Editor’s Note: This commentary by Suhas Apte and Jagdish N. Sheth, authors of The Sustainability Edge is part of our ongoing #IndieVoices series of commentaries and features in the month of March focusing on Climate Change. Read the... Read More
At the end of The Wizard Who Saved the World, says author Jeffrey Bennett, we want kids to leave any school discussion of global warming with the belief that they, too, have the power to be a “wizard” who can help us build a better... Read More
Back when I was a copy editor for The Detroit News twenty years ago, our ultraconservative editorial page would launch red-faced tirades against then-Vice President Al Gore for his prediction of the end of the internal combustion engine.... Read More
Editor’s Note: This is part of our ongoing #IndieVoices series of commentaries and features in the month of March focusing on Climate Change. Read the introduction to the series here. There is no problem more enormous, more urgent, or... Read More
To Purdue scholar Su’ad Abdul Khabeer, hip-hop and American Islam are a natural match: both flourish beyond, and comment upon, a hostile status quo. And both provide a place of refuge and expression for African Americans held at the... Read More
It’s too easy to forget that the fight for basic human rights for African Americans occurred—and many would say is still occurring—very recently in our history. A time when African Americans were not allowed to vote in the South is... Read More
Why do women read romance? It seems like only men ask this question. A few months ago, before the November election and its potentially world-shifting outcome, sex seemed relatively low risk—or, at least, less risky than it used to be.... Read More
Editor’s Note: This commentary by author Lilah Suzanne is part of an ongoing Foreword Reviews series called #IndieVoices, in which we invite small publishers and indie authors to address the 2016 US presidential election and its... Read More