The New Tribalism. He liked it better when Wendy was insolent and yelled 'Death to the pigs!' at a couple of off-duty cops having a cup of coffee at a local diner before Frieda pulled her away."
Joan Leegant Moment Magazine Jan 2012 20min Permalink
A young couple, laying low in Maine, is menaced by the reappearance of a suspicious father.
"Jesse is small, but solid in the way some short men can be. He has thick hair, dyed black, parted distinctly in the middle of his head, and he is wearing slacks and a clean, white tee-shirt. In his small hand, he has my journal."
Amy L Clark Solstice Jan 2012 25min Permalink
On prison tourism.
S.J. Culver Guernica Dec 2012 25min Permalink
The human lives lost in exchange for cheaper goods.
Jim Yardley New York Times Dec 2012 Permalink
Analysis of the divisive murder case.
Gene Weingarten Washington Post Dec 2012 25min Permalink
How the biker gang makes money.
Andy Serwer Fortune Nov 1992 15min Permalink
How an obscure Australian judge and a hard-charging lawyer put the S&P on trial for the global financial collapse.
Bernard Lagan The Global Mail Dec 2012 20min Permalink
A father’s life, one year after the death of his three daughters in a fire.
Dan P. Lee New York Dec 2012 30min Permalink
Tracking cyberextortionists and their roving swarms of bots.
Evan Ratliff New Yorker Oct 2005 15min Permalink
A community says its children are being targeted by a group of pedophiles. But did widespread sexual abuse actually take place?
Menachem Kaiser Tablet Nov 2012 20min Permalink