“Low-information voter” used to be something of a term of art for political scientists: a person who picks a candidate because of something superficial and flighty. Now, however, it’s becoming a derisive term for the sliver of people who remain undecided in this race. It’s not really fair, though. Many people of certain minds appear to be L.I.V.s: Donald Trump, for one. Others are undecided because they know too much, not too little. (Michael Bloomberg was one example until yesterday).

So, in the spirit of appealing to a certain kind of undecided voter—those who want to read long, immersive reporting about the two Presidential candidates—we’ve compiled a list of nine long New Yorker stories to dig through over the weekend. These should help you decide. Or maybe not.