CATEGORIES
Writing for a Warming World - Imagining the overwhelming, the ubiquitous, the world-shattering.
Climate change is one of those topics that can throw novelists—and everyone else—into a fearful and cowering silence. When the earth is losing its familiar shapes and consolations, changing drastically and in unpredictable ways beneath our feet, how can we summon our creative resources to engage in the imaginative world-building required to write a novel that takes on these threats in compelling ways? And how to avoid writing fiction that addresses irreversible climate change without letting our prose get too preachy, overly prescriptive, saturated with despair?
A YOUNG ARTIST
An Italian widow is still discovering the joy of painting at ninety-three.
BIZARRE REALITY
Julio Torres's \"Fantasmas\" finds truth in fantasy.
How Jet Democratized the Thirst Trap
When I was growing up, in the early two-thousands, I knew of only one way that a mere mortal could be pictured in a bikini for paying subscribers.
GOINGS ON
What we're watching, listening to, and doing this week.
THE BRINK OF WAR
Will Hezbollah's border fight with Israel lead to a wider conflict?
Abject Naturalism + Sarah Braunstein
The baby's father left before the Cesarean incision had fully healed, when it was still a raised red line, tender to the touch, glistening with Vitamin E oil. Perfidy!
HEAVY WEATHER
Some first-generation disaster films were real-life disasters for their actors. D. W. Griffith's 1920 melodrama \"Way Down East,\" featuring the climactic rescue of a woman being carried off on an ice floe in raging currents, was filmed in a real river after a real blizzard.
WRITING PROMPTS
Take a walk in your neighborhood while pushing your baby who refuses to nap in a stroller.
DEAD RECKONING
At the Sphere, a fan wrestles with what the Grateful Dead have left behind.
OVERCORRECTION
On the abolition of prisons.
BEACH BOYS
Eating and drinking through Provincetown.
HEAR NO EVIL
An artist uses audio analysis to investigate violence.
PARADISE BRONX
The borough’ history has always been shaped by its in-between-ness.
BLOCKING
\"Sing Sing.\"
CHARMED
Clairo makes music about the wallop and jolt of romantic connection.
SEX AND SENSIBILITY
The rise and fall of the Bluestockings.
THE POWER OF THE PIRATES
Their flag meant death. What else did it mean?
BOT THERAPY
He appeared one day on Instagram. He had noticed my posts and asked if I wanted to talk.
DANCES WITH WOOLF
Does ballet need narrative?
THE SUMMER OF SCI-FI
1982 and the meaning of moviegoing.
INSIDE THE TRUMP PLAN FOR 2025
A network of well-funded far-right activists is preparing for the former President's return to the White House.
A Dynasty Born In Fire- How an upstart Maya king forged a new social order amid chaos
At the beginning of the Terminal Classic period (ca. A.D. 810-1000), many of the great kingdoms of the southern Maya lowlands-among them Tikal, Palenque, and Calakmul-were being abandoned or collapsing. For many years, scholars have assumed that most, if not all, the other kingdoms across the Maya world must have also been in steep decline.
Like Cats And Dogs – Archeologist fund the skeleton of a male Eurasian lynx (Lynx lynx), a notoriously shy creature.
Оn the periphery of Zamárdi, an ancient lakeshore settlement in west-central Hungary, archaeologists uncovered a nearly five-foot-deep beehive-shaped pit with the skeletons of four adult dogs buried in successive shallow layers.
Medical Malfeasance - Archaeologists uncovered two coffins during excavations of a nineteenth-century cemetery in Quebec City that provide evidence of the illicit practice of diverting corpses for the study of human anatomy.
Archaeologists uncovered two coffins during excavations of a nineteenth-century cemetery in Quebec City that provide evidence of the illicit practice of diverting corpses for the study of human anatomy. Starting in 1847, medical students were required to have practical experience studying human anatomy, but legal options to procure cadavers were limited
Digs & Discoveries - A Fortress Sanctuary - A sprawling 2,000-year-old fortress in the Zagros Mountains of Iraqi Kurdistan appears to have included a sanctuary dedicated to the ancient Persian water goddess Anahita.
A sprawling 2,000-year-old fortress in the Zagros Mountains of Iraqi Kurdistan appears to have included a sanctuary dedicated to the ancient Persian water goddess Anahita.
Digs & Discoveries - A Friend For Hercules - Archaeologists discovered a finely carved head depicting Apollo, god of the sun, music, and poetry.
While digging at the crossroads of the two main streets in the ancient city of Philippi in northern Greece, archaeologists discovered a finely carved head depicting Apollo, god of the sun, music, and poetry.
Where Did the Loot Go? - This is one of those find the money stories. And it's one that has attracted treasure hunters for more than 150 years.
Whatever happened to the $97,000 from the Reno Gang's last heist? Up to a dozen members of the Reno Gang stopped a Jeffersonville, Madison and Indianapolis train at a watering station in southern Indiana. The outlaws had prior intelligence about its main load: express car safes held about $97,000 in government bonds and notes. In the process of the job, one of the crew was killed and two others hurt. The gang made a clean getaway with the loot.
THE LAST RAVE
Remembering a summer of estrangement.
HOW THE WEST WAS LONG
“Horizon: An American Saga—Chapter 1.”