The Wrath of the Gods
How reading can lead to resilience in the most trying times.
How reading can lead to resilience in the most trying times.
In 1936, Karp Lykov whisked his family into the Siberian wilderness to escape Bolshevik persecution. They remained there, alone, until discovered by a helicopter crew in 1978.
Mike Dash Smithsonian Jan 2013 15min Permalink
Mardi Fuller grew up in a world of swimming lessons and swim teams because of a mysterious death that haunted her family’s past.
Mardi Fuller Outside Dec 2021 30min Permalink
The American yam is not the food it says it is. How that came to be is a story of robbery, reinvention, and identity.
Lex Pryor The Ringer Nov 2021 20min Permalink
A Thanksgiving story about the limits of human empathy.
Annie Lowrey The Atlantic Nov 2018 20min Permalink
Pregnant and facing decades in prison, the mother of Tupac Shakur fought for her life—and triumphed—in the trial of the Panther 21.
Tashan Reed Jacobin Nov 2021 25min Permalink
The story of the 1977 Revolt at Cincinnati, and the men who changed the course of the NRA forever.
Elena Saavedra Buckley Epic Magazine Nov 2021 35min Permalink
A hundred years ago, in the midst of an American food crisis, two spies who had once sworn to kill each other came together with a plan to feed America: hippo meat.
Jon Mooallem The Atavist Magazine Dec 2013 1h25min Permalink
For nearly 200 years, San Francisco has been the last stop of petty thieves, con artists and killers. Iva Kroeger was all three.
Katie Dowd SFGate Nov 2021 Permalink
Scandal, conspiracy, and cover-ups in the theft of the “Irish Crown Jewels” from Dublin Castle.
Dan Nosowitz Atlas Obscura Nov 2021 Permalink
Learning to love music—and to hate it, too.
Kelefa Sanneh New Yorker Sep 2021 Permalink
When a down-and-out doctor finds his rundown mansion is haunted, he pulls the quintessentially American move: opening the house to the public for a fee. Everything goes wrong from there.
Patrick Glendon McCullough Truly*Adventurous Oct 2019 35min Permalink
American history begs the question: Can immigrants possibly inherit the mythology of the U.S.?
Kirtan Nautiyal Guernica Oct 2021 20min Permalink
Archaeological discoveries are shattering scholars’ long-held beliefs about how the earliest humans organized their societies—and hint at possibilities for our own,
David Graeber, David Wengrow Guardian Oct 2021 25min Permalink
How morality and geography crystalize in Arkansas.
Alice Driver Bitter Southerner Oct 2021 20min Permalink
After decades of mismanaging its nuclear waste, the US Department of Energy wrestles with its toxic legacy.
Lois Parshley Virginia Quarterly Review Oct 2021 40min Permalink
Half a century ago, a legion of idealists dropped out of society and went back to the land, creating a patchwork of utopian communes across Northern California. Here, the last of those rogue souls offer a glimpse of their otherworldly residences—and the tail end of a grand social experiment.
David Jacob Kramer GQ Sep 2021 Permalink
Can a cowboy become the greatest polo player of all time?
Alvin Townley Truly*Adventurous Sep 2021 10min Permalink
Meditations on the myth of the voiceless.
Amitav Ghosh Orion Sep 2021 20min Permalink
Terrorists boarded two planes in Boston and flew them into the World Trade Center. Massachusetts zeroed in on its top airport official, who has never quite recovered.
Ellen Barry New York Times Sep 2021 10min Permalink
Did people first come to this continent by land or by sea?
Ross Andersen The Atlantic Sep 2021 Permalink
On the history of modern food.
Tom Finger Pipe Wrench Aug 2021 25min Permalink
On peaches.
Shane Mitchell Bitter Southerner Aug 2021 25min Permalink
An oral history of one of the most influential communities on the internet.
From #UKnowUrBlackWhen to #BlackLivesMatter, how a loose online network became a pop culture juggernaut, an engine of social justice, and a lens into the future.
No longer just an online movement, Black Twitter takes to the streets—and finds its voice.
Joy and pain, harmony and discord, organization and chaos—there’s no single way to define Black Twitter’s complex, ongoing legacy.
Grief, conspiracy theories, and one family’s search for meaning in the two decades since 9/11.
Jennifer Senior The Atlantic Aug 2021 30min Permalink