Fiction — From the April 1922 issue
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Fiction — From the April 1922 issue
Fiction — From the August 1920 issue
Fiction — From the March 1918 issue
Fiction — From the February 1916 issue
Fiction — From the December 1915 issue
Fiction — From the November 1915 issue
Fiction — From the August 1914 issue
Fiction — From the July 1914 issue
Fiction — From the January 1914 issue
Fiction — From the June 1913 issue
Fiction — From the February 1913 issue
Fiction — From the July 1911 issue
Fiction — From the April 1910 issue
Fiction — From the July 1909 issue
Fiction — From the October 1907 issue
Fiction — From the August 1907 issue
Fiction — From the July 1907 issue

Years of consideration preceding the inclusion of the word “phat” in Random House’s 1996 Compact Unabridged Dictionary:

Scientists created crash helmets that stink when cracked and fruit flies to whom blue light smells delicious.

In Belize, a construction company bulldozed a 2,300-year-old Mayan temple to make road fill.
“This is the heart of the magic factory, the place where medicine is infused with the miracles of science, and I’ve come to see how it’s done.”
© 2012 Harper’s Magazine. Logo photograph (detail) by Nadia Shira Cohen.

