Utopian for Beginners

A former DMV employee from Sacramento invents a new language—and a mysterious group of Ukrainians take an interest in what he’s created:

“Soon after the publication of the Russian article, Quijada began to receive a steady stream of letters from e-mail addresses ending in .ru, peppering him with arcane questions and requesting changes to the language to make its words easier to pronounce. Alexey Samons, a Russian software engineer based in Vladivostok, took on the monumental task of translating the Ithkuil Web site into Russian, and before long three Russian Web forums had sprung up to debate the merits and uses of Ithkuil.

“At first, Quijada was bewildered by the interest emanating from Russia. ‘I was a third humbled, a third flattered, and a third intrigued,’ he told me. ‘Beyond that, I just wanted to know: who are these people?'”

Source: The New Yorker
Published: Dec 17, 2012
Length: 36 minutes (9,063 words)

Remember This

There is a 41-year-old woman, an administrative assistant from California known in the medical literature only as “AJ,” who remembers almost every day of her life since age 11. There is an 85-year-old man, a retired lab technician called “EP,” who remembers only his most recent thought. She might have the best memory in the world. He could very well have the worst.

Published: Nov 1, 2007
Length: 22 minutes (5,542 words)