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Worlds Unseen and Unimagined: On Learning About Human Senses Through the Animal Kingdom

Worlds Unseen and Unimagined: On Learning About Human Senses Through the Animal Kingdom

Jackie Higgins Considers the Abundance of Biodiversity All Around Us

By Jackie Higgins | February 28, 2022

How California’s Waterways Gave Life to Indigenous Communities

How California’s Waterways Gave Life to Indigenous Communities

Greg Sarris Shares His Ancestral History

By Greg Sarris | February 25, 2022

How Writing a Children’s Book is an Antidote to Doomsday Thinking

How Writing a Children’s Book is an Antidote to Doomsday Thinking

Ben Okri on Imagining the Impossible

By Ben Okri | February 22, 2022

Observing the Beautiful, Secret Lives of Sandhoppers

Observing the Beautiful, Secret Lives of Sandhoppers

Adam Nicolson on an Overlooked Beach-Dweller

By Adam Nicolson | February 22, 2022

Revisiting Thich Nhat Hanh’s Call to Fall in Love with the Earth

Revisiting Thich Nhat Hanh’s Call to Fall in Love with the Earth

This Week from the Emergence Magazine Podcast

By Emergence Magazine | February 22, 2022

Read the loveliest moons in literature, in honor of today’s Snow Moon.

Read the loveliest moons in literature, in honor of today’s Snow Moon.

By Katie Yee | February 16, 2022

Best Reviewed
Books of the Week

  • The Rest of Our Lives
  • Call Me Ishmaelle
  • Homeschooled: A Memoir
  • The Spy in the Archive: How One Man Tried to Kill the KGB
  • Watching Over Her
  • American Reich: A Murder in Orange County, Neo-Nazis, and a New Age of Hate

Confronting the Old Boys’ Club at Everest Base Camp

By Silvia Vasquez-Lavado | February 10, 2022

How Rachel Carson Carved Out a Space to Become a Full-Time Writer

By James R. Gaines | February 9, 2022

Martin Puchner on the Climate Lessons from the Epic of Gilgamesh

By Martin Puchner | February 9, 2022

Inside the Strange World of the Meteorite Trade

Inside the Strange World of the Meteorite Trade

Greg Brennecka on Owning a Piece of Mars

By Greg Brennecka | February 7, 2022

Who Gets to Define History?

Who Gets to Define History?

Part 2 of the Limited Series, Coming Home to the Cove

By Emergence Magazine | February 7, 2022

On the Moral and Metaphysical Significance of Aloneness

On the Moral and Metaphysical Significance of Aloneness

Sumana Roy Considers Solitary Ways of Being

By Sumana Roy | February 3, 2022

What Does the Natural World Look Like After Human Beings Abandon It?

What Does the Natural World Look Like After Human Beings Abandon It?

This Week on the Book Dreams Podcast

By Book Dreams | February 3, 2022

How Antarctic Explorers Kept Themselves Sane on the Voyage

How Antarctic Explorers Kept Themselves Sane on the Voyage

Ranulph Fiennes on the Trials of Ernest Shackleton

By Ranulph Fiennes | January 31, 2022

"The flap of a wave; the kiss of a wave." 8 of the best uses of water in Virginia Woolf's novels.

By Snigdha Koirala | January 25, 2022

Place is Not a Character—It is Its Own Story

Place is Not a Character—It is Its Own Story

Morgan Thomas on the Way We Write Natural Landscapes

By Morgan Thomas | January 25, 2022

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Page 25 of 51
    • Thinking Outside the Cop: Using Game Wardens in Crime FictionJanuary 13, 2026 by Sarah Crouch
    • Make Our Villains Gayer, Please: Reclaiming the Trope of Queer-Coded AntagonistsJanuary 13, 2026 by Isha Raya
    • Ross Montgomery on Researching Profanity, Halley's Comet, and Writing Historical FictionJanuary 13, 2026 by Alex Dueben
    • The Rest of Our Lives
    • The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
    • "Poignant Tender The final line of em The Rest of Our Lives em is by…"
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