CATEGORIES

Looking For Frederick Douglass
The Atlantic

Looking For Frederick Douglass

How a visit to his birthplace helped me understand this moment in America

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10+ mins  |
September 2020
Anubian Kingdom Rises
Archaeology

Anubian Kingdom Rises

Excavations at a city on the Nile reveal the origins of an ancient African power

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10+ mins  |
September/October 2020
What a Dame!
The Oldie Magazine

What a Dame!

The late Vera Lynn – Oldie of the Year in 2018 and a great friend to the magazine – wrote her last piece for us in May, aged 103

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4 mins  |
August 2020
Profitable Wonders: Batting for bats
The Oldie Magazine

Profitable Wonders: Batting for bats

Besides elegantly wielding his bat at the crease, former England Captain David Gower is a long-standing admirer of the other, flying version.

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3 mins  |
August 2020
Christopher Robin did adore his bear
The Oldie Magazine

Christopher Robin did adore his bear

He told me he loved Winnie-the-Pooh – and his father, AA Milne

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4 mins  |
August 2020
A Plague is an Apocalypse But It Can Bring a New World
New York magazine

A Plague is an Apocalypse But It Can Bring a New World

The meaning of this one is in our hands.

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10+ mins  |
July 20 - August 02, 2020
Under Review
Russian Life

Under Review

BOOKS FOR THE GREAT PAUSE

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4 mins  |
July/August 2020
Russian Life

The Romance of the Earth

Half a century ago, the profession of geologist was both popular and revered in Russia, shrouded in a halo of romance and adventure. Indeed, it was not unusual for the lives of these explorers of subterranean mysteries to be immortalized in motion pictures, or for songs to be written about them.

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7 mins  |
July/August 2020
The Thimble
Russian Life

The Thimble

Pashka Bystrov, known around the village as Speedy, was leaning back against the warm stove and despondently watching his wife, Galka. Her hair still in curlers, she was tossing her dresses, skirts, and fleece tights into a suitcase, wadding up her feather-light stockings, and yelling at him that she was sick up to here, and then some, with village life, and she wanted to hear her heels tapping on asphalt and get a proper salon perm.

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8 mins  |
July/August 2020
“Painting Jesus Isn't Dangerous”
Russian Life

“Painting Jesus Isn't Dangerous”

Orthodox Street Art in Contemporary Russia

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10+ mins  |
July/August 2020
Journeys through the Russian Empire
Russian Life

Journeys through the Russian Empire

WILLIAM CRAFT BRUMFIELD Sergey Prokudin-Gorsky traveled throughout Russia prior to the Revolution, photographing churches and mosques, railways and monasteries, towns and remote natural landscapes. His images are now archived at the Library of Congress. William Brumfield has recreated Prokudin-Gorsky’s journeys and photographed those same sites today and the photos are laid out side by side int his new book – a testament to two brilliant photographers whose work prompts and illuminates, monument by monument, questions of conservation, restoration, and cultural identity and memory.

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6 mins  |
July/August 2020
Owls of the Eastern Ice
Russian Life

Owls of the Eastern Ice

A Quest to Find and Save the World’s Largest Owl

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5 mins  |
July/August 2020
Arctic Wake-up Call
Russian Life

Arctic Wake-up Call

Oil spill highlights Russia's deteriorating infrastructure

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3 mins  |
July/August 2020
An expat Goes Home
Russian Life

An expat Goes Home

At dawn one day in late November, I was awakened by a call. It was my niece, sobbing: “Uncle Vic… Papa died.”

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10+ mins  |
July/August 2020
A Cold Soup to Beet Summer
Russian Life

A Cold Soup to Beet Summer

I was a picky eater in my childhood, and cooked vegetables were especially taboo for me, precluding any enjoyment of my mother’s scrumptious borshch, vegetable ragout, and the like. It must have been a small miracle for her, then, that I did eat her cold svekolnik (свекольник) soup. Perhaps I was seduced by its brilliant red color, or by the floating halves of a hard-boiled egg, or the fact that it was refreshingly cold on a hot summer day.

