The New Yorker • 17th June 2014 When You’ve Had Detroit The crimes and the beautiful things were never easy to disentangle.
The New Yorker • 14th September 2012 Documenting Detroit A conversation with Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady, directors of "Detropia."
The New Yorker • 25th July 2012 What Do We Mean By “Evil”? The history and evolution of the ultimate condemnation.
The New Yorker • 6th April 2012 How Muslims View Easter What does the Quran have to say about the crucifixion?
The New Yorker • 13th March 2012 Staring Into the Void with Hari Kunzru A novelist confronts the unknowable.
The New Yorker • 24th February 2012 Blood Money Crime and punishment in the Iranian film “A Separation.”
The New Yorker • 15th February 2012 Tea with Simon Critchley A conversation with the philosopher about the impossibility of separating church from state.
The New Yorker • 20th January 2012 Julie Through the Glass The rise and fall of the Mormon TV commercial.
The New Yorker • 12th January 2012 The First Church of Pirate Bay Who can say how far its gospel will spread?
The New Yorker • 17th October 2011 From India to Zuccotti Park Occupying Wall Street with my in-laws.
The New Yorker • 4th March 2011 Africa’s Cell-Phone Revolution The morning after I arrived in Liberia I watched a mob beat a man bloody in the street.
The New Yorker • 7th October 2010 The Use and Abuse of Strange Tales Good stories are not necessarily simple ones.
The New Yorker • 18th June 2010 The Adventures of Guille and Belinda A conversation with Alessandra Sanguinetti about her extraordinary series of photographs of a pair of cousins in rural Argentina at play.
The New Yorker • 9th June 2010 Days with My Father Talking with Phillip Toledano about how he captured his father's final days.
The New Yorker • 12th February 2010 Keith Calhoun and Chandra McCormick’s New Orleans Did I tell you about how that alligator bit my little pinkie toe off?
The New Yorker • 10th November 2009 Tragedies, Ancient and Contemporary Sophocles was a writer, but he was also a soldier.