Long Form * Instapaper

Longer than a newspaper item but shorter than a book, a magazine article is the ideal length for my attention span. I'd rather spend an hour with a great magazine article rather than read a book any day. Ditto for hopscotching through shallow blogs and newspaper bits. But there are fewer print publications running long form journalism. Ironically, a new website, called Long Form, points to the best long form articles appearing anywhere in print, and also collects the great magazine articles from the past. Long Form fits perfectly into a small ecosystem whereby you can read these great pieces of writing on a Kindle, iPad, or phone. I've found the easy-reading portable screens of these tablet devices fit a 1 to 2-hour window perfectly.
Here is how this system works. The Long Form website lists great magazine articles just published as well as past hits from the archives. You mark the articles you want to read, which are then downloaded to your tablet via Instapaper, another website, which has an iPad app and Kindle connection. You can then read the articles, without ads, at your leisure on your gadget. The whole migration is seamless and unconscious.

I mentioned this was an ecosystem. You can also select pieces to read on your tablet or phone directly at Instapaper, which does not specialize in long forms but also includes short pieces. Instapaper's sister site, Give Me Something To Read, like Long Form, makes reader selections of the best magazine articles. On both sites you hit a button "Read Later" to move it to your reading device. In fact you can mark any web page to be "read later" from an Instapaper button on your menu bar and it will move it to your tablet, phone, or even RSS feed. And you can send to Instapaper (and therefore to your reading device) any item from your Twitter stream or social apps like Delicious or Digg, Reddit, etc. to be read later on your Kindle or iPad (or computer screen).
However, I prefer to read long form factuals, and so I keep returning to Long Form to find the gems. I particularly enjoy classic great magazine pieces that I missed over the years. In fact, I realized that I've never seen a list of the best magazine articles ever, but see no reason not to make one now. If you have a nomination for one of the top 100 magazine articles of all time, please send it to me (with a link if possible). I'll share what I accumulate on this page here.
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Mike B
These tools are so great, but in a way it reminds me of Napster before the music industry caught on, except in this case it's the publishers. In addition to older articles that I missed the first time around, the editors of both longform and Give Me Something to Read do a great job of finding articles in publications I've never heard of or would never otherwise pick up.
Also, for a more pleasant reading experience in the browser without bookmarking, you can't beat Readability: http://lab.arc90.com/experiments/readability/
Z
The question here really is: would you pay for these articles in the format that you're getting them in (via Instapaper)? Not that advertising is getting the publishers much ($5/CPM?), but in theory they are getting money if you're not coming through Instapaper.
Mike
I've also been loving Instapaper + Longform. I noticed that in your Best Magazine Articles Ever list "The Mountains of Pi" is currently linked to "The Peekaboo Paradox" article. I found the article through Google, but I thought you might like to fix the link.
cc
Thanks for the note, Mike. Just fixed the link.
Andy Proehl
This article about the strained efforts of Memorial Medical Center to cope in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina is an excellent example of probing, investigative journalism. It details the blurry line that doctors walked between saving who they could and playing God.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/30/magazine/30doctors.html
Mike S
I enjoyed the article "A tank of gas, a world of trouble", which traces the hidden, storied trail of the fungible good from source to customer.
http://www.chicagotribune.com/chi-oil-email,0,1188245.story
Andrew Weber
Gary Taubes 'What If It's All A Big Fat Lie' in the NYT Sunday Magazine is terrific: http://www.nytimes.com/2002/07/07/magazine/what-if-it-s-all-been-a-big-fat-lie.html?pagewanted=print
dex
>But there are fewer print publications running long form journalism.
I doubt this claim has much (if any) merit: to wit: the Nation; The Times Literary Supplement; The New York Review of Books; Guardian Weekly; London Review of Books; Harpers; The New Republic; Hudson Review; Sewanee Review. These are a just a few of the more well-known places that so-called "long-form" journalism takes place. There are hundreds more quarterlies, weeklies, and monthlies out there.
Toby
....this is why I read your blog! Amazing, thank you so much.
Toby
...and this article gets a mention in the (UK's) Guardian:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/organgrinder/2010/jul/30/best-magazine-articles
Andrew
RFK's article in Rolling Stone about the supposed connection between vaccination and autism.
Learn first-hand how a well-written article can completely deceive you and make you believe in complete bullshit.