Tuesday, February 28, 2023

Morning Coffee Link Roundup (2/28/23)

Today is Tuesday and somehow it's the last day of February already??

Ukraine war: Zelensky says situation in Bakhmut worsening (BBC)

IOC should consider banning Russia from Paris 2024 Olympics, 34 countries urge (Politico EU)

Progress! In a first, a South Korean court says same-sex partners should get government benefits (NPR)

I... see. Mexican president posts photo of what he claims is a Maya elf (The Guardian)

The FDA has cleared the first home flu and Covid test — but its maker just declared bankruptcy (STAT)

NH Senate committee recommends making Medicaid expansion permanent (NHPR)

Research shows Republicans and Democrats think differently about mental health (Grid)

‘Culture is hard to break’: Kenya’s medical schools face a shortage of cadavers (The Guardian)

Interesting... Longtime New York Times Film Critic A.O. Scott Moving to Book Review After the Oscars (THR)

A New View of the Most Explosive Moon in the Solar System (NYT)

And some longer reads...

Kherson's underground resistance: How ordinary people fought Russia from the shadows (NPR)

The unexpected ‘winners’ of the war in Ukraine: The people, companies and countries that have benefited from the turmoil (Grid)

A Turkish Photographer’s Tribute to the Girls of Quranic Schools (New Yorker)

The Sierra Club Tries to Move Past John Muir, George Floyd and #MeToo (NYT)

How Should Scientists Navigate the Ethics of Ancient Human DNA Research? (Smithsonian)

Monday, February 27, 2023

Morning Coffee Link Roundup (2/27/23)

Oh, Monday. Here's my weekly TV news roundup at The Televixen.

Results are still coming in, but this is good background: Nigeria is about to pick a new leader. What the election means for the country — and for Africa. (Grid)

SOMEONE is definitely at fault!! (Not necessarily the skater herself.) After Russia finds 'no fault' in doping scandal of figure skater, WADA appeals case (NPR)

With an eye on 2024, some states consider new protections for election workers (The 19th*)

Good for them: Gabrielle Union-Wade and Dwyane Wade Fight for Justice for Black Trans People at 2023 NAACP Image Awards (THR)

NH House gives initial marijuana legalization OK (NHPR)

FINALLY. He's been terrible in lots of ways for years. Dilbert cartoon dropped by US newspapers over creator’s racist comments (The Guardian)

Health leaders are ‘cheerleading’ for childhood vaccines as student vaccination rates drop (NH Bulletin)

From outdoor sessions to historically close split, NH House Clerk Paul Smith aims to keep 400 lawmakers moving (NHPR)

Space dust from 4.2bn-year-old asteroid could hold key to preventing cataclysmic collisions with Earth (The Guardian)

Digital Scans Reveal Secrets of ‘Golden Boy’ Mummy (Smithsonian)

And some longer reads:

A year of war in Ukraine as witnessed by Guardian photographers – photo essay (The Guardian)

How Vladimir Putin sells his war against ‘the West’ (Politico EU)

Jimmy Carter’s real legacy: Saving millions of lives from a debilitating disease (Grid)

For British Farmers, the Effects of Brexit Have Become Clearer (NYT)

9 diseases that keep epidemiologists up at night (NPR)

Wednesday, February 22, 2023

Morninig Coffee Link Roundup (2/22/23)

Today is Wednesday. Sorry if the spacing wound up weird on some screen resolutions yesterday - hopefully that was a fluke.

A view from the epicenter of Turkey’s nightmare earthquake: “It’s bleak” (Grid)

U.N. says recorded civilian toll of 8,000 in Ukraine is 'tip of the iceberg' (Yahoo! News)

Russian journalist Maria Ponomarenko sentenced to 6 years in jail over post on Mariupol strike (Politico EU)

Bangladesh shuts down main opposition newspaper (The Guardian)

Safety measure or book banning tool? K-12 obscene materials bill sparks heated debate (NH Bulletin)

Yay for him!! Chicago White Sox prospect Anderson Comas comes out as gay: "Fight for your dreams" (CBS News)

