What to read among the Pulitzer Winners

medalNewsdayCongratulations to all the winners of the Pulitzer yesterday, which, given the state of print media, is a little like being handed a lollipop on the deck of the Titanic. But still, a fine honor.

I was particularly glad to see Gene Weingarten’s devastating Washington Post Magazine piece on hyperthermia–babies who die when their parents leave them in locked cars. I read it when it came out over a year ago, and I just reread it today. I had the exact same stomach-twisting reaction to the stories in the piece. But it’s not the omg factor that makes it good journalism; it’s Weingarten’s instinct to dissect these somewhat unthinkable tragedies and explain their legal, psychological and moral components. Stunning.

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About Nathan

Nathan Thornburgh is a contributing writer and former senior editor at TIME Magazine who has also written for the New York Times, newyorker.com and, of course, the Phnom Penh Post. He suspects that he is messing up his kids, but just isn’t sure exactly how.

3 thoughts on “What to read among the Pulitzer Winners

  1. I found Weingarten’s piece unreadable—in an absolutely literal way. I couldn’t click past the first page I was so traumatized. I think I was shaking.

    Maybe it was jetlag.

  2. I was actually able to get through it without being too traumatized. I think that’s to Gene’s credit that he was as sensitive as possible. I have lots of phobias and fears with my kids, but somehow leaving them locked in a car isn’t one of them. Not that I think I’m immune from such a horrible accident, but it isn’t a real in my greatest hits of parental nightmares.

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