The Bad Thing

Sometimes the most haunting part of trauma isn’t what happened—it’s wondering what could have happened if you hadn’t trusted your gut.

Well Without Water

Haunted by a running tap in prison, a man grows obsessed with water waste and climate change, pushing him to the edge.

Weekly Top 5

The Top 5 Longreads of the Week

This week we have stories from Sarah Miller, James D. Walsh, Hanif Abdurraqib, Gabrielle Drolet, and Jeremiah David.

The Top 5 Longreads of the Week

Showcasing stories from Jason Motlagh, Rhaina Cohen, Lydia C. Buchanan, Molly Young, and Forrest Wickman.

The Top 5 Longreads of the Week

Recommendations from Bobbie Johnson; Bee Wilson; Jia Tolentino; Isra Fejzullaj, Rina Chandran, and Michael Zelenko; and Matthew Ponsford.

Editors’ Picks

The Epic Rise and Fall of a Dark-Web Psychedelics Kingpin

Andy Greenberg | Wired | May 22, 2025 | 12,182 words

“Interdimensional travel, sex with aliens, communion with God. Anything is possible with just a sprinkle of DMT. Akasha Song’s secret labs made millions of doses—and dollars—until the feds showed up.”

The Reenchanted World

Karl Ove Knausgaard | Harper’s | May 21, 2025 | 10,753 words

“On finding mystery in the digital age.”

Our Narrative Prison

Eliane Glaser | Aeon | May 13, 2025 | 3,588 words

“The three-act ‘hero’s journey’ has long been the most prominent kind of story. What other tales are there to tell?”

Pirates of the Ayahuasca

Sarah Miller | n+1 | May 20, 2025 | 8,216 words

“There have been times in my life when I wouldn’t have taken seriously the possibility that a South American psychedelic could help ease the horror of systems collapse.”

Maximalisma

Lisa Russ Spaar | The American Scholar | May 16, 2025 | 3,007 words

“A professor endeavors to separate treasure from trash—before her children have to do it for her.”

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Essays and Features

The Race That Turned to Ruin

“Fifteen teams lifted off from Switzerland in gas ballooning’s most audacious race. Three days later, two of them drifted into Belarusian airspace—but only one would survive.”

Tattoos

The ways memory, history, and identity are inscribed—on skin, in silence, and through generations.

Quieseeds

What if the key to understanding ourselves lies in the spaces between things—between words, between waves, between worlds?

The Romance History Forgot

Sir Robert Falcon Scott’s doomed journey to the South Pole captivated the world. But hidden within the legend was a story that has never been told—a love affair between two of the crew who survived.

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Reading Lists

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All of our year-end lists, since 2011.

Favorite stories from across the web, picked by Longreads staff, guest curators, and readers.