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During the hottest summer in history, The New Yorker’s Dhruv Khullar undergoes testing in a specialized chamber where researchers monitor the effects of heat on the body. (article)
Parul Sehgal visits Robin Wall Kimmerer, who set out to bridge the gap between Western science and Indigenous teaching—and created a surprise best-seller and literary phenomenon. (article)
Parul Sehgal visits Robin Wall Kimmerer, who set out to bridge the gap between Western science and Indigenous teaching. Plus, Dhruv Khullar looks at extreme heat and the body. (episode)
During the hottest summer in history, The New Yorker’s Dhruv Khullar undergoes testing in a specialized chamber where researchers monitor the effects of heat on the body.
Parul Sehgal visits Robin Wall Kimmerer, who set out to bridge the gap between Western science and Indigenous teaching—and created a surprise best-seller and literary phenomenon.
Hadley, who published her first novel in her forties, talks to the New Yorker fiction editor Deborah Treisman about the long process of finding her true voice. (article)
A congressional Republican and the head of the Sierra Club talk about the search for common ground on climate action. Plus, the fiction writer Tessa Hadley. (episode)
Mariannette Miller-Meeks, an Iowa Republican, feels that the G.O.P. hasn’t engaged enough with this critical issue. But she won’t vote for Democratic bills that “take away choice.”
To broaden support for climate action, the organization’s executive director tells Elizabeth Kolbert, environmentalists must talk to people about the issue they care about most: jobs.
Hadley, who published her first novel in her forties, talks to the New Yorker fiction editor Deborah Treisman about the long process of finding her true voice.
A congressional Republican and the head of the Sierra Club talk about the search for common ground on climate action. (article)
Santiago lost her ability to read after having a stroke, in 2008. She talks to the staff writer Vinson Cunningham about recovering and returning to her craft. (article)
The U.S. Education Secretary, Miguel Cardona, and the contributor Jeannie Suk Gersen on the movement to end legacy admissions—and the larger problem of equity in college acceptance. (article)
The U.S. Education Secretary, Miguel Cardona, and the contributor Jeannie Suk Gersen on the movement to end legacy admissions. Plus, Santiago speaks with Vinson Cunningham. (episode)
The U.S. Education Secretary, Miguel Cardona, and the contributor Jeannie Suk Gersen on the movement to end legacy admissions—and the larger problem of equity in college acceptance.
Santiago lost her ability to read after having a stroke, in 2008. She talks to the staff writer Vinson Cunningham about recovering and returning to her craft.
“The Color of Water” author speaks with the staff writer Julian Lucas about his exploration of race and faith in a small Pennsylvania community. (article)