This week, we’re sharing stories from Robert Sanchez, Nicholas Hune-Brown, Emily Van Duyne, David Ferris, and Jaya Saxena.
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1. The Enduring Legacy of Elijah McClain’s Tragic Death
Robert Sanchez| 5280 Magazine | September 1, 2021 | 4,454 words
“In summer 2020, the nation’s attention turned to the killing of a 23-year-old Aurora man. His death prompted a flood of more than 8,500 letters from outside the state of Colorado—all begging Governor Jared Polis for justice. We read every one.”
2. The Shadowy Business of International Education
Nicholas Hune-Brown | The Walrus | August 18, 2021 | 7,330
“Foreign students are lied to and exploited on every front. They’re also propping up higher education as we know it.”
3. Grace: An Unfinished Draft, A Fire
Emily Van Duyne | Avidly | September 9, 2020 | 2,405 words
“In Texas—Georgia—in Alabama—all over this vast canvas of fear that we call America, women will die. They won’t have time to run away. They will be great-Aunts only in name, and in death. And their deaths will disappear into a language made and remade by men to cover their shitty sins.”
4. When the Toughest Trees Met the Hottest Fire
David Ferris | E&E News | August 16, 2021 | 6,670 words
“The other name of the coast redwood is Sequoia sempervirens. The second word in Latin means ‘evergreen.’ Its tactics are legendary. Knock over a redwood and it is not dead. A circle of new redwoods, called a fairy ring, will grow around its wide base. The tree has cloned itself, and Big Basin is full of redwoods formed in rings, starting life in the ruins of death.”
5. Margaritaville and the Myth of American Leisure
Jaya Saxena | Eater | August 30, 2021 | 4,200 words
“Margaritaville, as Parrotheads will tell you, is a state of mind. But it’s also—delightfully, sometimes inexplicably—a real place now open in Times Square.”