Oh no: The maker of Enfamil recalls 145,000 cans of infant formula over bacteria risks (NPR)

Anti-Defamation League Releases New Report on Impact of Kanye “Ye” West’s Antisemitic Statements (THR)

Drying Great Salt Lake Could Expose Millions to Toxic Arsenic-Laced Dust (Smithsonian)

Scientists steer lightning bolts with lasers for the first time (The Guardian)

And some longer reads:

Inside the hell of East Palestine: Unanswered questions, frustration and the lingering threat of toxic chemicals (Grid)

Sickle Cell Cure Brings Mix of Anxiety and Hope (NYT)

Can 3-D Printing Help Solve the Housing Crisis? (New Yorker)

Busted and Broken Fossils Show How Dinosaurs Fought (Smithsonian)

Learning From Queer Libraries and Archives in a Time of Erasure (Autostraddle)

Monday, February 20, 2023

Morning Coffee Link Roundup (2/20/23)

Today is Monday and I have the day off! This would not have been my first choice of a holiday for my company to add this year, but I am also not looking a day off gift horse in the mouth. Here's my weekly TV news roundup at The Televixen.

Biden has made a secret trip to Kyiv as Russia's war there enters its 2nd year (NPR) 

East Palestine train derailment is the latest in a disturbing trend of hazmat incidents along America’s railways (Grid)

Farmworker group says Hannaford's ethics help line hasn't fixed living conditions (NHPR)

Ashley Diamond won a legal victory to protect incarcerated trans people in 2016. Now, she’s suing again. (The 19th*)

The radicalization of Michel Houellebecq (Politico EU)

An Interview With the Guy Who Has All Your Data (Gizmodo)

Congratulations to Jupiter! Jupiter Reclaims Title of Planet With the Most Moons (Smithsonian)

An A.I. Translation Tool Can Help Save Dying Languages. But at What Cost? (Slate)

Archaeologist hails possibly oldest mummy yet found in Egypt (The Guardian)

A Fossil Flower Trapped in Amber Had a Mistaken Identity for 150 Years (NYT)

And some longer reads:

Exxon Scientists Predicted Global Warming, Even as Company Cast Doubts, Study Finds (NYT)

In a post-Dobbs world, pathologists who study pregnancy loss walk a thin line between medicine and the law (STAT)

What does a world with billions of old people look like? Asian countries are searching for answers (Grid)

Five Revolutionary Technologies Helping Scientists Study Polar Bears (Smithsonian)

John le Carré’s Search for a Vocation (New Yorker)

Sunday, February 19, 2023

Book Review: The Spare Man by Mary Robinette Kowal

The Spare Man by Mary Robinette Kowal
Adult science fiction/mystery
Tor Books
October 11, 2022

Tesla Crane, a brilliant inventor and an heiress, is on her honeymoon on an interplanetary space liner, cruising between the Moon and Mars. She’s traveling incognito and is reveling in her anonymity. Then someone is murdered and the festering chowderheads who run security have the audacity to arrest her spouse. Armed with banter, martinis and her small service dog, Tesla is determined to solve the crime so that the newlyweds can get back to canoodling—and keep the real killer from striking again.

The Spare Man has a great, simple hook - it's The Thin Man in space! And if that one-liner grabs you, then yes, it's as delightful as it sounds, go get it right now. However, if you haven't read or seen The Thin Man, don't worry - like the best retellings, there are some fun references here for fans of the original, but it also stands fully on its own. (And yes, Nick and Nora fans, there's a dog. Her name is Gimlet. She's great.

I love traditional mysteries, but I've also been increasingly appreciating books that blend mysteries with other genres, and an interplanetary spaceship, once you start thinking about it, is a perfect mystery setting. Talk about a locked room. Kowal does a great job of really integrating the mystery with the science fiction elements - the setting isn't window dressing, but intrinsic to the way the mystery unfolds, and the different genre aspects feel very balanced. And the sci-fi worldbuilding is fascinating and intricate without ever feeling like a data dump; this is definitely helped by the humor and the way Kowal's style keeps things moving at a bright, sparkling pace.

