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'The Eagle Huntress' follows Nurgaiv Aisholpan as she trains an eagle to hunt the plains of northwest Mongolia.
'The Eagle Huntress' follows Nurgaiv Aisholpan as she trains an eagle to hunt the plains of northwest Mongolia. (Photo: Asher Svidensky)

The Only Things You Need to Read, Watch, and Do This Week: November 7

The books, movies, music, podcasts, and other media on our radar

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(Photo: Asher Svidensky)

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

This week's lineup features some powerful characters, including a young woman who hunts the plains of Mongolia with a trained eagle nearly half her size and another聽who murders聽a classmate with a letter opener.聽(Thankfully, the latter is fictional.)

Fiction

'Pull Me Under'聽by Kelly Luce

Luce's debut novel dwells on existential suffering and endurance-based redemption.聽Rio Silvestri, a Colorado nurse and ultramarathoner, has a secret past concealed even from her husband and daughter: before she moved to Boulder for college and rebuilt her life, she was named Chizuru Akitani and lived in Japan. The child of an聽American mother and world-renowned Japanese violinist father, she was tormented over her hafu鈥攈alf鈥攕tatus by her Japanese elementary schoolmates,聽culminating聽in her killing her primary tormentor with a letter opener. Her father disowns聽her,聽she is confined聽to a juvenile detention center for the remainder of her adolescence, and she is ordered to move to America when she is聽released at the age of 20.聽It's only upon her father's death that聽she returns to Japan for the first time since her escape. There, she heads out for an ill-prepared long-distance hike and a reckoning with her personal history, reminiscent of Haruki Murakami's work. It's a compelling meditation聽on the conflict between our private selves and the face we present to the world. 鈥擟hris Cohen

Film

'The Eagle Huntress'

Kazakh teenager Nurgaiv Aisholpan聽trains as one of the only female eagle hunters in the world, and becomes聽the first to enter, and win, the region's annual Golden Eagle Festival. The new documentary, which begins聽聽this week, follows her over the course of about a year,聽from early training to her first hunt.聽Director Otto Bell recounts how, on their first day of filming, they followed Aisholpan聽on her quest to capture her eagle from a聽nest聽about 100 feet off the ground:

It was kind of thrown together, but we also planned out the angles, because we knew we were only going to get one chance. We filmed Aisholpan getting the rope on so her father could hold on to her as she climbed down to the nest, and then we're like, “Okay wait, wait,” you know, like the universal hands up sign for wait, and then we scrambled down the side of the cliff to a ledge that was next to the nest, and that's how we got the sideways angle. And then, finally, we put a GoPro underneath her cardigan鈥攖hat's when it became less about me making a film. It actually became about me telling her story because I was there for that first step.

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'Into the Inferno'

The prolific Warner Herzog is back with a Netflix documentary that had him traveling from Indonesia to Iceland, paying聽homage to volcanoes and the ways that we puny humans interact with them.聽Yes, there's a lot of awe-inspiring lava footage鈥攂ut don't expect a reverent nature-documentary tone.聽Herzog takes a much less worshipful view of nature. “When you look out at the universe at night and you look at the stars, you know that there is a huge mess out there, and it鈥檚 very hostile and very inhospitable,” he told聽David聽Holbrooke聽in a聽2011 interview听蹿辞谤 国产吃瓜黑料. “There is no such thing as the harmony of the earth. I鈥檓 not buying this New Age crap.”

Long Read from '国产吃瓜黑料'

The Malheur Occupiers Were Found Innocent. The Standing Rock Protestors Were Assaulted. What Does This Say About Our Country?

The same day that seven Malheur occupiers were found innocent,聽riot police uprooted Native American demonstrators in North Dakota聽using pepper spray, batons, helicopters, armored vehicles, and a sound cannon.

At first blush, the scenarios seem similar: a group of passionate activists commit civil disobedience in the hinterlands to protest issues that seem beyond their control. But the particulars are quite different, and understanding them illuminates how America鈥檚 centuries-old myth of the noble cowboy and savage Indian has taken contemporary form in white privilege and institutional racism. The simplest evidence of the disparities between the protestors at Standing Rock and the ones at Malheur can be found by looking at how each group has been portrayed in the media and treated by law enforcement.

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Long Read from Elsewhere

鈥楬ow Much Suffering Can You Take?鈥

The New York Times聽goes behind the scenes at the Quintuple Anvil Triathlon, a聽Virginia race that requires participants to run聽five Ironman-length races in five days. It's one of the world's聽most extreme sufferfests, right聽alongside the Barkley Marathons and the Race Across America.

The trees will keep moving. You will swear bugs are crawling over your face, even when they are not. The cracks in the road will form smiley faces. None of this is real 鈥 but it is 3 a.m., and you have dozens of miles still to run.

The sores from chafing are so bad you will think nothing of tugging open your shorts and squirting in ointment in full view of strangers. There is no modesty here; they seem to understand.

Actually, no. They don鈥檛 really understand. They are not competing in this race. And nobody not competing in this race understands.

Lead Photo: Asher Svidensky

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