A dive into the contentious and messy world of diagnosing dyslexia.
Editor’s Pick
In Dark Times, I Sought Out the Turmoil of Caravaggio’s Paintings
“The work the artist made near the end of his life changed my understanding of both beauty and suffering.”
Where Camels Take to the Sea
“In Gujarat, India, a special breed of camel is not constrained by land—but it cannot escape the many forces of change.”
Mark in the Middle
“There was no obvious way to placate liberal employees and conservative users at the same time.” Casey Newton reports on the dynamics inside Facebook and shares a series of leaked audio recordings from internal meetings this summer.
The Children of 9/11 Are About to Vote
“What the youngest cohort of American voters thinks about politics, fear and the potential of the country they’ve grown up in.”
‘Our Foster Child Asked Us to Adopt Him – By Drawing Himself on to a Family Photo’
The story of how, after years of difficulty, George finally found his family.
The Election That Could Break America
“If the vote is close, Donald Trump could easily throw the election into chaos and subvert the result. Who will stop him?”
The Slow, Troubling Death of the Autopsy
Doctors make mistakes. The true cause of a person’s death is often complicated and unclear. “Why you should get an autopsy if it’s the last thing you do.”
One Man’s Trash
“Two new books reveal the meaning latent in the junk we collect.”
‘I picked up a drink and casually set fire to my life’: how addiction nearly destroyed me
“Find a job, lose the job, go to jail: Guardian reporter Mario Koran found himself in a dangerous cycle. But behind bars, he discovered a new purpose.”
