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A neighborhood in quarantine
May 3, 2020
We are entering Week 7 of official quarantine here in Mexico City. We’re definitely used to it by now, though that doesn’t mean it’s easy. The peak of the...
In praise of Nailed It!
April 26, 2020
In the middle of an episode of the fourth season of Nailed It!, host Nicole Byer rolls over the judges’ table, thuds to the floor, and continues rolling...
A non-coronavirus story!
April 19, 2020
This week I published a feature in Science’s special issue on drought about the rise and fall of Wari, which many archaeologists (though not all!) consider...
Maintenance work, part 2
April 12, 2020
Late last year I wrote about my frustrations with cooking and other “maintenance work,” in the parlance of Jenny Odell: I started reading How To Do Nothing...
A quarantine (re-)read
April 5, 2020
I bet it’s really hard to concentrate right now. I’m certainly feeling that, although it’s gotten a little better now that we’ve settled into quarantine life...
The art of quarantines past
March 29, 2020
The coronavirus news cycle has finally come for me with a vengeance, so due to an avalanche of extremely urgent deadlines, I will be keeping this newsletter...
Rerun: The achievable goal
March 22, 2020
Today I am bringing you a rerun. I originally sent out this issue on Oct 13, 2019, and I think the philosophy of the achievable goal might be helpful for a...
A dispatch from Before
March 15, 2020
Friends, what a week. Mexico has 41 confirmed cases of COVID-19, with no community transmission reported yet. Schools are closing for a month starting on...
Unsolved mysteries
March 8, 2020
Last week I said that my feature on Teotihuacan and the Maya contained a writing challenge: There is no answer to the mystery, and thus no natural resolution...
An epic story
March 1, 2020
This week I published a long article about an ancient mystery: What, exactly, was the relationship between Teotihuacan and the Maya? If you’ve heard of any...
Drowning
February 23, 2020
I wrote last week about not having enough water. Today I’m thinking about places that have too much water. I’ve been researching sea level rise in the past...
Water
February 16, 2020
You know you’ve really made a friend in Mexico City when you ask to come over to their place to take a shower, because your water has gone out. It happens to...
An experiment
February 9, 2020
What follows is a short piece of fiction inspired by a recent New York Times story about an almost-abandoned cosmic ray observatory and the handful of people...
On editing
February 2, 2020
I love a good edit. I’ve heard not all writers do, but I can’t imagine it. The second draft—after an editor gets involved—is my favorite part of the whole...
Shaking off the dust
January 26, 2020
Hello! I’m back. I planned on returning to this newsletter last Sunday, but the week before I had a challenging feature to file and I didn’t feel like...
The year, the decade
December 15, 2019
I love the end of the year. I’m not really one for new year’s resolutions, but I can’t get enough of year-end lists and reflections, both my own and other...
Maintenance work
December 8, 2019
I have a love-hate relationship with cooking at the moment. I really like doing it, but like everyone in the 21st century I don’t have much time for it. This...
An American abroad
December 1, 2019
The first time I left the U.S., I was 17 years old. I went to Spain on a truly terrible tour with other high school students, none of whom I knew and only...
What does productivity mean anyway?
November 24, 2019
In last week’s issue, I cited RescueTime’s productivity metric in my examination of how much work is too much, but promised to critique it further. Here I...
How much is too much work?
November 17, 2019
I said last week that my overlapping assignments resulted in “objectively too much work.” I know this because I got sick after completing it. But let’s break...
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