When nature is its own protagonist
Amitav Ghosh’s book sings the ancestral story of nutmeg.
Amitav Ghosh’s book sings the ancestral story of nutmeg.
Yes, says Katelyn Beaty, who defines celebrity as “fame’s shinier, slightly obnoxious cousin.”
By Jesse Curtis
New York University Press
Jonathan Augustine starts where Barth left off, moving from salvific reconciliation to social reconciliation.
Anthropologist Jorja Leap bears witness to the struggles of women reentering society through programs designed for men.
Glancy’s spirit is shaped as much by her exile from her tribe as by her ties to it.
Randal Jelks and Shaka Senghor both write with realism but not fatalism.
Elizabeth Weinberg’s call to climate action highlights the interconnection of all things.
For Sachs, flight is multivalent: her flight from the Nazis, any refugee’s flight from oppression, God’s flight from God.
Tom Fate’s essays present an ethically complicated journey of discovery.