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<em>A Lab of One's Own</em> by Rita Colwell and Sharon Bertsch McGrayne, Read by Jackie Sanders

A Lab of One's Own by Rita Colwell and Sharon Bertsch McGrayne, Read by Jackie Sanders

A Memoir and a Call to Action

By Behind the Mic | October 20, 2020

Rick Bass on Salvaging America's Forest Arks Against the Coming Fire

Rick Bass on Salvaging America's Forest Arks Against the Coming Fire

"In the farthest, most northern places, we can still make a stand against climate change."

By Rick Bass | October 15, 2020

How Thermodynamics Explains the Origins of Life

How Thermodynamics Explains the Origins of Life

From the New Books Network's Book of the Day Podcast

By New Books Network | October 5, 2020

What a Video Game Can Teach Us About Getting Through a Pandemic

What a Video Game Can Teach Us About Getting Through a Pandemic

Anna Weltman on Making Real-World Models From World of Warcraft Epidemics

By Anna Weltman | October 2, 2020

On Malaria, Drought, and the Personal Consequences of Greed

On Malaria, Drought, and the Personal Consequences of Greed

Zoë Dutka Faces a Crisis in Santa Elena de Uairén, Venezuela

By Zoë Dutka | October 1, 2020

What Animal Emotions Tell Us About Ourselves

What Animal Emotions Tell Us About Ourselves

From the New Books Network's Book of the Day Podcast

By New Books Network | October 1, 2020

Best Reviewed
Books of the Week

  • The Things We Never Say
  • John of John
  • Ghost Stories: A Memoir
  • Look What You Made Me Do
  • Backtalker: An American Memoir
  • Glorious Country: How the Artist Frederic Church Brought the World to America and America to the World

All Hail the Beaver, Mighty Linchpin of the Natural World

By Derek Gow and Ben Goldfarb | September 30, 2020

The Best Reviewed Science, Technology, and Nature Books, September Edition

By Book Marks | September 30, 2020

Meet the PhD Student Inventing a New Scientific Language in Welsh

By Ally Findley | September 29, 2020

Are the illustrations in children’s books making kids… dumber?                            

Are the illustrations in children’s books making kids… dumber?                            

By Jonny Diamond | September 28, 2020

How Storytellers Use Math (Without Scaring People Away)

How Storytellers Use Math (Without Scaring People Away)

Dan Rockmore on Infinite Powers and The Weil Conjectures

By Dan Rockmore | September 28, 2020

Pesticides, Incendiaries... How US Chemical Companies Endeared Themselves to the Public

Pesticides, Incendiaries... How US Chemical Companies Endeared Themselves to the Public

Frank A. Von Hippel on the Time the "Chemical Warfare Service" Rebranded as the "Chemical Peace Service"

By Frank A. von Hippel | September 25, 2020

Colin Dickey on Why Americans Are So Keen to Believe Conspiracies

Colin Dickey on Why Americans Are So Keen to Believe Conspiracies

In Conversation with Maris Kreizman on The Maris Review Podcast

By The Maris Review | September 24, 2020

It Turns Out Nice People Don't Actually Finish Last

It Turns Out Nice People Don't Actually Finish Last

Marc Brackett in Conversation with Roxanne Coady
on Just the Right Book

By Just the Right Book | September 24, 2020

Would E.T. Have Compassion for Us? Or Just Invade?

Would E.T. Have Compassion for Us? Or Just Invade?

Claire Isabel Webb Guests on Time to Eat the Dogs

By Time to Eat the Dogs | September 22, 2020

When in Doubt, Smile Like<br> an Axolotl

When in Doubt, Smile Like
an Axolotl

Aimee Nezhukumatathil in Praise of the Mexican Walking Fish

By Aimee Nezhukumatathil | September 11, 2020

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Page 47 of 62
    • Will Another ‘Miami Vice’ Remake Have Anything to Say?May 11, 2026 by Nick Kolakowski
    • Crime and the City: OttawaMay 11, 2026 by Paul French
    • Dr. Gary Brown on The Pitt, Trauma, and Debuting a Medical Thriller at 76May 11, 2026 by Gary Brown
    • The Things We Never Say
    • The Best Reviewed Books of the Week
    • "She s not a minimalist but Elizabeth Strout does more with less than any writer…"
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