Books
Hometown [Damiani]
A collection of Joseph Szabo's wonderful photos from the 1970s and early '80s. (Foreword)
Nothing Bad Ever Happens [Small Batch Books]
The life of a Long Island businessman and problem-solver named Jim Miller. (Author)
Covering the Bases [Chronicle Books]
An anthology of classic newspaper sports writing on the greatest moments in baseball. (Editor)
Gluttony [Chronicle Books]
An anthology about an overabundance of food and drink — and its consequences. (Co-Editor)
Selected articles, interviews, essays, and reviews
Fishing With My Daughter [New York Times | PDF]
An essay on fatherhood, memory, and the rewards of "staying open to the rhythms of the natural world."
Where Have All the Covers Gone? [Boston Globe | Ideas]
On the peculiar thrill of seeing a book we love being read by someone we've never met.
An Interview With Tom Zoellner [Red Canary Magazine]
A conversation about Zoellner's excellent collection of essays, The National Road.
An Interview With Patrick Radden Keefe [Los Angeles Review of Books]
Keefe on his sweeping, switchblade-sharp Say Nothing: A True Story of Murder and Memory in Northern Ireland.
An Interview With Steven Johnson [Los Angeles Review of Books]
A conversation about piracy, power, pandemics - and Johnson's latest book, An Enemy of All Mankind.
What Dickens Knew About Trump
Examining the myriad ways that Fagin and a twice-impeached populist goon are ethical and psychological twins.
[MORE FROM THE LOS ANGELES REVIEW OF BOOKS]
A Tribute to the Sublime Judy Holliday [TIME]
She could do it all, and like all of the greatest entertainers, she made it look effortless.
Worst Movie Taglines. Ever. [TIME]
'Great Things Come in Bears' and other awful efforts.
Stan Musial: A Salute to the Man [TIME]
Three-time MVP, three-time World Series champ, and maybe the nicest guy who ever played the game.
The Best Movie of All Time at 70: Here's Looking at You, Casablanca [TIME]
What sets Casablanca apart? Its "accidental perfection."
My Bloody Valentine's First Album in Two Decades: Attention Must Be Paid [TIME]
[MORE FROM TIME.COM]
In Praise of Kenneth Patchen
Celebrating a uniquely American poet whose work is a tonic against disgust and despair. [The Awl]
How Judge Woolsey Set Ulysses Free [Daily Beast]
On a momentous First Amendment court opinion that is succinct, humane, and hugely readable in its own right.
Loren Eiseley: The Late, Great Science Writer We Need Right Now
Eiseley wrote movingly of the forces that shape the Earth — and of humanity’s impermanence.
Hemingway's Messy Legacy Keeps Getting Messier [Daily Beast]
A new edition of Green Hills of Africa leaves a reader wondering: What the hell was wrong with Papa?
George Orwell's Ode to Spring [Daily Beast]
The author of 1984 and Homage to Catalonia wrote about nature as eloquently as he wrote about everything else.
[MORE FROM THE DAILY BEAST]
The Photo That Changed the Face of AIDS [LIFE.com]
The story behind one of the most harrowing, controversial photographs to emerge from the global pandemic.
LIFE Rides With Hells Angels [LIFE.com]
In 1965, LIFE's Bill Ray spent weeks with the Angels. His photos never ran in the magazine. Here they are.
A LIFE Photographer Plays With the Polaroid SX-70
Co Rentmeester experimented with the now-legendary camera before it went on sale to the general public.
Alone in a Crowd: Marilyn Sings 'Happy Birthday' to JFK, May 1962
Like any photo that assumes a celebrity of its own, Bill Ray’s portrait is more than just a pretty picture.
The Art of Photographing a Famous Pig [LIFE.com]
The key to the endeavor? The creature's willingness to please.
The LIFE Magazine Covers That Never Were [LIFE.com]
Turns out many of the "classic" LIFE covers featured in a popular 2014 movie were never covers at all.
The Rooster vs. the Logo
A gutsy call by LIFE magazine's founder resulted in a striking cover worth crowing about.
[MORE FROM LIFE.COM]
The Consolations of Bleak Nature Poetry in the COVID Age [Medium]
Poems that cast a harsh light on our own mortality can sometimes offer a peculiar sort of comfort.
Who Said It? Donald Trump or Homer Simpson? [Medium]
It sometimes seems that Homer and that other guy share a single, profoundly incurious brain.
[MORE FROM MEDIUM]
Return to Treasure Island [HuffPost]
How a "boy's adventure novel" written 130 years ago by a tubercular Scot can still thrill grown-up readers today.
Profile: New York Times Columnist Jim Dwyer [Columbia Journalism Review]
The Pulitzer Prize winner on why he has the best job in journalism.
Beast Cements Paul Kingsnorth's Reputation as a Furiously Gifted Writer [Washington Post]
With echoes of Kafka and John Gardner's Grendel, Kingsnorth's novel is as cryptic as it is thrilling.
Trump vs. Americans Who Kneel for the Anthem [NY Daily News | Opinion]
Donald Trump will never grasp that a person can be rich and famous and still want to fight for those less fortunate.
The Grisly History of Brooklyn's Revolutionary War Martyrs [Smithsonian]
More Americans died in British prison ships than in all the battles of the Revolutionary War combined.
A Conversation With the Coolest Man in New York: Milton Glaser [Gothamist]
"My whole life has been devoted to this thing called art, which is really all about making things."
[MORE FROM GOTHAMIST]
Case Foundation — Faces of Founders Project: Bridging the Justice Gap [Branded | FastCo.Works]
Meet two women who created a simple way for lawyers to volunteer their professional services to those in need.
Case Foundation — Faces of Founders Project: Their Moment in the Sun [Branded | FastCo.Works]
George Ashton and Yuri Horwitz founded the solar financing and development venture Sol Systems.
A 3D-Printing Lab Is Iowa's Entry Into a $140 Billion Industry [Branded | FastCo.Works]
Protostudios could be the catalyst for a new medical device hub in the Hawkeye State.
Visions of an Immersive World [Branded | FastCo.Works]
Profiles of six insiders applying mind-blowing tech to upend their respective industries.
Building [Personal essay]
"We were a small crew, just four guys. We framed houses."
Big Wheel Keep on Turning [Oberlin Alumni Magazine, Fall 2015 cover story| PDF]
Can a quirky, ingenious contraption built by an Oberlin alum help save our harbors, rivers, and oceans?
Deadspin: The Stacks
Occasional pieces on sports, culture, and photography for the original, pre-mass-editorial-resignation Deadspin.
LA Weekly
Book reviews for the West Coast's premier alt-weekly.
Salon
More reviews from long ago.