[Esquire Sunday Reads]( [The Crisis Facing America's Park Rangers]( [The Crisis Facing America's Park Rangers]( A call from dispatch comes over the radio, late morning on a Saturday: A man with a gunâpossibly multiple weaponsâhas been spotted by a trail runner at the Chautauqua Overlook. The air is warm, 75 degrees, and getting warmer. College kids and families are out enjoying the 155-mile network of trails that make up Open Space and Mountain Parks (OSMP), owned, operated, and patrolled by the city of Boulder, Colorado. The trail originates in a residential areaânice houses. Expensive houses. New construction, the occasional four-car garage, owners who work for the tech companies that have changed Boulderâs demographics over the past twenty-five years. Two rangers head up Flagstaff Road, a few blocks from the parking area. The trail is steepâBoulder locals like it because they can get a good workout in just a few miles. When the rangers finally see the suspect, off the trail and sitting on a rock that drops off to a steep cliff, they realize itâs a kid. A teenager who looks just a little older than some of their own kids, wearing a rifle across his chest. A military-grade canvas bag droops by his side. [Read the Full Story]( [MORE FROM ESQUIRE]( [The World May Be Ending But at Least We Have Lee Pace]( [The World May Be Ending But at Least We Have Lee Pace]( Lee Pace and I have formed a sci-fi book club. His idea. Without anyone intending it, dinner at a Japanese restaurant in Brooklyn has turned into our clubâs unofficial first meeting. Thereâs The Lord of the Rings and Dune, of course, which the actor has read more times than he remembers. He also sings the praises of his favorite writer, Ursula K. Le Guin, and the universe-rattling Three-Body Problem, by Cixin Liu. He pulls out his Kindle to show me the Bobiverse series, which heâs currently reading, and to download a couple books I suggest (Ann Leckieâs Ancillary Justice and Arkady Martineâs A Memory Called Empire). I have no doubt heâll read them immediately. âWe have to get back together and discuss,â he says. [Read the Full Story]( Â
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 [Forget Every Cocktail Shaker You've Ever Known. Elevated Craft's Is Better.]( [Forget Every Cocktail Shaker You've Ever Known. Elevated Craft's Is Better.]( I made 16 lemon drops last Friday night. Kacey Musgraves's Star-Crossed movie was finally streaming, so my friends gathered at my apartment to get buzzed on the summery cocktail while watching our gal rock the hell out of sequined eyebrows. Eight women, two rounds of lemon drops, 16 drinksâa feat that you might assume would've chained me to the bar cart, measuring and shaking away from first song to last (no skips). But no, after stumbling through some mental multiplication, I was flying through those lemon drops, mixing three at once without having to fudge the ideal ratio of vodka to lemon juice to triple sec to honey simple syrup, without dousing my shirt in booze, and without over-diluting or under-chilling the final product. And then, movie wrapped, the death of matrimony celebrated, my roommate breezed through a round of dirty martinis for the group. [Read the Full Story]( [The 12 Best Single Malt Scotch Brands to Drink Right Now]( [The 12 Best Single Malt Scotch Brands to Drink Right Now]( Are you looking to spend a couple hundred thousand dollars on whisky? In September, the oldest single malt scotch ever to be bottled and sold was released by Gordon & Macphail, marking a seismic event for scotch fans. I was lucky enough to try the 80-year-old whisky, which was distilled at The Glenlivet in 1940 and spent its lifetime in a sherry butt, and can report back that it aged rather gracefullyâoaky, leathery, and musty on the nose, a hit of sharp tannin on the palate, followed by orange, sour cherry, grape hard candy, and just a hint of Honey Nut Cheerios. Its cost will surely be astronomical; the first of 250 decanters will be auctioned off in October by Sothebyâs for an estimated $100K to $200K, with proceeds going to charity. [Read the Full Story]( Â
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 [The Worry and Joy of Being Ben Platt]( [The Worry and Joy of Being Ben Platt]( Why is Ben Platt in my screening of Dear Evan Hansen starring Ben Platt? Iâm kneeling on the floor of the fancy Whitby Hotel screening room, frantically cleaning up the entire box of popcorn Iâve knocked over. Thatâs when I notice him. The lights dim as I pluck the last few kernels up, and I look up to seeâis that? It is. Itâs Ben freaking Platt claiming one of the bright orange seats in the back marked RESERVED. Of the 130 seats in the theater, only a dozen or so are taken, one of them, now, by the star of Dear Evan Hansen, the film weâre about to see. [Read the Full Story]( [The 110 Best Movies of All Time]( [The 110 Best Movies of All Time]( To completely take the wind out of all of our sails, coming up with a perfect list of the 110 greatest movies of all time is... well, it's impossible isn't it? To get cerebral about it, when lists like this come together, half the fun is going through and seeing where (or even if) your favorite made the list. Taking in how your tastes and experiences line up with whomever devoted this much time to this monstrosity. With film being such an expansive and subjective form of art, there is hardly a wrong answer to what is and isn't deserving of making a list like this. [Read the Full Story]( Follow Us [Unsubscribe]( | [Privacy Notice/Notice at Collection]( esquire.com
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