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Few events are as powerfully symbolic of Britain’s paralysing inability to get anything done than the failure last week of ...
WIMBLEDON is heading towards the business end at the All England Club – and two Brits will be looking to book their spots in ...
When it comes to untethering the imagination and letting it soar into the unknown, comic books and graphic novels are hard to beat. The arrangement of square panels on a white page can unlock potent ...
Cheryl has been blighted by tragedy of late, most recently being targeted by a stalker who left her 'fearing for her life'.
Six years later, the result is “Young Firecrackers,” a five-part memoir written by Rehn and four of his high school friends who survived addiction: Ashley Mercurio, Ryan Bernstein, Andrew Theriot and ...
One friend told me last year that she could never afford health insurance and worked full-time until she was 75. She was rarely ill. But since she stopped working, her health has been a challenge. She ...
In Philadelphia, there exists a treasure trove where one person’s castoffs become another’s prized possessions – The Second Mile Center thrift store, where bargain hunters experience the thrill of the ...
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Her Campus on MSNCatherine Paiz Used Her Pain To Grow, & Now, She’s Telling Her Story"You can look at your life experience and play this victim mentality and say all these things happened to you, but it's like, ...
Maris Kreizman is a 40-something book critic, columnist for Lit Hub and one-time podcaster. In her debut essay collection “I ...
Robert P. Baird’s debut novel is about a divinity professor whose 2-year-old son radiates in a way that might be divine.
In recent years, an irresistibly intuitive hypothesis has both salved and fuelled parental anxieties: it’s the phones.
NPR's Juana Summers speaks with Honoree Fanonne Jeffers about her new book Misbehaving at the Crossroads: Essays & Writings.
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