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Work on Mumbai’s bullet train station is gaining pace. Excavation for the base slab is around 75 percent complete, with ...
Have we broken the natural contract between humans and rivers? The nature writer debates our relationship with the world’s ...
We should protect Earth's rivers and forests with laws. But it is another matter to recast them as actual life forms, as ...
Find Your Next Book Romance Novels N.Y.C. Literary Guide Nonfiction Spring Preview Fiction Spring Preview Advertisement Supported by nonfiction In “Medicine River,” Mary Annette Pember ...
Robert Macfarlane’s new book asks a simple question that poses a profound challenge to environmental policy and the drive for ...
Virgin River fans have been left divided, with many saying they prefer the new TV series over the books. Some fans even go as far to say they can't engage with the books at all, over one common theme.
Nothing hits your senses quite like the enchanting smell of a paperback book. This sweet smell, with a hint of vanilla and an underlying aroma of coffee beans, is actually called bibliosmia.
Medicine River. According to Mary Annette Pember in her powerful new book of that name, the Ojibwe (sometimes Anglicized as Chippewa) believed that everything needed for a good life could be found ...