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More
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2026 Florida Legislature
Not So Forever Home
Paycheck To Paycheck
Florida And Climate Change
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Tampa Bay Eviction Crisis
Growing Up With Guns
Your Florida
Defending The Everglades. Again.
2026 Atlantic Hurricane Season
2026 Florida Legislature
Not So Forever Home
Paycheck To Paycheck
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Tampa Bay Eviction Crisis
Growing Up With Guns
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Meet the Staff
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Why 'Islamofascism' May Create New U.S. Enemies
A growing number of conservative commentators, policymakers and even the president have used the term "Islamofascist" to refer to Islamist extremists. But critics argue that the term offends millions of Muslims by suggesting Islam itself is the enemy.
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0:00
Scientists Are Human, Too: Questions For Cartoonist Tom Gauld
Literary pun purveyor Tom Gauld turns his pen to the foibles of science (and science fiction) in his new comic collection Department of Mind-Blowing Theories, inspired by his scientist grandfather.
'Apsara Engine' Doesn't Break The Graphic Novel Rules — It Ignores Them
Bishakh Som's new comics collection is uncanny and hard to categorize — science-fictiony, mythic and humanistic, without making any particular assumptions about where humans as a species are going.
'Kochland' Explores How The Famous Brother Duo Made Their Money
The Koch brothers' wide-ranging influence is no secret. But rather than focusing on how they spend their money, Christopher Leonard presents a richly reported tale of how they got it.
Katrina Destroyed 'The Yellow House' — But Inequality Eroded Its Foundation
Sarah M. Broom's extraordinary memoir about the New Orleans home she grew up in describes decades of life lived — as well as the systemic racism that ultimately contributed to the house's destruction.
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•
7:50
'Three Women' Puts Female Desire At The Forefront
For her new book, Lisa Taddeo spent nearly a decade immersed in the sex lives of three women. She says desire is one of the things we think about the most, and it's time to talk about women's desires.
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•
6:29
To Stand Still Is To Die: A New Novel Follows Migrants To 'American Dirt'
Jeanine Cummins' new novel opens in Mexico, where a drug cartel has massacred 16 members of a family. A tense on-the-road ordeal follows, as a desperate mother struggles to save herself and her son.
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7:27
Staying At Home? Check Into Emily St. John Mandel's Haunting 'Glass Hotel'
The author of Station Eleven weaves together stories of a hotel worker and an ultra-wealthy con man in a novel that captures how precarious life is — in a way that feels particularly resonant now.
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6:11
'The Only Plane In The Sky' Offers A Powerful, Graphic Narrative Of Sept. 11
When today's children someday ask what Sept. 11 was really like, Garrett Graff's book will be the answer: He vividly recounts the most upsetting and totemic moments — and critical, little-told others.
Darkness And Beauty Go Hand In Hand In 'Black Light'
In her debut collection, Kimberly King Parsons writes with the unpredictable power of a firecracker, bringing flashes of illumination to sharp, compassionate stories about longing and disappointment.
The U.S. defeats Vietnam 3-0 to open its 2023 Women's World Cup
The two-time defending champion U.S. opened group play in the Women's World Cup with a sluggish performance over Vietnam. The U.S. brings a mix of newcomers and veterans to this year's tournament.
Senate Passes Sweeping Financial Overhaul Bill
President Obama and the Democrats scored another major legislative victory Thursday. The Senate passed a broad bill to overhaul financial regulations. The measure rewrites the rules for Wall Street to try to avoid crises like the 2008 economic meltdown. This time the Democrats got a little help from Republicans.
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3:53
On Tour With Best-Selling Suspense Writer M.J. Rose
From endless book signings to heated arguments with booksellers, author M.J. Rose knows the value of self-promotion. NPR's Lynn Neary joins Rose on the road for a taste of what it means to be a writer in today's new world of publishing.
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8:19
'Pearl Buck In China': A Child Across The Good Earth
A new biography tells the story of Buck's Chinese childhood, as the daughter of zealous missionaries. In Pearl Buck in China, Hilary Spurling makes a compelling case for a reappraisal of Buck's fiction — transforming her from dreary "lady author" into woman warrior.
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0:00
Why The Zombie Craze Still Has Our Undying Affection
Disney Channel's new high school zombie musical; The Walking Dead's ratings reign; the buzz for the new book Dread Nation: In pop culture, the undead persist after our brains.
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•
3:56
'Wednesday's Child' deals in life after loss
The stories in Yiyun Li's book focus chiefly on people trying to put themselves together after loss, dealing with anguish that takes its time and rises from its dormancy at unexpected moments.
Preservationists are trying to restore national park trails destroyed by the weather
National parks and hiking trail networks around the country are facing dual pressures - crowds and changing weather. Preservationists in New Hampshire are painstakingly restoring one such trail.
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•
3:42
How Self-Improvement Became Self-Destruction On 'Diamond Mountain'
Scott Carney's new book unpacks the complicated story of Ian Thorson, who died in the Arizona wilderness after becoming involved with an unorthodox Buddhist group led by a charismatic American monk.
An Artist Draws His Journey Away From War And Death, With Gratitude
Shigeru Mizuki's Showa 1944-1953 is the third volume of his massive, autobiographical history of Japan and WWII, packed with anger at generals who ordered him to die, and gratitude for his survival.
Lowly Worm Is Back! Richard Scarry Jr. Brings Dad's Manuscript To Life
The younger Scarry, also an illustrator, found a draft of Best Lowly Worm Book Ever! in his dad's Swiss chalet. He says all that was missing was the final art, "so that's what I did."
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•
5:18
'Sage' Is A Naturalist's Guide To The Historic Rabbits Of Waterloo
Leona Francombe's debut novel is all about rabbits: They eat, they sleep, and they think about the battle of Waterloo. Reviewer Jason Sheehan says it's a lovely story that sometimes lacks a point.
An Early Peek At Pratchett In 'Dragons At Crumbling Castle'
Before Terry Pratchett created the Discworld, he was a young reporter with a sideline in charming little comic stories about dragons and dust motes, now collected in Dragons at Crumbling Castle.
Writing 'Career Of Evil' Gave Robert Galbraith (aka J.K. Rowling) Nightmares
Rowling studied real criminal case studies to write the latest in the Cormoran Strike mystery series — "It was horrible," she says. But writing under a pseudonym remains "a very private pleasure."
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22:54
Frisky, Subversive 'American Housewife' Practices Shock And Awwww
The slightly demented homemakers in Helen Ellis' new collection wield sharp elbows and sharper knives, but critic Heller McAlpin says the stories build to touching, unexpected punchlines.
'Prince Of Cats' Melds Comics, Hip-Hop And Shakespeare
Ron Wimberly's energetic re-working of Romeo and Juliet focuses on Tybalt, the "Prince of Cats." It mashes up wildly diverse elements into a fresh creation, the visual equivalent of a DJ's mix.
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