For many Americans, everything changed last March; that was when a national emergency was declared in response to what we were calling “the novel coronavirus” and when the first stay-at-home orders rolled out. Now it’s March again, a reality that is hard to process for many reasons, not least because time has ceased to make sense during the pandemic. We are also on the precipice of change once again, but the good kind, with the Covid-19 vaccine expected to be available to all adults in the US by spring’s end.
One Year Later
A collection of stories about the coronavirus pandemic — what we’ve been through and where we go from here.


The pandemic took lives far too soon. How much human potential has been lost?


“Is this going to be like this forever?” An oral history of fear, endurance, and hope in Sunset Park.


Covid-19 would take hundreds of thousands of older Americans in nursing homes. Desperate that his ailing father would not be among them, one writer bounded home.

The pandemic took lives far too soon. How much human potential has been lost?

“Is this going to be like this forever?” An oral history of fear, endurance, and hope in Sunset Park.

Covid-19 would take hundreds of thousands of older Americans in nursing homes. Desperate that his ailing father would not be among them, one writer bounded home.
This month, Vox has put together a collection of stories meant to help us all understand what we’ve been through this past year and where we go from here. There are stories about loss, but also survival; stories about family, about neighborhoods, about work; stories about birthdays and movies and food delivery. We’ll be publishing new pieces throughout March, all of which you’ll be able to find here.
Cover Image: People light candles at a vigil for those who died due to the Covid-19 pandemic, in April 2020 in Queens, New York. (SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)
Everything in One Year Later


Millions of Americans have lost relatives and friends. We need to pay attention to the science and consequences of grief.






What C.S. Lewis’s A Grief Observed can tell us about our year of loss.




Harm reduction works. Covid-19 has proved it.


By March 2020, researchers knew that uncontrolled spread would be disastrous.
Most Popular
- The Supreme Court signals it might be losing patience with Trump
- The nightmarish problem with trying to make Trump obey court orders
- A massive blind taste test fed people real and vegan meats. It revealed something surprising.
- Take a mental break with the newest Vox crossword
- The startling reason Australia is shooting koalas out of trees from helicopters