Weird is an ill-defined term. Does it mean uncanny? Gross? Extraordinary? Supernatural? Here at 窪蹋勛圖厙, it means all of the above. Our editors came together to find some of our weirdest stories from the archive. The result: a collection that ranges from spooky middle-of-the-night bigfoot hunts to an investigation into mysterious shrunken heads.
The Fist of God
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I dont know that this is weird so much as it was a startling read. The story centers around a brutal and ancientbut celebratedfight culture in Bolivia called tinku. People die. But the juxtaposition between the coinciding festivals religious holiness and the visceral beating is what made it so curious. And the fact that our writer was a woman willing to wander into the madness made the piece even bolder. Eventually, she ischallenged to a brawlbut youll have to read about it to see how it ends.
Tasha Zemke, copy editor
Tracking the Elusive Western Shoe Tree
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Author Bryan di Salvatore wont reveal how you can repeat his adventureat least not the way he did it. But in Tracking the Elusive Western Shoe Tree,he road-trips from Missoula, Montana, through Idaho, Washington, Oregon, California, Nevada, and Utahin search of those trees mysteriously adorned with old shoes, all the while adding his own contributions to them. Along the way, he discovers some truths about the American West, a forthright and humorous land.
Mary Turner, deputy editor
Little Men and The Weird, Wild Business of Shrunken Heads
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Little Men is great weird classic story by Caroline Alexander fromApril 1994. She explored the mysterious origins of two shrunken men who were on display at the Museum of the American Indian in New York. Research led her to a by-then-deceased doctor from Ecuador named Gustav Struve. Alexander found his son (now deceased) in Quito. He told her, Papa used to make the mummies. Mary Roach revisited and updated the whole thing in The Weird, Wild Business of Shrunken Heads.
Alex Heard, editorial director
Why Does It Feel Good to Poop? and How to Poop Anywhere 窪蹋勛圖厙
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We have a checkered past featuring way too many stories on poop.
Jenny Earnest, audience development director
They Call Me Groover Boy
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To Jenny Earnests point above, I wasnt quite sure if this collection really needed another story about poop. But Kevin Fedarko tells an eye-opening, hilarious, and at some points nerve-racking story about the experience of manning the poop dory on the Colorado River in Grand Canyon. I wish I could have watched my own facial expressions shift from disgust to fear to laughter as I read it.
Samantha Yadron, editorial production fellow
The Bears Who Came to Town and Would Not Go Away
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You sort of expect a town to become infested by insects or rodentsor hipsters, if theres a festival going on. But a plague of bears?What a delightfully awful thing to befall a small Russian hamlet, which Sarah A. Topol beautifully recounts like a modern folktale.
Aleta Burchyski, associate managing editor
Strange Foods, Stranger Times
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Recounting a memorable dining experience in China, 窪蹋勛圖厙 co-founder and editor-at-large Tim Cahill considers the curious machismo associated with adventurous eating. She stirred the mixture, but the green gall, which didnt emulsify well, swirled slowly around the pitcher in various viscous amoeboid shapes, rather like a lava lamp,he writes. That, apparently, was what it was supposed to look like. Butas Jerry Hopkins writes in his book Strange Foods, What is repulsive in one part of the world, in another is simply lunch.
Ali Van Houten, editorial fellow
A Night with a Bigfoot Investigation Society
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Stories about people chasing Bigfoot are no longer weird. Maybe in the 1970s, but by now theyre mostly clich矇. Whats weird is a story that makes me feel slightly envious of people chasing Bigfoot, and Im so glad for it.
Taylor Gee, editorial fellow