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3 mins  |
July/August 2020
Kevin Kwan – The Shakespeare of Status Anxiety
The Atlantic

Kevin Kwan – The Shakespeare of Status Anxiety

Kevin Kwan, the author of Crazy Rich Asians, celebrates and skewers the social codes of the wealthy and powerful.

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10 mins  |
July - August 2020
Archaeology

A Sylk Road Renaissance

Excavations in Tajikistan have unveiled a city of merchant princes that flourished from the fifth to the eighth century A.D.

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10+ mins  |
July/August 2020
The Arrow That Saved My Life—Twice
Reader's Digest US

The Arrow That Saved My Life—Twice

After a freak backyard accident almost kills her, a Texas woman is taken on a miraculous medical journey

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6 mins  |
July - August 2020
First Fiction 2020
Poets & Writers Magazine

First Fiction 2020

In our twentieth annual roundup of the summer’s best debut fiction, Lauren Groff, Bryan Washington, Paul Lisicky, Sue Monk Kidd, and Sarah Gailey introduce first books by Ashleigh Bryant Phillips, Jean Kyoung Frazier, Corinne Manning, Megha Majumdar, and John Fram.

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10+ mins  |
July - August 2020
A Poetics Of Resilience
Poets & Writers Magazine

A Poetics Of Resilience

In her new book, Memorial Drive: A Daughter’s Memoir, former poet laureate and Pulitzer Prize Winner Natasha Trethewy contends with persistent trauma, both personal and cultural, going beyond witnessing to seek truth in all its complexity.

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10+ mins  |
July - August 2020
What We Found in Writing
Poets & Writers Magazine

What We Found in Writing

ON THE evening Denver went into lockdown, I was fishing. The South Platte runs right through the city, and if you’re into urban fly-fishing, you can cast for huge carp among the wrecked grocery carts and old tires.

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10+ mins  |
July - August 2020
Save Indie Bookstores
Poets & Writers Magazine

Save Indie Bookstores

Writers tend to have their favorite local book-stores. The one where the staff members are mostly poets.

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4 mins  |
July - August 2020
“I Said to My Mother, ‘Did You See the Blood?' She Said, ‘I Hoped You Hadn't Noticed.'”
New York magazine

“I Said to My Mother, ‘Did You See the Blood?' She Said, ‘I Hoped You Hadn't Noticed.'”

Marga Griesbach was sent to Stutthof concentration camp in 1944. This past February, she left Washington State to take a cruise around the world.

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10+ mins  |
May 25 - June 07, 2020
The Last Night Out
The Atlantic

The Last Night Out

The virus pulled back the curtain on our fraught relationships.

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8 mins  |
June 2020
What Takes Our Breath Away
The Atlantic

What Takes Our Breath Away

An undertaker reflects on the one thing death can’t steal: our stories.

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7 mins  |
June 2020
The Special Child
The Atlantic

The Special Child

In his unsettling trilogy about a possibly divine boy, J. M. Coetzee asks how we recognize the truth when it enters the world.

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10 mins  |
June 2020
Food & Drink
Russian Life

Food & Drink

Babushka’s Victory Cake

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4 mins  |
May/June 2020
Under Review
Russian Life

Under Review

Under Review

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4 mins  |
May/June 2020
The Secret of Scooby-Doo's Enduring Appeal
The Atlantic

The Secret of Scooby-Doo's Enduring Appeal

Why on earth has the formulaic series, which debuted half a century ago, outlasted just about everything else on television?

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9 mins  |
May 2020
The Beauties
Russian Life

The Beauties

I. I remember when I was still in high school in the fifth or sixth level, I traveled with my grandfather from the village of Bolshaya Krepkaya in the Don region to Rostov-on Don.

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10+ mins  |
March/April 2020