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Billion-Year Histories and Birding While Black: Your Climate <br>Readings for April

Billion-Year Histories and Birding While Black: Your Climate
Readings for April

Amy Brady Recommends J. Drew Lanham, Kate Aronoff, and More

By Amy Brady | April 8, 2021

Born to Rewild: Jeff VanderMeer on What It Means to Restore Your Own Little Part of the World

Born to Rewild: Jeff VanderMeer on What It Means to Restore Your Own Little Part of the World

The Author of Hummingbird Salamander Talks to Drew Broussard

By Drew Broussard | April 5, 2021

Arati Kumar-Rao: A River at the Heart of the World

Arati Kumar-Rao: A River at the Heart of the World

This Week on the Emergence Magazine Podcast

By Emergence Magazine | April 5, 2021

The Life and Times of “The Most Intelligent Bird in the World

The Life and Times of “The Most Intelligent Bird in the World"

Jonathan Meiburg on the Remarkable Mental and Physical Dexterity of Tina the Striated Caracara

By Jonathan Meiburg | March 30, 2021

Telling Tales of Climate Collapse: Novelists Weigh In

Telling Tales of Climate Collapse: Novelists Weigh In

Part Two of Amy Brady’s Conversation with Pitchaya Sudbanthad, Madeleine Watts,
Diane Wilson, and More

By Amy Brady | March 25, 2021

What Happens When Apex Predators Take Over the Planet

What Happens When Apex Predators Take Over the Planet

Stefano Mancuso on the Extinctions of the Anthropocene

By Stefano Mancuso | March 25, 2021

Best Reviewed
Books of the Week

  • Go Gentle
  • The Palm House
  • Lázár
  • Rasputin: The Downfall of the Romanovs
  • Famesick: A Memoir
  • Where the Music Had to Go: How Bob Dylan and the Beatles Changed Each Other--And the World

The Wild and Elemental City: Finding Life in Pandemic
New York

By Megan Fernandes | March 25, 2021

How Contemporary Novelists Are Confronting Climate Collapse in Fiction

By Amy Brady | March 24, 2021

A Beautiful Harvest: How Students in Japan Turn Urushi Trees Into Lacquer

By Hannah Kirshner | March 23, 2021

How the Salvation of New York City Drinking Water Can Be a Model for Saving the Planet

How the Salvation of New York City Drinking Water Can Be a Model for Saving the Planet

Michael Heller and James Salzman on the Concept
of “As-If” Ownership

By Michael Heller and James Salzman | March 18, 2021

Yamen Manai on Waiting for the Perfect Allegory

Yamen Manai on Waiting for the Perfect Allegory

In Conversation with Brad Listi on Otherppl

By Otherppl with Brad Listi | March 17, 2021

A new species of jumping spider has been named after Eric Carle.

A new species of jumping spider has been named after Eric Carle.

By Walker Caplan | March 15, 2021

<em>Unsolaced</em> by Gretel Ehrlich, Read by the Author

Unsolaced by Gretel Ehrlich, Read by the Author

Celebrating—and Mourning—Changes on Earth
While Traveling the Globe

By Behind the Mic | March 10, 2021

Elizabeth Kolbert: Cleaning Up America’s Filthy Rivers May Be a Neverending Job

Elizabeth Kolbert: Cleaning Up America’s Filthy Rivers May Be a Neverending Job

“First you reverse a river. Then you electrify it.”

By Elizabeth Kolbert | March 9, 2021

On the Frontlines of the Battle to Preserve the American West

On the Frontlines of the Battle to Preserve the American West

From White Nationalists to Endangered Tortoises, Michelle Nijhuis Encounters the Modern Wilderness

By Michelle Nijhuis | March 9, 2021

How Algernon Blackwood Turned Nature Into<br> Sublime Horror

How Algernon Blackwood Turned Nature Into
Sublime Horror

Eugene Thacker on the 1907 Novella The Willows

By Eugene Thacker | March 8, 2021

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    • How David Mills Helped Bring 'NYPD Blue' to Its Artistic ApexApril 17, 2026 by David Masciotra
    • The Best True Crime of the Month: April 2026April 17, 2026 by CrimeReads
    • How the Cozy Genre Took Over the WorldApril 17, 2026 by Randee Dawn
    • Go Gentle
    • The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
    • "A social satire full of dopamine-releasing one-liners and sparkling writing But it can be frustratingly…"
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