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Longreads

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Sticking the Landing: On KickersIn our excerpt of episode 430 of The Creative Nonfiction Podcast, host Brendan O’Meara talks to author Louisa Thomas about kickers and entry points into stories.
“Sometimes it’s more like I have an idea, and I need to...

Sticking the Landing: On Kickers

In our excerpt of episode 430 of The Creative Nonfiction Podcast, host Brendan O’Meara talks to author Louisa Thomas about kickers and entry points into stories. 

Sometimes it’s more like I have an idea, and I need to think about, well, what’s the lede? And that becomes the way into it, and then how does it develop? I don’t write an outline. I usually write a few notes. I have a document full of research or ideas or thoughts or interviews if I’ve done interviews, and then I just start writing.

For a profile, I block it out a little bit more. I still don’t have an outline, but I have beats I want to hit, and a general sense of structure. What’s sort of unusual is that I do a lot of the planning and even pre-writing in my head.

Read the full excerpt.

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In today’s new Longreads essay, Kayla Aletha Welch recounts joining her husband and 50 other people on a pilgrimage in the Jaliscan highlands—and goes on an unlikely journey of marriage, faith, and doubt.

“I saw him differently then, as one does when she realizes that the man with whom she has birthed a child and opened a shared line of credit might believe that a tiny doll in a tiny town holds mysterious powers.”

Read “Where Miracles Exist for the Weekend” on Longreads.

longreads reading mexico jalisco faith doubt religion marriage sacrifice
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Come One, Come All: A Reading List on ParksBeen annoyed in a public space? You are not alone. Elizabeth Blackwell explores the dramas beneath the trees in our latest reading list on parks.
“Large urban parks are some of the only places where people...

Come One, Come All: A Reading List on Parks

Been annoyed in a public space? You are not alone. Elizabeth Blackwell explores the dramas beneath the trees in our latest reading list on parks.

Large urban parks are some of the only places where people of all ages and demographics mingle. But it’s a shared ownership that can lead to controversies and drama. How should those spaces be used? What kind of structures belong there? Who can be trusted to decide?

This reading list touches on the sometimes messy, sometimes inspiring stories that unfold amid the playgrounds, walking paths, and duckponds of our local parks.

writing reading essays nonfiction public parks
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The Kitchen with Two DoorsKristina Kasparian celebrates a beloved childhood comfort food and considers the meaning of home and family in her new essay, “The Kitchen with Two Doors.” This is one to savor!
“Dishes of the diaspora are strange in how...

The Kitchen with Two Doors

Kristina Kasparian celebrates a beloved childhood comfort food and considers the meaning of home and family in her new essay, “The Kitchen with Two Doors.” This is one to savor! 

Dishes of the diaspora are strange in how they take on an identity of their own. In the school yard, I learned from my peers that their mothers and grandmothers made mulukhiyah differently than we did just a few neighborhoods away, using beef stock or rabbit stock instead of chicken, and adding tomato to the palette to interrupt the green. These variations on truth made me feel even more anchored to my family, though shaky about the veracity of our culture. Were we the ones doing it wrong? It hadn’t yet occurred to me at that age that the pride I felt for my family’s customs could be muddied by the shame of being inauthentic.

The same disquietude stirred in my chest when my sister once pointed out that we eat Egyptian mulukhiyah far more often than any traditional Armenian foods. Our family traditions had become impregnated with where we had been, not where we were from. Home is not homeland.

comfort food childhood family pregnancy surrogacy
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The Top 5 Longreads of the WeekIn this week’s Top 5:
* The endorphins of community (New York Magazine)
* Environmentalism and the far right (ProPublica)
* Richard Gadd, post-Baby Reindeer (British GQ)
* Documenting graves as a hobby (Slate)
*...

The Top 5 Longreads of the Week

In this week’s Top 5:

* The endorphins of community (New York Magazine)
* Environmentalism and the far right (ProPublica)
* Richard Gadd, post-Baby Reindeer (British GQ)
* Documenting graves as a hobby (Slate)
* Revolutionary bike riders in Afghanistan (Bicycling Magazine)

Learn why our editors selected these stories for you this week. 

longreads weekly top 5 reading weekend reading running baby reindeer cycling
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How Concerned Citizens Drove a Neo-Nazi Out of Rural MaineChristopher Pohlhaus planned to build a fascist training compound in the woods of rural Maine. The local journalists, veterans, lumberjacks, and policymakers weren’t having it.
“Pohlhaus, 37,...

How Concerned Citizens Drove a Neo-Nazi Out of Rural Maine

Christopher Pohlhaus planned to build a fascist training compound in the woods of rural Maine. The local journalists, veterans, lumberjacks, and policymakers weren’t having it.

Pohlhaus, 37, is a former U.S. marine, an itinerant tattoo artist, and a hardcore white-supremacist influencer. He is loud and hostile, and proud to be both. His voice is pitched surprisingly high, and he has a slight Southern drawl. He has a large body and small bald head; a blue-black tattoo crawls up the right side of his face, from his chin to his forehead. Over the years, Pohlhaus has collected thousands of social media followers, who know him by his nickname: Hammer.

Hammer had been living in Texas for a few years when, in March 2022, he bought the land in Maine. He told his followers that he was going to use it to build a haven, operational center, and training ground for white supremacists.

Check out our excerpt of The Atavist’s latest blockbuster story. 

longreads the atavist maine fascism neo-nazis community activism
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In today’s new Longreads essay, Elizabeth Friend examines the vanishing hitchhiker tale, and one spooky North Carolina story in particular: the tale of a young woman named Lydia. 

There are countless variations on Lydia’s story. Sometimes her dress is a specific color. Sometimes a different family member opens the door. Sometimes the young man drapes his jacket over the girl’s shoulders, only to find it later on her grave.

Elizabeth explores how folklore passed down over generations reveals our anxieties during times of change. The ghost story of Lydia reflects the shifting expectations of American women in the first half of the 20th century. 

Read “The Lessons of Lore” on Longreads.

longreads essay ghosts halloween hitchhikers myth folklore legend ghost stories women culture history American history
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