- Drone Pilots have Bank Accounts Frozen
- A Dummy’s Guide to Mapping Daesh
- Taiwan's VP Candidates
- Assassinating Terrorists Does Not Work
- The interrogator’s soul
- Beijing locks up its lawyers
- Magical Thinking about Isis
The Best Declining Mall Review You've Ever Read.
Also, this.
- Elliott Johnson: the young Tory destroyed by the party he loved
- Altgame Profiles: Kitty Horrorshow
- Intel at IndieCade: The Cost of Diversity in Games
- Diversity of Existence
- Forget all the comparisons to cinema--games are more like operas
- Where Should a Good Millennial Live?
- The Other Side of BlackFriday Price Tags
- Governing By Debt
- Latour on Paris Attacks
- In Catastrophic Times
- "Fuck off, Google"
- Dialed Up
- Unfollow
- Hostages
- Letter of solidarity from SFSU's ethnic studies graduate program
- The Mizzou blueprint: how to fight for higher education
- From Mizzou to Yale: the resurgence of black student protest
- The demands
- Lady adjuncts of the apocalypse
- Astroturf white supremacy
- The other student activists
- Women of color as diversity workers
- Against the extradition of Greek student protesters
- Conflict in Minneapolis: terrorism and civil war
- On right-wing political violence
- How Chicago tried to cover up a police execution
- Where should a good millennial live?
On Iván Repila’s The Boy Who Stole Attila’s Horse:
- An excerpt.
- “each chapter title a prime number which corresponds to the number of days the brothers have spent in the well.”
- Iván Repila: An Interview with Sophie Hughes: “When I dreamed of two men trapped in a well and the unbelievable solution that they propose in order to escape, I started to ask myself: Why did I dream that? Do I feel trapped somehow by my family, work or society? As these and more questions formulated in my mind, the story began to take shape, and in the face of my incapacity to answer those questions, the text found its way.”
- “one of the most unpleasant stories I’ve read in ages”
- “It may be that, looking back, we recognize these as the years when the social fabric began to fray.”
- “These two new novels by Spanish writers born only six years apart place children in appalling predicaments.”