Weekly E-book: The Cost of Freedom
After a fashion, our weekly e-book returns. This week we bring you a reason to count the cost of freedom.
Sunday Comics
It’s true we are immune/When fact is fiction and TV reality/And today the millions cry/We eat and drink while tomorrow they die/Sunday Bloody Comics
Open for Business
Sarah Hinchliff Pearson looks at how platforms and creators build successful endeavors around open digital content.
Fermata
Cole Hornaday’s novel pauses to reflect before it moves to its inexorable conclusion.
For Abortion Providers, a Constant Barrage of Personalized Harassment
Shootings like the one at a Colorado clinic are rare. Stalking, hate mail, and intimidating protests are the daily reality. Nina Martin interviews David Cohen and co-author Krysten Connon about their book, Living in the Crosshairs: The Untold Stories of Anti-Abortion Terrorism.
Two Reviews: Crossing Over: Poems by Priscilla Long and Jack Remick’s The Deification
Pam Carter gives her thoughts on two books by local poets.
State of Play
Mark Taylor-Canfield gives you his thoughts on the latest political thriller by Kevin MacDonald with Russell Crowe.
The Ghastly Impermanence: The Price of Oil
Omar Willey explores the BBC Radio 4’s seven-part “season of dramas” dealing with the price of oil.
Who’s in that Vomit, Anyway?
Andrew Farke re-examines prehistoric vomit and finds…not a pterosaur.
Fighting Over Fatigue
How can you do medical research on chronic fatigue syndrome when divisions between patients, doctors and researchers are almost as chronic and painful as the disease itself? Virginia Gewin reports on new hopes of reconciliation.
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