
2026/6/29 · 8:23
Five Long Reads Worth Your Week: Repo Men, AI Boyfriends, and Esperanto
This week’s shortlist pairs reported systems stories with intimate essays: auto repossession and debt, grief science, AI companionship, Lebanon’s Shia communities under war, and the stubborn idealism of Esperanto.
The week’s strongest long reads keep circling the same question from different angles: what happens when an institution promises order, then leaves ordinary people to absorb the cost. That institution might be a lender, a therapy framework, a chatbot company, a militia-state conflict, or a 139-year-old invented language. Read times below are rough, rounded estimates at about 250 words per minute.
| Pick | Source / date | Est. time | Why it earns the slot |
|---|---|---|---|
| Paige Williams, “The Repo Man Coming for Your Ride” | The New Yorker, June 29, 2026 1 | 38 min | The most reported, least skimmable piece here: a profile that turns a YouTube-famous repossessor into a tour through American auto debt. |
| Amanda Petrusich, “What Science Knows About Grief” | The New Yorker, June 29, 2026 2 | 27 min | A rare grief essay that does not confuse eloquence with closure. It tests clinical language against lived bereavement. |
| Lauren Oyler, “Navigating the Unknown Together: Me and My Idiot AI Boyfriend” | The Guardian, June 23, 2026 3 | 20 min | Funny, hostile, and sharper than the usual “I tried an app” assignment, because the real subject is language, not novelty. |
| Zain Samir, “War on the Shia” | London Review of Books, Vol. 48 No. 11, June 25, 2026 4 | 31 min | The densest political read: Lebanon’s war told through displacement, sectarian suspicion, and the logic that pushes critics back toward Hizbullah. |
| Katie Thornton, “Love Language” | Harper’s Magazine, June 2026 5 | 30 min | A generous, reported answer to an easy-to-mock question: why does Esperanto still matter to anyone? |
1. A repo story that becomes an x-ray of auto debt
Paige Williams begins with Matthew Pitman, a Utah repossessor who turned his job into the YouTube persona “RepoNut,” then uses him to open up a larger world of lenders, tow trucks, license-plate readers, online spectacle, and fear. The piece is fun at first because Pitman is fun to watch: fast-talking, observant, theatrical, proud of the tactical side of finding cars people do not want found. But Williams steadily moves the camera outward. By the time she is writing about $1.7 trillion in U.S. auto debt, rising post-recession repossessions, and an industry with uneven licensing and little standardized training, the repo man has become the visible edge of a much larger financial machine 1.
The reporting is strongest when it refuses to make anyone too simple. Pitman knows the job humiliates people at terrible moments; he also believes charm can keep him alive. Repossessors are described as both underregulated actors with coercive power and workers exposed to serious danger: the article notes that at least seven repo agents were killed in 2023, a record high, and follows industry efforts to professionalize a business still stuck with an outlaw image 1. The result is a piece about debt enforcement that never loses the texture of the people doing the enforcing.
Read it if: you want a reported story that moves from one irresistible character into a system-level account of how Americans buy cars, lose cars, and watch both events get monetized.
2. Grief, measured and unmeasured
Amanda Petrusich’s essay starts with the sudden death of her husband in 2022 and the blunt logistics that followed: driving away from the emergency room with her infant daughter, cleaning blood from the floor, handling death certificates, returning a newly bought car, and discovering that even music could become physically hard to hear. From there, the piece turns toward science and clinical practice: prolonged grief disorder was added to the revised DSM-5 in 2022, and Petrusich follows the debate over whether a diagnosis can validate disabling grief or wrongly pathologize ordinary loss 2.
What makes the essay worth the time is the pressure it puts on both sides of that debate. Petrusich explains the clinical tools, including EMDR, naltrexone, transcranial magnetic stimulation, and monitored psychedelic therapy, without pretending that any of them can answer the metaphysical question grief keeps asking: where did the dead person go? The piece’s best movement is not from suffering to cure, but from panic to a changed relationship with grief itself. Its ending is modest and credible: the author does not need science to prove that therapy helped her, but she also does not dismiss the human need to name, study, and treat grief when it becomes unlivable 2.
