Longform will no longer recommend nonfiction articles around the web. Readers are bummed.
Loyal readers of Longform, the nonfiction podcast and website dedicated to curating and recommending nonfiction articles, learned Wednesday that the
Loyal readers of Longform, the nonfiction podcast and website dedicated to curating and recommending nonfiction articles, learned Wednesday that the
Djeneba Aduayom for TIME Shonda Rhimes and I are deep into a conversation about what makes a healthy work environment when she has to stop me from
This feature was first published in the October 2020 issue of The Great Outdoors magazine, and describes a walk I conducted in July 2018. Read more
In 1927, when Al Jolson’s The Jazz Singer packed theaters across America, Rosa Rio thought her future as an organist was curtains. Fresh out of
In a challenging and devastating year like 2021, it helps to reflect on what went right. With misinformation rampant and the stakes so high, it’s a
Each year in November, the TIME photo team comes together to narrow down the thousands of images made by photographers around the world since
Each year in November, the TIME photo team comes together to narrow down the thousands of images made by photographers around the world since
In a year when the pandemic continued to make the world feel unsteady and social media a touch ephemeral, this selection of books offers a way to
Three weeks ago, state senators Jake Chapman and Brad Zaun crashed a standing-room-only school board committee meeting in Johnston, where they issued
Photo via The Good Brigade/Getty Image One August day in 2019, Ina and David Steiner were in their offices at their Natick home when they each
Nothing soothes my soul quite as much as a mug of hot cocoa. I am not so much a chocolate snob as a lover of chocolate in any form so long as it is
I’ve been on Twitter for almost a decade and I’m still not sold on it. If pressed I’d say I hate it more than I like i,t and I’m nowhere near
Editor’s note: we’ve updated the line “Boyne wrote an article in The Irish Times about his support for trans rights but refusal to engage
When Jack Peltason took office as the first chancellor of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 1967, he took home a salary of $34,000
Photo illustration by C.J. Burton It was shortly after I’d spent the morning duck-hooking my way around the golf course while a bunch of