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Editors’ Picks Features Topics Best of 2018
Longreads
It’s Getting Hot in Here, So Take Off All Your Constructs
By Soraya Roberts Feature

Hot Girl Summer has women subverting a feminine archetype, but only if they can embody it first.

Friends: We Need Your Help
to Fund More Stories

Bundyville: The Remnant

What if we told you that in the summer of 2016, in a rural Western town, there was a bombing you never heard about?
Explore the stories and podcast
What Does It Mean To Be Moved?
By Jennifer Wilson Feature

We can all remember a time when the wind touched us when we needed touching, pushed us along when we were unsure.

Images Present Themselves: A Conversation With Photographer Burk Uzzle
By Tom Maxwell Feature

Some of the most iconic images get captured when you’re just out for a stroll. What you do with these images is a political act.

Pages You Can Dance To: A Book List
By Brittany Allen Feature

Either Martin Mull or Frank Zappa or Elvis Costello once said writing about music is as pointless as dancing about architecture. Which doesn’t account for how I’ve danced to all these books.

Wear your Longreads love on your sleeve. Literally.

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The Longreads Podcast

Our new weekly podcast, dedicated to helping people find and share the best storytelling in the world.

Latest Picks

For Women Musicians, Maybelle Carter Set The Standard And Broke The Mold
By Tift Merritt  / NPR
Woodstock: My Queer Love Story
By Kate Walter  / Longreads
Deep brain stimulation
By Jonathan Pugh  / Aeon
The Case That Made an Ex-ICE Attorney Realize the Government Was Relying on False “Evidence” Against Migrants
By Melissa del Bosque  / Pro Publica
Mysteries of Menopause
By Lesley Hazleton  / The Stranger
The Teacher. The Basketball Coach. The Dead Rat In the Mail.
By Sarah Fuss Kessler  / Medium
Our Democracy’s Founding Ideals Were False When They Were Written. Black Americans Have Fought to Make Them True.
By Nikole Hannah-Jones  / The New York Times Magazine
The 1619 Project
By Bryan Stevenson , Linda Villarosa , Matthew Desmond , Staff , Nikole Hannah-Jones  / The New York Times Magazine
Day Trip
By Sophia Moskalenko  / The Rumpus
For the Love of Orange
By Larissa Pham  / The Paris Review
View more

Latest Posts

Editor’s Roundtable: One of the Most Important Pieces of Our Time, Plus Rats and French Cooking (Podcast)
By Longreads Commentary

Longreads editors discuss stories in The New York Times Magazine, Eater, and Hakai Magazine.

The Top 5 Longreads of the Week
By Longreads Weekly Top 5

This week, we’re sharing stories from Nikole Hannah-Jones and The New York Times Magazine Staff, Melissa del Bosque, Nitasha Tiku, Sarah Gilman, and Tift Merritt.

Woodstock: My Queer Love Story
By Kate Walter Feature

Kate Walter went to Woodstock in 1969 with her boyfriend. She went back in 1994 with her girlfriend. She’s not going back again.

On a Wild Patch of Mississippi Soil
By Aaron Gilbreath Highlight

Camping a wooded island along the lower Mississippi River introduces one writer to a land of legend and wildness.

I’ll Be Loving You Forever
By Rebecca Schuman Feature

My best friend and the New Kids on the Block, 30 years later.

Get the Longreads Weekly Email

Sign up to get the week’s best Longreads delivered to your inbox every Friday afternoon.

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Flagrant Foul: Benching Teen Moms Before Title IX
By Britni de la Cretaz Feature

As a high schooler and new mom, Jane Rubel didn’t consider herself a feminist. She just knew that if husbands and fathers were eligible to play high school basketball, she should have been, too.

‘Horror Is a Soothing Genre … It’s Upfront About How Scary It Is To Be a Woman.’
By Laura Barcella Feature

Sady Doyle discusses the connection she draws between society’s monstrous treatment of women and woman’s archetypal monstrosity.

This Month in Books: ‘The Minor Figure Yields to the Chorus’
By Dana Snitzky Commentary

I’m reading this book right now called “The Manuscript Found in Saragossa.” It’s a recursive story-within-a-story sort of thing, and it’s giving me nightmares.

Toni Morrison, 1931-2019
By Danielle Jackson Reading List

An elegy and reading list for Toni Morrison, the Nobel Laureate and Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist who died Monday, August 5, 2019.