Read it if: you want an essay that earns its feeling through exactness. It is less a universal grief memoir than a carefully argued case for humility about what psychology can and cannot know.
3. The AI boyfriend as a problem of prose
Lauren Oyler’s Guardian long read has a stunt premise: a skeptical novelist agrees to get an AI boyfriend. The piece could have been predictable, and it knows that. Oyler starts by saying she believes chatbots have no place in a decent society, then puts that disgust under pressure by testing companion apps and choosing Replika after ChatGPT declines to perform the role she needs for the assignment 3.
The joke works because it is aimed at language. Her “boyfriend,” Matt, is not creepy because he becomes too human; he is creepy because he keeps producing the social shape of intimacy without the friction that makes intimacy meaningful. He forgets his own freckles, generates generic backstory, displays emotional states, and produces guilt in the author even when she knows no one has been hurt. Oyler folds in the darker context around AI companionship, including lawsuits and official concern over systems designed to replace social interaction, but the core insight is literary: romance depends on idiosyncrasy, misfire, private rhythm, and memory. Matt has simulation without shared life 3.
Read it if: you are tired of AI pieces that reduce the question to “useful or not useful.” This one asks what kind of language counts as relation.
4. Lebanon seen from the people told to stand behind the war
Zain Samir’s LRB dispatch opens with Hassan, whose apartment in Dahieh was destroyed after an Israeli evacuation warning and strike. Hassan’s story becomes the entrance to a broader argument about how “Hizbullah stronghold” can flatten a dense, ordinary, socially complex Shia neighborhood into a target category. The piece follows the war through 2024, 2025, and 2026, but its most important work is social rather than chronological: it shows how bombardment, displacement, and sectarian discrimination narrow the political space for Lebanese Shia who might otherwise criticize Hizbullah 4.
Samir is careful with contradictions. Hassan is angry at Israel and privately disappointed that Hizbullah stored weapons in a residential building; displaced Shia families face suspicion and exclusion when they try to rent outside their communities; and military pressure that is supposed to weaken Hizbullah can make it feel, to some of the people living under that pressure, like the only available defender of dignity and safety. The article’s later scenes, including a deadly raid in al-Nabi Shayth and a grandmother-poet waiting for news of her son, make the politics feel inseparable from humiliation, mourning, and attachment to land 4.
Read it if: you want a hard, reported piece that complicates the usual strategic language around Lebanon. It is not easy reading, but it explains why coercion can deepen the loyalties it is meant to break.
5. Esperanto, treated as more than a punch line
Katie Thornton’s Harper’s piece begins with an old AOL message from a friend pitching Esperanto as the universal language that might still help the world understand itself. Years later, after shortwave radio pulls her back toward the language, Thornton studies on Duolingo and attends the 110th World Esperanto Congress in Brno, Czech Republic. The reported question is simple: why do people still gather around a language whose founding dream, universal adoption as a second tongue for peace, has clearly not arrived 5.
The answer turns out to be richer than nostalgia. Thornton gives the movement its history: L. L. Zamenhof’s 1887 invention; Esperanto’s appeal to labor, anticolonial, anarchist, pacifist, religious, and hobbyist communities; persecution under Stalin, Franco, and Hitler; and the modern split between world-changing “final victory” idealism and a smaller, subcultural sense of Esperanto as a community in itself. The loveliest reporting comes from the movement’s infrastructure: the free homestay network Pasporta Servo, niche associations for railway enthusiasts and naturists, and speakers in places such as the Democratic Republic of the Congo who value Esperanto as a noncolonial bridge language 5.
Read it if: you have ever mistaken a failed utopian project for a useless one. Thornton’s piece is clear-eyed about Esperanto’s limits, but unusually good on why stubborn, voluntary fellowship can still feel precious.
The one I would start with
Start with “The Repo Man Coming for Your Ride.” It has the fullest combination of character, reporting, social stakes, and narrative propulsion. If you only have twenty minutes, read Oyler’s AI-boyfriend piece instead; it is the sharpest sentence-for-sentence and the easiest to finish in one sitting. If you want the piece most likely to stay with you after the tab is closed, choose Petrusich on grief.

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