The Antiquarian
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What’s your warm-up?
February 27, 2022
My husband is a musician, and I’m always learning new things about the creative process by watching him work. Lately I’ve been thinking about scales, and the...
Finally some helpful book publishing advice
February 20, 2022
Writing a book is an emotional minefield. Not only are you doing the hardest intellectual work of your life, but also at regular but random intervals every...
Three ways writing a book is different than covering news
February 13, 2022
When I set out to write a book, I thought it’d be basically the same as writing magazine stories, only much longer. On the surface, I’m doing the same sorts...
What I’ve learned writing about apocalypses, during an apocalypse
February 6, 2022
What's wrong with back to normal
My best productivity advice
January 30, 2022
I’ve gotten a lot of positive feedback on last week’s issue about stopping work even when you don’t want to or think you can’t. (Thank you!) I want to...
Why stopping work is just as important as starting
January 23, 2022
In my last newsletter of 2021, I included this note about recalibrating my work and rest schedules: When I was doing mostly news and feature articles, I...
A frontier double feature
January 16, 2022
Hi friends! I’m back from a holiday break that managed to be both relaxing (because I spent most of it cross stitching at my parents’ house) and stressful...
Breaking Bad and the power-mad white man
December 5, 2021
The Antihero Triology, Part 3
The Antihero Trilogy, Part 2
November 14, 2021
There’s a scene midway through season 2 of Mad Men (set in 1962) in which Don and Betty go to a Memorial Day celebration at a country club. Veterans are...
Quantifying colonialism
October 31, 2021
Another week, another news article. An unsustainable pace if I also want to write a book, so this is it for me and news for a while (I hope). I wrote about a...
Forensic anthropology’s race problem
October 24, 2021
I’m pausing the Antihero Trilogy to share a story I published this week, about a debate roiling in U.S. forensic anthropology. For decades, forensic...
The Antihero Trilogy, Part 1
October 17, 2021
Over the course of the pandemic, my husband and I have watched and/or rewatched the three antihero dramas credited with defining the Golden Age of...
How should a writer write?
October 10, 2021
I’m thinking a lot about how I want and need to structure my days. Not just my workdays, but especially my workdays. And most especially my writing days,...
On Indigenous voices and diverse sources in journalism
September 26, 2021
This week I wrote about a new paper on human footprints found in White Sands National Park, which possibly date to as far back as 23,000 years ago. This is a...
Against the American Dream
September 19, 2021
Hello! I took an unplanned late-summer vacation from the newsletter, because, well, I didn’t feel like doing it for a while. I’m trying to honor my own...
Simone Biles is our hero
August 1, 2021
Breaking the tradition of disposable bodies
In praise of Schedule Send
July 25, 2021
I hate email. (I know, I’m writing an email newsletter. We contain multitudes.) I don’t even get that much of it. For me, email is not so much a time suck as...
My latest feature
July 11, 2021
I’m delighted to share what I hope will be my big story of the year (maybe of my life?): a deep dive into the history and future of the Morton Collection, a...
The conquistadors’ music
June 27, 2021
Listening to a world transformed
Feel weird about your pandemic body? Read this
June 20, 2021
I hear rumors that some people are vaccinated and back out in the world. (Not me, yet! Fingers crossed for August.) Chances are you look a little different...
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