The Young Man and the Sea Sponge
By Darryn King Feature

SpongeBob SquarePants turned 20 this summer. This is the story of how a marine biology teacher named Stephen Hillenburg gave life to an animated character who continues to delight fans worldwide.

View more posts

Popular Posts

Whole 60
By Laura Lippman Feature

The Laura Lippman plan requires that you eat whatever you want whenever you want to eat it, and declare yourself beautiful. We’re not going to lie — it’s really hard.

Reading Lessons
By Irina Dumitrescu Feature

You never stop learning how to read — probably because you also never stop forgetting how to read.

Flagrant Foul: Benching Teen Moms Before Title IX
By Britni de la Cretaz Feature

As a high schooler and new mom, Jane Rubel didn’t consider herself a feminist. She just knew that if husbands and fathers were eligible to play high school basketball, she should have been, too.

NestlĂ© Is Sucking the World’s Aquifers Dry
By Aaron Gilbreath Highlight

The multinational corporation is gradually privatizing a natural resource.

A Minor Figure
By Longreads Feature

While searching for photographs that depict black young women and girls living free in the second and third generations born after slavery, Saidiya Hartman finds a disturbing image.

Whiteness on the Couch
By Natasha Stovall Feature

Clinical psychologist Natasha Stovall looks at the vast spectrum of white people problems, and why we never talk about them in therapy.

Books

What Does It Mean To Be Moved?
By Jennifer Wilson Feature

We can all remember a time when the wind touched us when we needed touching, pushed us along when we were unsure.

Pages You Can Dance To: A Book List
By Brittany Allen Feature

Either Martin Mull or Frank Zappa or Elvis Costello once said writing about music is as pointless as dancing about architecture. Which doesn’t account for how I’ve danced to all these books.

‘Horror Is a Soothing Genre … It’s Upfront About How Scary It Is To Be a Woman.’
By Laura Barcella Feature

Sady Doyle discusses the connection she draws between society’s monstrous treatment of women and woman’s archetypal monstrosity.

This Month in Books: ‘The Minor Figure Yields to the Chorus’
By Dana Snitzky Commentary

I’m reading this book right now called “The Manuscript Found in Saragossa.” It’s a recursive story-within-a-story sort of thing, and it’s giving me nightmares.

Toni Morrison, 1931-2019
By Danielle Jackson Reading List

An elegy and reading list for Toni Morrison, the Nobel Laureate and Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist who died Monday, August 5, 2019.

View all

Current Events

Editor’s Roundtable: One of the Most Important Pieces of Our Time, Plus Rats and French Cooking (Podcast)
By Longreads Commentary

Longreads editors discuss stories in The New York Times Magazine, Eater, and Hakai Magazine.

Toni Morrison, 1931-2019
By Danielle Jackson Reading List

An elegy and reading list for Toni Morrison, the Nobel Laureate and Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist who died Monday, August 5, 2019.

Editor’s Roundtable: Escape the Podcast
By Longreads Commentary

Longreads editors discuss stories in Slate, The Cut, and The Goods by Vox.

Editor’s Roundtable: Smiles, Lies, and Promise (Podcast)
By Longreads Commentary

Longreads editors discuss stories in Gay Magazine, The New Yorker, and Topic.

Editor’s Roundtable: Manufactured to Go Viral (Podcast)
By Longreads Commentary

Longreads editors discuss stories in Pacific Standard, The Paris Review, and Topic.

View all

Essays & Criticism

Woodstock: My Queer Love Story
By Kate Walter Feature

Kate Walter went to Woodstock in 1969 with her boyfriend. She went back in 1994 with her girlfriend. She’s not going back again.

I’ll Be Loving You Forever
By Rebecca Schuman Feature

My best friend and the New Kids on the Block, 30 years later.

Flagrant Foul: Benching Teen Moms Before Title IX
By Britni de la Cretaz Feature

As a high schooler and new mom, Jane Rubel didn’t consider herself a feminist. She just knew that if husbands and fathers were eligible to play high school basketball, she should have been, too.

Whiteness on the Couch
By Natasha Stovall Feature

Clinical psychologist Natasha Stovall looks at the vast spectrum of white people problems, and why we never talk about them in therapy.

Won’t You Be My Neighbor: An Anti-Hate Pop Culture Syllabus
By Soraya Roberts Feature

Media and entertainment grounded in empathy are a critical part of a saner culture — and we can all help by actively producing, seeking, and supporting it.

View all
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