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Longreads
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Editors’ Picks Features Topics Best Of 2020
Longreads
‘What’s the worst thing you’ve ever done?’
By Longreads Feature

In Scott Kimball, the FBI thought it had found a high-value informant who could help solve big cases. What it got instead was lies, betrayal, and murder.

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to Fund More Stories

Longreads Best of 2020

A collection of our favorite stories from the past year
Read Our Favorites
The State of Waiting
By Caitlin Dwyer Feature

Separated by war, boundaries, and immigration policies they cannot control, one young Yemeni couple refuses to give up on love.

Judge a Book Not By its Gender
By lisawhill Feature

Lisa Whittington-Hill suggests there’s a distinct gender bias in celebrity memoirs. Where female celebrities are expected to expose all, male writers get to write about whatever they want.

Queens of Infamy: Boudicca
By Anne Thériault Feature

If you underestimate a woman determined to avenge violence against her daughters, prepare yourself to get sacked. On repeat.

Latest Picks

Inside the Mind of a Murderer: The Power and Limits of Forensic Psychiatry
By Taj Nathan  / The Guardian
The Anxiety of Influencers
By Barrett Swanson  / Harper’s Magazine
The Water in May
By Ken Leung  / GQ
Airbnb Is Spending Millions of Dollars to Make Nightmares Go Away
By Olivia Carville  / Bloomberg Businessweek
Familiar strangers: A talk with co-author of “Mango and Peppercorns” about growing up Vietnamese-American, mothers, and food
By Tricia Vuong  / The Counter
Kip Kinkel Is Ready to Talk
By Jessica Schulberg  / HuffPost
The Amazon That Customers Don’t See
By Grace Ashford , Karen Weise , Jodi Kantor  / The New York Times
Critical Race Theory Battle Invades School Boards—With Help From Conservative Groups
By Brandy Zadrozny , Ben Collins , Tyler Kingkade  / NBC News
Lost Children
By Jorge Barrera  / CBC News
Alan Turing’s Biggest Fan Remains the Real Enigma
By Chris Walker  / Westword
View more

Latest Posts

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

This week, we’re sharing stories from Jessica Schulberg, Patrick Strickland, Shanna B. Tiayon, Sarah Berns, and Madeleine Aggeler.

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

This week, we’re sharing stories from Jesse Eisinger, Jeff Ernsthausen, and Paul Kiel, Arno Kopecky, Isaac WĂĽrmann, Vanessa AngĂ©lica Villarreal, and Laura Spinney.

Nelly the Elephant Packed Her Trunk … and Went on the Run
By Carolyn Wells Highlight

Campaigners want circus elephants placed in specially built sanctuaries. But their owners insist being separated from their human “families” would be traumatic.

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

This week, we’re sharing stories from Victor Luckerson, Tristin Hopper, John Drescher, Steve Shorney, and Pamela Petro.

Zoom Towns — Where Tourists Never Leave
By Carolyn Wells Highlight

“There’s another population of people who came and never left: those freed by COVID from cubicles and work commutes.”

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‘Every Single Person Migrating Has a Story’: Caitlin Dwyer on the Emotional Underlayers of Family Separation
By Cheri Lucas Rowlands Feature

The writer describes her process of reporting and shaping her recent essay, “The State of Waiting,” which explores love in the shadow of war and immigration policy.

Even the Steam Had a Shadow
By Longreads Feature

“He couldn’t remember coming here, or going anywhere. He looked down at himself. With a writhe of horror, he found he couldn’t even remember getting dressed. His clothes were unfamiliar.”

‘The City Just Lied’: Remembering the 1921 Tulsa Massacre
By Seyward Darby Highlight

One hundred years later, journalists look back on the massacre of “Black Wall Street.”

The Lies Told to Speak to a Princess
By Carolyn Wells Highlight

The full story behind the scoop to interview Princess Diana has remained hidden for a quarter of a century — until now.

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

This week, we’re sharing stories from Desiree Stennett and Caroline Glenn, Imani Perry, Bethany Marcel, Joshua Hunt, and David Alm.

