Blowholes are more common than you think.
Essays
An ode to lesbians who showed the way
The photography series ‘Hidden Once, Hidden Twice’ highlights women who serve as a model for others.
Issei poetry between the world wars
The rich history of Japanese-language literature challenges assumptions about what counts as U.S. art.
A bear hunt illuminates the complexities of a marriage
Will the gift of a significant harvest be individual or shared?
How kung-fu heroes can grow our climate consciousness
‘It’s an intentional alignment with a certain kind of underground resistance.’
I married a cookstove scientist
My reluctant journey to ditching our gas stove.
Tending the shoots of possibility
On the 50th anniversary of the Endangered Species Act, a researcher contemplates the future of species we’ve tried to protect.
An angler goes ever farther upstream with tenkara
How a centuries-old Japanese method of fly-fishing awoke a strong connection to hāfu lineage.
A momentous trade illuminates what’s true
A writer hopes to prove that there’s real labor that goes into her craft.
We need to reframe our thinking about what’s wild
Why we should take a look from wildlife’s perspectives.
How the New Mexico whiptail became a gay icon
All members of the lizard species are female and reproduce asexually through a process called parthenogenesis.
Beauty is always bigger than the pain
A writer finds what she needs on a snowy walk through a cherished and familiar landscape.
Contemplating Cormac McCarthy
On pain specific to America and artistic influence.
Short-lived or shallow, it’s still water
Notes on what is fluid and flowing, even if ephemeral.
Slowing down the pace of childhood
How can you teach kids to appreciate slowness in a speeded-up world?
Remembering Charles Wilkinson, a true friend to Indian Country
The professor and leader leaves a legacy in Indigenous advocacy.
What the gray jay taught me about myself
The authenticity and playfulness of the naughty, queer bird is something to celebrate.
My beloved lemon squeezer
A simple tool becomes a form of self-defense.
The Tractor Princess
Memories from California’s Pajaro Valley.
The abundance of subsistence
Losing salmon means losing more than just food.