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Editors’ Picks Features Topics Best Of 2018
Longreads
A Single Sentence
By Longreads Feature

In an clandestinely written memoir, a jailed Turkish novelist and political dissident remembers the single sentence that changed everything at the moment of his arrest.

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
These Boys and Their Fathers
By Don Waters Feature

Trying to form some connection to the father who abandoned him, an outdoorsman surfs the California beach where his father grew up, while looking for answers in the autobiography his father left behind.

Mathematics as a Cultural Force
By Jessica Gross Feature

Historian Amir Alexander on Euclidean geometry’s far-reaching effects.

The Girl I Didn’t Save
By Longreads Feature

Cameron Dezen Hammon reflects on her frustrations as a Christian music minister for the terminally ill, unable to heal a cancer patient she cared for, and struggling to be compassionate at her belligerent Jewish father’s bedside.

Wear your Longreads love on your sleeve. Literally.

Visit the Store

The Longreads Podcast

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

Latest Picks

The girl in a box: the mysterious crime that shocked Germany
By Xan Rice  / The Guardian
Who Chooses
By Tara Atkinson  / Moss
The Rescue
By Zach Campbell  / The Atavist
Was It Worth It?
By Amelia Schonbek , Irin Carmon  / The Cut
McDonald’s CEO Wants Big Macs to Keep Up With Big Tech
By Leslie Patton , Thomas Buckley  / Bloomberg Businessweek
The Sum of Life: Zora Neale Hurston
By Michael Adno  / The Bitter Southerner
To Love and Protect Each Other — From Bigotry
By Jay Deitcher  / Longreads
Four Years in Startups
By Anna Wiener  / The New Yorker
Stories About My Brother
By Prachi Gupta  / Jezebel
Walking with the Ghosts of Black Los Angeles
By Ismail Muhammad  / Literary Hub
View more

Latest Posts

“We’re All Still Cooking…Still Raw at the Core”: An Interview with Jacqueline Woodson
By Adam Morgan Feature

“When I look at that dress and how much intention went into the making of it…it’s like we want to have something that can’t be destroyed, because so much of the past has been destroyed…”

Editor’s Roundtable: Democracy Needs Healing Crystals
By Longreads Commentary

Longreads editors discuss stories in The New Yorker, The Guardian, and Politico.

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

This week, we’re sharing stories from Prachi Gupta, Tess McClure, Anna Wiener, Ismail Muhammad, and Alex McLevy.

Grow Up
By Soraya Roberts Feature

Being an adult at the end of the world means listening to children tell the truths grown-ups refuse to actually hear.

To Love and Protect Each Other — From Bigotry
By Jay Deitcher Feature

After Jay Deitcher sits silent as his wife is verbally assaulted by his father’s racist friend, he grapples with the ways his family has been muted by trauma.

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Climate Messaging: A Case for Negativity
By Rebecca McCarthy Feature

Nell Zink, Joy Williams, and a different kind of climate skepticism.

What Should Universal Basic Income Look Like?
By Livia Gershon Feature

Andrew Yang made it news, but we need a better plan.

Shelved: The Bonzo Dog Doo Dah Band’s “Brain Opera”
By Tom Maxwell Feature

What happens when you’re not different just for the sake of being different.

‘People Can Become Houses’
By Danielle Jackson Feature

In her debut memoir, Sarah Broom builds her “obsession” with her family home — destroyed in 2005 by Hurricane Katrina — into a story of how families decide who they are, how they got here, and how they reconstruct themselves over and over again.

Your Healing Crystals Are Part of the Capitalist Exploitation Machine
By Aaron Gilbreath Highlight

Healing crystals move from poor villages to first world consumers along a trail of death, ecological destruction, and capitalistic concentration of wealth.

View more posts

Popular Posts

Cut From the Same Cloth
By Myfanwy Tristram Feature

Artist Myfanwy Tristram was irritated by her teenage daughter’s extreme fashions — until she took an illustrated journey into their origins.

The Myth of Making It
By Soraya Roberts Feature

If the most financially and critically successful artists don’t feel successful, maybe there’s something wrong with how we think about success.

Paul Clarke Wants to Live
By Rebecca Tan Feature

When a promising student left a neighborhood full of heroin for the University of Pennsylvania, it should have been a moving story. But what does an at-risk student actually need to thrive — or even just to survive?

How Google Discovered the Value of Surveillance
By Longreads Feature

In 2002, still reeling from the dot-com crash, Google realized they’d been harvesting a very valuable raw material — your behavior.

McDreamy, McSteamy, and McConnell
By Samuel Ashworth Feature

Congressional fan fiction is real, it’s glorious, and it might be reshaping our political world.

Mathematics as a Cultural Force
By Jessica Gross Feature

Historian Amir Alexander on Euclidean geometry’s far-reaching effects.

Books

These Boys and Their Fathers
By Don Waters Feature

Trying to form some connection to the father who abandoned him, an outdoorsman surfs the California beach where his father grew up, while looking for answers in the autobiography his father left behind.

A Single Sentence
By Longreads Feature

In an clandestinely written memoir, a jailed Turkish novelist and political dissident remembers the single sentence that changed everything at the moment of his arrest.

The Girl I Didn’t Save
By Longreads Feature

Cameron Dezen Hammon reflects on her frustrations as a Christian music minister for the terminally ill, unable to heal a cancer patient she cared for, and struggling to be compassionate at her belligerent Jewish father’s bedside.

“We’re All Still Cooking…Still Raw at the Core”: An Interview with Jacqueline Woodson
By Adam Morgan Feature

“When I look at that dress and how much intention went into the making of it…it’s like we want to have something that can’t be destroyed, because so much of the past has been destroyed…”

Mathematics as a Cultural Force
By Jessica Gross Feature

Historian Amir Alexander on Euclidean geometry’s far-reaching effects.

View all

Current Events

A Single Sentence
By Longreads Feature

In an clandestinely written memoir, a jailed Turkish novelist and political dissident remembers the single sentence that changed everything at the moment of his arrest.

Editor’s Roundtable: Democracy Needs Healing Crystals
By Longreads Commentary

Longreads editors discuss stories in The New Yorker, The Guardian, and Politico.

What Should Universal Basic Income Look Like?
By Livia Gershon Feature

Andrew Yang made it news, but we need a better plan.

Downsizing the American Black Middle Class
By Bryce Covert Feature

Government jobs helped thousands of Black families move into the middle class. Now, increasing calls for government privatization are pushing them back out.

Editor’s Roundtable: Fans, ‘Grams and Installment Plans
By Longreads Commentary

Longreads editors discuss recent stories in Inc., The Cut, and The Baffler.

View all

Essays & Criticism

A Single Sentence
By Longreads Feature

In an clandestinely written memoir, a jailed Turkish novelist and political dissident remembers the single sentence that changed everything at the moment of his arrest.

The Girl I Didn’t Save
By Longreads Feature

Cameron Dezen Hammon reflects on her frustrations as a Christian music minister for the terminally ill, unable to heal a cancer patient she cared for, and struggling to be compassionate at her belligerent Jewish father’s bedside.

Grow Up
By Soraya Roberts Feature

Being an adult at the end of the world means listening to children tell the truths grown-ups refuse to actually hear.

To Love and Protect Each Other — From Bigotry
By Jay Deitcher Feature

After Jay Deitcher sits silent as his wife is verbally assaulted by his father’s racist friend, he grapples with the ways his family has been muted by trauma.

What Should Universal Basic Income Look Like?
By Livia Gershon Feature

Andrew Yang made it news, but we need a better plan.

View all
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