View more posts

Popular Posts

Happy is a Relative State
By Longreads Feature

“The rest of my life will always be entwined with rheumatoid arthritis. But it’s my choice to also be something more, to not feel sick, to still find those shadows of a dancer, which is to say tiny flecks of magic, within me.”

‘What’s the worst thing you’ve ever done?’
By Longreads Feature

In Scott Kimball, the FBI thought it had found a high-value informant who could help solve big cases. What it got instead was lies, betrayal, and murder.

Somewhere Under My Left Ribs: A Nurse’s Story
By Longreads Feature

The landscape of operating theaters must be terrifying for patients, but it’s becoming normal for me. It’s amazing what you can get used to.

Queens of Infamy: Boudicca
By Anne Thériault Feature

If you underestimate a woman determined to avenge violence against her daughters, prepare yourself to get sacked. On repeat.

The State of Waiting
By Caitlin Dwyer Feature

Separated by war, boundaries, and immigration policies they cannot control, one young Yemeni couple refuses to give up on love.

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

This week, we’re sharing stories from Nathan Thrall, H. Claire Brown, Alexander Chee, Jean Garnett, and Erica Lenti.

Books

Even the Steam Had a Shadow
By Longreads Feature

“He couldn’t remember coming here, or going anywhere. He looked down at himself. With a writhe of horror, he found he couldn’t even remember getting dressed. His clothes were unfamiliar.”

Happy is a Relative State
By Longreads Feature

“The rest of my life will always be entwined with rheumatoid arthritis. But it’s my choice to also be something more, to not feel sick, to still find those shadows of a dancer, which is to say tiny flecks of magic, within me.”

Judge a Book Not By its Gender
By lisawhill Feature

Lisa Whittington-Hill suggests there’s a distinct gender bias in celebrity memoirs. Where female celebrities are expected to expose all, male writers get to write about whatever they want.

‘The Fledglings Are Out!’
By Longreads Feature

“Peering in, I see that last week’s eggs are now chicks. Tiny bright-yellow beaks, mouths opening and closing silently. This is the magic.”

‘Can You Imagine How That Felt?’: Blake Bailey’s Predations, As Told By His Students
By Seyward Darby Highlight

The inside story of author Blake Bailey’s grooming of middle-school girls.

View all

Current Events

What Happened to Milad? A Palestinian Father Searches for His Son.
By Seyward Darby Highlight

One man’s quest to find his son lays bare the reality of Palestinian life under Israeli rule.

‘Can You Imagine How That Felt?’: Blake Bailey’s Predations, As Told By His Students
By Seyward Darby Highlight

The inside story of author Blake Bailey’s grooming of middle-school girls.

The Syrian Rebels Who Found Refuge in Books
By Carolyn Wells Highlight

In a town under siege from Assad’s regime, a small group built a library from books rescued from the rubble.

“People are dying waiting”
By Krista Stevens Highlight

“Miguel Jr. and Jeannette are troubled that Miguel’s doctors didn’t present ECMO as an option, and then resisted the idea when the family suggested it.”

The Silencing of #MeToo Reporting in Germany
By Seyward Darby Highlight

How an HIV specialist in Germany is using media law to erase reporting of sexual abuse allegations against him.

View all

Essays & Criticism

The State of Waiting
By Caitlin Dwyer Feature

Separated by war, boundaries, and immigration policies they cannot control, one young Yemeni couple refuses to give up on love.

The State We Are In: Neither Here, There, nor in Heaven
By Madhushree Ghosh Feature

On vaccine privilege in America and COVID-19 inequities in India.

You Robbie, You Baka
By Brian Trapp Feature

On having a twin with cerebral palsy and navigating school bullies.

‘The Price For Your Return to Normal Is My Life’: On Dismantling Layers of the Doll
By Cheri Lucas Rowlands Highlight

“I have to wear all of these dolls, you see, so that Whiteness does not have to wear any.”

Listen to the Sound of My Voice
By Seyward Darby Highlight

How a journalist found her voice as her mother lost hers.

View all
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