blog post
by Erik Hoffner
One thing we’ve learned from our two-year Reimagining Infrastructure series is that society’s future infrastructure will probably not look like that of the past or even the present. Probably, it will Continue reading →
blog post
by James Krupa
The March/April issue’s story about teaching evolutionary theory at the University of Kentucky has generated a significant reader response; the essay has also been reprinted in Slate, passed around the web, Continue reading →
Poetry
the origin point of a meteor shower. Peaches redden: branches are propped with juniper posts and a shovel; steam rises from a caldera; stepping through a lava tube, we emerge into Continue reading →
Poetry
Martha Silano
Ah! And red; and they have peach fuzz, ah! They are full of juice and the skin is soft. They are full of the color of my village And of fair Continue reading →
Review
by Brett van Ort Reviewed by Kristen Hewitt
AFTER THE BOSNIAN War, the forests and countryside of Bosnia-Herzegovina were littered with leftover munitions and landmines. Brett van Ort’s book Minescape is a meditation on how this land was transformed Continue reading →