Troy — A defense attorney for the operator of a hyperbaric oxygen chamber that exploded in January, killing a five-year-old boy, questioned authorities on Friday on whether they knew for certain her ...
In December, the Book Review Book Club will read and discuss Ian McEwan’s latest novel, about a long-lost poem, the 2014 dinner party where it was read and the future dystopia that embraced it. By MJ ...
Nothing beats a late-night slice of pizza – even better if it's a large slice from a New York-style pie. Greater Cincinnati has a wide range of pizzerias to satisfy everyone's taste buds, but not all ...
Jenny Kidd has received funding from the Leverhulme Trust and the Arts and Humanities Research Council. Eva Nieto McAvoy does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company ...
A PSF proposal to address vulnerabilities in Python and PyPi was recommended for funding, but it was declined because the terms barred “any programs that advance or promote DEI, or discriminatory ...
In this ultimate strength test, the team takes on the world’s toughest cube to see if it can be chopped in half. Armed with powerful tools, insane precision, and a lot of determination, they push ...
Inside View: Ignore the haters pushing a revisionist history, and recognize the American experiment for the success that it is. Photo: Michael Brochstein/Zuma Press Donald Trump’s supporters are ...
Imagine the impact of climate change is irreversible, and decades of flooding, famine, pandemics and war have upended life on earth. That world is explored in Ian McEwan's new novel, “What We Can Know ...
Pregnant women who live in certain areas of New Jersey are eligible for a new cash assistance program of $20,000 — with no strings attached — over the next three years. The funding is by The Bridge ...
For years, Ian McEwan was nominated for the Booker Prize so often that the judges kept him on speed dial. But then there came a moment — say around 2016 — when he published “Nutshell,” about a ...
With dystopian fiction a firm fixture in our literary landscape, it’s easy to imagine future English syllabi that include, from this decade alone, works by Ali Smith, Paul Lynch, and Stephen Markley.