When the Pandemic Came to Sullivan Prison
As one blockmate after another fell ill, we tried to stay safe and care for one another. It wasn’t always enough.
As one blockmate after another fell ill, we tried to stay safe and care for one another. It wasn’t always enough.
John J. Lennon The New York Times Magazine Apr 2021 30min Permalink
A year of isolation made me consider all the casual, unwanted touch women endure — and why it’s so hard to refuse it.
Melissa Febos New York Times Magazine Apr 2021 20min Permalink
The pandemic brought the business opportunity of a lifetime to Puritan Medical Products of Guilford, Maine. But even a $250 million infusion from the U.S. government has done little to quell an epic family feud.
Olivia Carville Bloomberg Business Mar 2021 20min Permalink
Hundreds of workers at a Tampa lead smelter have been exposed to dangerous levels of the neurotoxin. The consequences have been profound.
Corey G. Johnson, Rebecca Woolington, Eli Murray Tampa Bay Times Mar 2021 25min Permalink
George Otto was a respected family physician with a bustling clinic in the northwest corner of the city. But he had a secret: after hours, he was running a booming fentanyl business.
Brett Popplewell Toronto Life Mar 2021 20min Permalink
Near America’s largest coal-fired power plant, toxins are showing up in drinking water and people have fallen ill. Thousands of pages of internal documents show how one giant energy company plans to avoid the cleanup costs for coal ash.
Max Blau Georgia Health News, ProPublica Mar 2021 40min Permalink
A writer reckons with his debts, both financial and personal.
Benjamin Thorp The Rumpus Mar 2021 10min Permalink
A notoriously brutal industry is slowly building supports for its workers.
Christina Couch Hakai Magazine Mar 2021 15min Permalink
A dispatch from the pandemic under Governor Kristi Noem.
Stephen Rodrick Rolling Stone Mar 2021 30min Permalink
How did so many rich countries get it so wrong? How did others get it so right?
David Wallace-Wells New York Mar 2021 30min Permalink
For years, employees of the Pierre enjoyed some of the most enviable union jobs in New York City. How much of that will survive the pandemic?
Jennifer Gonnerman New Yorker Mar 2021 20min Permalink
Before I learned about beauty, I delighted in my body. I sensed a deep well at my center, a kind of umbilical cord that linked me to a roiling infinity of knowledge and pathos that underlay the trivia of our daily lives.
Melissa Febos The Yale Review Mar 2021 15min Permalink
In Hobbs, New Mexico, the high school closed and football was cancelled, while just across the state line in Texas, students seemed to be living nearly normal lives. Here’s how pandemic school closures exact their emotional toll on young people.
Alec MacGillis ProPublica Mar 2021 Permalink
People with obsessive-compulsive disorder are often depicted as Type A clean freaks. The reality is much worse.
Lisa Whittington-Hill The Walrus Mar 2021 15min Permalink
On illness, lockdown, marriage, and intimacy.
Mary H.K. Choi GQ Mar 2021 Permalink
In a Plano bowling alley one night, Bill Fong came so close to perfection that it nearly killed him.
Michael J. Mooney D Magazine Jun 2012 20min Permalink
We stopped at a service station where there were old truck drivers, their vehicles festooned with red banners: “All-out war against the virus, weather hard times together.” The drivers wore their masks down around their chins as they smoked. I asked for water at the only open shop, and the assistant pulled his jacket up to cover his mouth before saying “over there.”
Lavender Au New York Review of Books Mar 2020 15min Permalink
The assumptions made by public officials, and the choices made by media, too often backfired.
Zeynep Tufekci The Atlantic Feb 2021 25min Permalink
A plane crash survivor and trauma researcher turns her attention to the memories we’re making now.
Erika Hayasaki Wired Feb 2021 Permalink
Last April, the District built a secret disaster morgue, assembled an army of volunteers to staff it, and trained people who had never previously seen a dead body to care for the dead. This is the story of the morgue—and the quiet force of civil servants tending to everyone we’ve lost to Covid.
Luke Mullins Washingtonian Feb 2021 25min Permalink
While the virus has ravaged rich nations, reported death rates in poorer ones remain relatively low. What probing this epidemiological mystery can tell us about global health.
Siddhartha Mukherjee New Yorker Feb 2021 25min Permalink
Baby Olivia weighed 1 pound, 10 ounces. Her doctors faced a stressful paradox: giving her the healing power of a parent’s touch, while keeping the virus out.
Eva Holland Wired Feb 2021 15min Permalink
On body horror, ‘Attack of the 50 Foot Woman,’ and the growing pains of being the tall girl.
Hannah Walhout Catapult Feb 2021 20min Permalink
How will we remember Covid-19?
Lois Parshley Broadcast Feb 2021 20min Permalink
The BBL is the fastest growing cosmetic surgery in the world, despite the mounting number of deaths resulting from the procedure. What is driving its astonishing rise?
Sophie Elmhirst Guardian Feb 2021 25min Permalink