Joe Ford, car detective, searches the world for stolen rare automobiles on the black market. [View in Browser]( [Esquire Sunday Reads]( [Inside the Twisted, Worldwide Hunt for a $7 Million Stolen Car]( Inside the Twisted, Worldwide Hunt for a $7 Million Stolen Car Joe is a detective for hire who specializes in recovering stolen cars. But not your car. Joe doesnât look for cars stolen from parking garages or shopping mallsâeveryday transportation whose value lies in the number of miles they carry us. Joe Ford specializes in recovering cars whose value lies in not being driven much at all: rare, collectible, fetishized cars that are worth hundreds of thousands of dollars, sometimes millions or tens of millions of dollars, prized not for their ability to get from here to there but rather for their beauty, the artistry of their design, the care with which they were built, and perhaps most of all, their provenance. âIâm in a niche of a niche of a niche,â he says. People end up doing all kinds of jobs in this life. You sometimes wonder if, given a few left turns and different choices, the guy playing center field at Yankee Stadium could have ended up a taxi driver instead. Or vice versa. But Joe . . . Joe Ford is what happens when a particular set of skills, personality traits, and turns of phrase lead a person into the only thing he should be doing. Itâs rare. And when you see him at workâwhen you see him move easily among both the shady creatures of criminality and the millionaires on those yachtsâyou wonder whether you, like him, have found your place in the world. [Read the Full Story]( [MORE FROM ESQUIRE]( [The Best Books of 2024 (So Far)]( The Best Books of 2024 (So Far) Welcome back to another year in books, dear reader. Just a quarter of the way through 2024, weâre already enjoying an embarrassment of literary richesâand now, weâre here to spread the gospel about our favorites. The best books of the year (so far) are taking us to dazzling new frontiers. In the fiction landscape, a spate of new novels offer visions of humanity from unlikely narrators, including robots, aliens, and the undead. Meanwhile, itâs shaping up to be an outstanding year for memoirs; new outings from luminaries like Leslie Jamison, Sloane Crosley, and Lucy Sante will grab you by the heartstrings and refuse to let go. In the nonfiction space, some of our finest intellectuals have released titles that help us make sense of our changing world, from the culture-flattening force of algorithms to the future of work. Here are the Best Books of 2024 (so far). [Read the Full Story]( [What I've Learned: Sheryl Crow]( What I've Learned: Sheryl Crow Iâve always struggled with the weight of everything. I come by that genetically. When I first started taking off, I could not figure out how to hold all the energy coming at me. So I went and studied with this woman named Sharon Salzberg; she teaches mindfulness meditation. I do mindfulness at least thirty minutes in the morning. Wherever I am. Two cups of coffee. Focus on breath. Itâs a practice of letting everything go. Itâs about finding compassion for yourself and your imperfections. [Read the Full Story](
[The Ageless Appeal of Armani]( The Ageless Appeal of Armani If the latest menswear from Giorgio Armani feels familiar to you, that's proof of concept. When the Milanese designer introduced his radically reimagined interpretation of traditional tailoring in 1975, he established a design language that was both comfortable and impressively durable. Nowadays you see it everywhere. But no one executes it quite like the maestro himself. The key in all of this is softening things up while stripping them down. Armaniâs clothes are defined by movement and easeâa thoroughly contemporary idea of masculine bella figura. When they debuted, that was a far cry from the rest of the market. Though the Neapolitan tailors of the thirties had devised a way to do away with much of the stuffing in a suit jacket, the highly structured, British take on construction continued to dominate the world of tailored clothing. Even designer ready-to-wear, still in its infancy in the early seventies, had a tendency toward rigidity. [Read the Full Story]( [Jeremy Allen Whiteâs The Bear Season 3 Coat Is Poised for Superstardom]( Jeremy Allen Whiteâs The Bear Season 3 Coat Is Poised for Superstardom If youâve seen The Bear, you know that Carmy Berzatto is the king of some ultra-niche menswear grails. Costume designer Courtney Wheelerâs selection of outfits for the character, played by Jeremy Allen White, achieved near-instant bestseller status as soon as watchers identified the wardrobe pieces from seasons 1 and 2. There was that perfect white tee from Merz B. Schwanen, some damn nice vintage Leviâs clocking in at $2,500, and now, if set photos from season 3 are to be trusted, we may be adding another banger to Carmyâs coveted wardrobe: a waxed tin-cloth trench coat from Filson. Before you get your hopes up, you should know that this jacket has been discontinued. Though Filsonâs chief creative officer, Alex Carleton, teased a possible return to our friends at Gear PatrolââWe regularly reissue products from our archives. I wouldnât rule out the possibility of the Dusterâs return if thereâs sufficient interestââright now the only way to score one for yourself is to hunt around on a site like eBay. (We like to imagine thatâs where Carmy found his, scrolling through the site and placing a bid after a very long night of cheffing and panic attacks.) [Read the Full Story]( [Is âDoomslangâ Making Us All Numb?]( Is âDoomslangâ Making Us All Numb? I never thought the end of the world would sound so casual. âHow are you? Aside from the world burning and all.â This has become my go-to pleasantryâthe default, dystopia-flavored greeting I use on Zoom calls, emails, and catchup texts with old friends. It isnât just me: Ever since the Trump presidency, End Times vernacular seems to have trickled its way from fringe conspiracy forums into jocular chitchat among well-cushioned urbanites. In 2024, conjuring catastrophe in quotidian conversation is practically good manners. Openers like âDid you have a nice weekend?â are followed by the obligatory âI mean, other than the slow creeping demise of the planet.â Social media is awash with doom-themed memes (the âThis is fineâ dog engulfed in flames; a screen grab of Leslie Knope from Parks and Recreation saying, âEverything hurts and Iâm dyingâ; a pleasant woodland background overlaid with âIâm thinking of joining the cicadas this summer and just screaming for six weeks straightâ), emoji combinations (ð§ââï¸ð¦ ððð¥â³ð¥²), and colloquialisms (âdumpster fire,â âhellscape,â âhate it here lolâ). It all seems to suggest that The End will arrive any day now⦠and yet, everyone is being weirdly chill about it. [Read the Full Story]( [LiveIntent Logo]( [AdChoices Logo](
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