Ted Conover has been a correction officer at Sing Sing Prison and a cab driver in Aspen; he hopped freight trains for a year while living as a hobo and crossed the U.S.-Mexican border with undocumented immigrants. All of this in the name of that particular brand of essayistic narrative journ
Depending on whom you ask, John McPhee is either the founder of narrative journalism or the savior of it; few, if anyone, would have any qualms with his writing or research. His subjects range wildly, from oranges to Bill Bradley to farmers' markets to the Mississippi River. Throughout
Daniel Clowes' middle name is Gillespie; the potential connection he – or, more likely, it would seem, his parents – have to jazz and the great trumpeter and bandleader may be the only part of Clowes' life that he has not sought, with an often courageous and selfless ugliness, to explo
How a 17th-century, fourteen-hundred-page medical textbook entitled The Anatomy of Melancholy, What it is: With all the Kinds, Causes, Symptomes, Prognostickes, and Several Cures of it. In Three Maine Partitions with their several Sections, Members, and Subsections. Philosophically, Medic