Hemingway: Henry Allen on the pictures and the man
Allen, a writer who knew how to craft a lead, puts an American icon in perspective.
Allen, a writer who knew how to craft a lead, puts an American icon in perspective.
One-handed ballplayer Jim Abbott’s message to an injured girl, and what happened next.
Hungry in Los Angeles? Look no further than this Pulitzer Prize winner Jonathan Gold’s work.
On this day in 1979, Saddam Hussein came to power in Iraq. Here, read two-time Pulitzer winner Anthony Shadid's telling of how the regime fell 24 years later.
A 1950s-era editorial in the Des Moines Register argued for sharing Iowa agricultural know-how with none other than Nikita Kurshchev.
When it came to people killing people, Edna Buchanan had heard it all. Here she tells an interviewer how she covered the 1979 police killing of an African-American man. The verdict in the case caused deadly riots.
William McPherson figured the best way to praise the letters was to quote them.
Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist David Maraniss shares his surefire method for getting the story right.
In the final segment of a portrait of Joseph Pulitzer, we learn that he carried no cash, rarely went to church and balked at baring his shoulder to Rodin.
In this second part of an intimate portrait of Joseph Pulitzer, we learn of his personal code, his legion of secretaries and his acute aversion to sound and smell.