Archive

The Week’s Best Longreads: The Daily Beast Picks for April 21, 2012

Longreads

The Daily Beast picks the best journalism from around the web this week. By David Sessions.

articles/2012/04/21/the-week-s-best-longreads-the-daily-beast-picks-for-april-21-2012/longreads-042012-top-box_ozyzhi

The White PlightAndrew Hacker, The New York Review of BooksCharles Murray writes another book about race.

articles/2012/04/21/the-week-s-best-longreads-the-daily-beast-picks-for-april-21-2012/longreads-042012-top-box_dy5wi9

Another Night to Remember Bryan Burrough, Vanity FairWhen the Costa Concordia hit a rock off the Italian coast on Jan. 13, it became the largest passenger ship ever wrecked, supplanting the Titanic in maritime history.

Six Degrees of AggregationMichael Shapiro, Columbia Journalism ReviewHow The Huffington Post ate the internet.

Truth or Consequences Joe Hagan, Texas Monthly Eight years ago, Dan Rather broadcast an explosive report on the Air National Guard service of President George W. Bush. It was supposed to be the legendary newsman’s finest hour. Instead, it blew up in his face. Joe Hagan finally gets to the bottom of the greatest untold story in modern Texas politics.

How America Came to Torture Its PrisonersLarry Siems, SlateI read nearly 140,000 formerly classified documents about America’s abuse of prisoners since 2001. Here is what I learned.

Can You Make Yourself Smarter?Dan Hurley, The New York Times Magazine

A new memory game has revived the tantalizing notion that people can work their way to a higher I.Q.

For more great longreads, check out our friends at longreads.com.

Got a tip? Send it to The Daily Beast here.