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#AceBookDesk – Thirteen years ago this past Sunday, Longreads came to life as a hashtag on Twitter to help readers around the world to share great stories enjoy says Kindness & Love XX ❤️❤️

Illustrations going clockwise, starting from top left: Zoë van Dijk, Jonathan Bartlett, Louise Pomeroy, and Glenn Harvey
Queens of Infamy: Anne Boleyn
Anne Thériault | May 2018 | 5,949 words (23 minutes)
Anne Thériault’s entire collection on the badass women of centuries past is brilliant: sharp, informative, and like nothing you’ve ever read, mixing history, humor, and Anne’s undeniably unique voice. Each installment is worth a read — and you can read them in any order — but here I’ll recommend the second in the series, on “king-seducing homewrecker extraordinaire” Anne Boleyn. —CLR
Bundyville
Leah Sottile | May 2018–July 2019 | 69,699 words
Over the course of two podcast seasons, nine connected features, and nearly 70,000 words, Leah Sottile delves into Oregon’s infamous Bundy family — and more largely into the growing contingent of Americans who refuse to acknowledge the federal government. No easy answers here, just a nuanced exploration of how we arrived at what increasingly feels like a pivotal moment for the future of democracy. —PR
The Final Five Percent
Tim Requarth | October 2019 | 6,723 words (27 minutes)
After his brother is hit by a drunk driver while riding a motorcycle, neuroscientist and writer Tim Requarth confronts how traumatic brain injury has irrevocably altered his family. —KS
Searching For Mackie
Annie Hylton | February 2020 | 8,310 words (20 minutes)
In this harrowing reported story, Annie Hylton spends time with the Basil family, who are haunted by the disappearance of their sister, Immaculate “Mackie” Basil. Peering deep beneath the surface, Hylton sympathetically explores the darkness behind this tragedy and the intergenerational trauma of Canadian residential schools. —CW
How to Learn Everything: The MasterClass Diaries
Irina Dumitrescu | August 2020 | 5,406 words (21 minutes)
Ever harbored a desire to write, learn to cook or to act? MasterClass could, theoretically, teach you all these things and more. With wit, grace, and humor, Irina Dumitrescu took MasterClass sessions for six months and reported back, so you don’t have to. —KS
Running Dysmorphic
Devin Kelly | December 2019 | 3,955 words (15 minutes)
Poet, writer, and competitive runner Devin Kelly contemplates his battle with body dysmorphia and searches for the permission he needs to extend grace to himself. —KS
The Strange and Dangerous World of America’s Big Cat People
Rachel Nuwer | March 2020 | 7,033 words (28 minutes)
When COVID-19 was still just a murmur and Netflix’s Tiger King had yet to become mandatory escapism, you could already learn about Joe Exotic and Carole Baskin on Longreads. In a four-part podcast and 7,000-word piece, Rachel Nuwer examines the bizarre fact that in some American states it is easier to buy a lion than a dog. Meticulously researched, her work remains laser-focused on the welfare of the animals — rather than the people — and portrays a complete picture of big cat ownership in the U.S. —CW
Home Is a Cup of Tea
Candace Rose Rardon | July 2017 | 2,882 words (10 minutes)
Candace Rose Rardon’s travel writing stands out: She combines lovely musings on place with gorgeous watercolor sketches. In “Home Is a Cup of Tea,” she explores the world and searches for the meaning of home through the different teas she discovers while traveling. It’s a breezy read, and one of my favorite illustrated essays on the site. —CLR
Marmalade: A Very British Obsession
Olivia Potts | July 2020 | 4,161 words (15 minutes)
This jolly exploration into the surprisingly complicated world of marmalade is a ray of sunshine, with Olivia Potts’ wonderful writing resonating with the joy that exploring this realm brings her. It is an entrancing essay, and I defy you not to enjoy imagining the “50 sheep dyed orange in readiness for this year’s (marmalade) festival.” —CW
Debt Demands a Body
Kristin Collier | December 2021 | 6,596 words (21 minutes)
When Kristin Collier was 18, her mother began taking out private student loans in her name; over time, the debt compounded and compounded again, until it had soared to nearly $400,000. Why? Because it was designed to be unpayable. A wrenching personal story, overlaid on a historical arc that might just leave you quaking with rage. —PR

The Emptying
“I’m amazed at our human capacity to adapt to the unbearable. Almost anything can seem normal if it’s inflicted on us long enough.”

What’s The Vibe? A Reading List
Amorphous and intangible, a vibe is hard to describe. Let these five longreads sharpen your focus.

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