Once Upon a Time in Central Florida
Inside Give Kids the World Village, where the ice cream is unlimited, nightly tuck-ins from six-foot bunny rabbits are complimentary, and Santa Claus visits every Thursday.
Inside Give Kids the World Village, where the ice cream is unlimited, nightly tuck-ins from six-foot bunny rabbits are complimentary, and Santa Claus visits every Thursday.
Katherine LaGrave Afar Feb 2021 25min Permalink
Without understanding the lingering illness that some patients experience, we can’t understand the pandemic.
Ed Yong The Atlantic Aug 2020 15min Permalink
A dispatch from a caretaker.
Jessica Lustig New York Times Magazine Mar 2020 15min Permalink
The University of Maryland waited 18 days to inform students of a virus on campus. That decision left vulnerable students like Olivia Paregol in the dark.
Jenn Abelson, Amy Brittain, Sarah Larimer Washington Post May 2019 30min Permalink
On plagues, parasitic mind control, and magical thinking.
Elisa Gabbert Real Life Sep 2018 20min Permalink
A woman copes with her husband's terminal illness.
Katie Runde Pithead Chapel Sep 2018 10min Permalink
Illness, family, and the weight of history.
Angela Qian Catapult Nov 2017 15min Permalink
Illness and identity in a quietly fractured family.
Brandon Taylor The Rumpus Jul 2017 20min Permalink
A terminally ill journalist deals with a variety of setbacks.
Joy Williams New Yorker Jul 2016 15min Permalink
A couple deals with animal complications, unhappiness, and terminal illness.
Odie Lindsey Guernica Jul 2016 15min Permalink
Lessons for dating and dying.
Emily Lackey Hobart Jun 2016 Permalink
Middle school and family unease; a mysterious neurological condition.
"I knew something bad was about to happen right before it did. My face heated. All the sound cut out, like a huge furry helmet had been dropped over my skull. The room, it didn’t look right. I’m trying to think how to explain it, but all I can come up with is that the colors separated, kind of fizzed around—the green and red marks on the dry-erase board hovered like insects, the purple of Mr. Franz’s tie pixilated. I had that greasy swirl in my stomach like when you’re about to fart and are still praying there’s a way it will be silent, like when you go to the bathroom after a science lab of intolerable closeness to your intolerably cute lab partner and see that yes, the tingle on your nose was actually a tumor-sized whitehead erupting."
Amy Shearn MAKE: Literary Magazine Jun 2014 30min Permalink
A woman's attempt to maintain stability with a troubled daughter and an architect husband succumbing to Alzheimer's.
"Even a year ago, he had still been the old Dory, the real Dory, forgetful, but not so much that it turned his insides out: he couldn’t remember the name of Ellen’s place of work, the institute that she’d founded decades before—The Children’s Place? The Children’s Center? It’s the Learning Center? Are you sure? Then he couldn’t remember how to adjust his drafting table, then he didn’t know where his fine-tip pens were."
Mireille Silcoff Electric Literature's Recommended Reading Aug 2014 20min Permalink
Exploring the riddle of Morgellons disease: sufferers feel things crawling under their skin and hardly anyone believes them.
Leslie Jamison Harper's Sep 2013 25min Permalink