The main couple is M/F and never mentions who else they might or might not be attracted to, so I hesitate to call the book queer, but it definitely feels queer, and it's a thoroughly queernorm world, where everyone mentions their pronouns as a matter of course, relationships and families come in all sorts of configurations, and characters' hobbies, styles of dress, etc. have nothing to do with their genders. In this way it was extremely refreshing. There's also lots of ethnic and racial diversity, and explorations of the effects that disability and trauma have had on the characters' lives.

I highly recommend this one and definitely hope there are more Tesla Crane mysteries in our future. Bonus: There are fun cocktail recipes at the beginning of each chapter!

Author's Site | Amazon | Bookshop

Thursday, February 16, 2023

Morning Coffee Link Roundup (2/16/23)

Thursday! So close to a three-day weekend! (My company added Presidents Day as a holiday this year and I have mixed feelings on that specific choice but am VERY excited for a day off.)

Nicola Sturgeon unexpectedly quits as first minister of Scotland amid swirl of political setbacks, citing ‘brutality’ of public life (CNN)

Russian banks and exports set to be hit in new EU sanctions (Politico EU)

‘We’re Scared, Too’: Ohio Residents Press for Answers on Train Derailment at Meeting (NYT)

The Myth of the Iowa Caucuses Got Busted (New Yorker)

'New York Times' stories on trans youth slammed by writers — including some of its own (NPR)

Twitter is just showing everyone all of Elon Musk’s tweets now (The Verge)

This is great: Now available at a public library in Lebanon: naloxone, an opioid reversal drug (NHPR)

Phony Managerial Positions Created to Avoid Overtime Pay, New Study Shows (Gizmodo)

Scary monsters: how virtual reality could help people cope with anxiety (The Guardian)

Real "don't know why these guys would live together! Obviously just roommates!!!" energy here: See the Lavish Pompeii Home Owned by Two Men Freed From Slavery (Smithsonian)

And some longer reads:

Turkey’s Earthquake Response Is as Political as the Conditions That Increased the Devastation (New Yorker)

Is an Arctic ‘Cold War’ coming? How climate change and the war in Ukraine are driving tensions. (Grid)

How the Myth of the American Frontier Got Its Start (Smithsonian)

Not so faux: How the ‘fake’ fur industry is secretly selling you real fur (Grid)

I am VERY SKEPTICAL: A behind-the-scenes look at how the pitch timer works (MLB.com)

Wednesday, February 15, 2023

Morning Coffee Link Roundup (2/15/23)

I guess it's Wednesday! I was supposed to go to the dentist this morning but they called and rescheduled. A reprieve!

Dianne Feinstein is retiring. Could Adam Schiff replace her? (Vox)

Nikki Haley Is Running for President, the First G.O.P. Rival to Take On Trump (NYT)

Not great!! Italy regional elections: Right-wing coalition wins landslide victory (Politico EU)

Dictator Hun Sen shuts down Cambodia’s VOD broadcaster (The Guardian)

“I Owe Turkey, Because I Was a Refugee”: A Young Syrian on the Earthquake’s Devastation (New Yorker)

South Dakota is about to pass a trans healthcare ban (LGBTQ Nation)

Four things to consider as Sununu presents state budget plan to lawmakers (NHPR)

"Ebbs" is a strong word!! But wow, I spend so much time looking at this tracker. I'll miss it. As the pandemic ebbs, an influential COVID tracker shuts down (NPR)

Aw, good for him! (He's one of the highest-level male players to come out while playing.) Jakub Jankto: Czech Republic international midfielder comes out as gay (BBC)

Ancient DNA Reveals a Genetic History of the Viking Age (Smithsonian)

And some longer reads:

Can Putin win? (Politico EU)

Want to stop police abuse? Screen out the abusers, experts say. (Grid)

Sigh: Vaccine Makers Kept $1.4 Billion in Prepayments for Canceled Covid Shots for the World’s Poor (NYT)

The Meaning of African American Studies (New Yorker)

A.I. Is Becoming More Conversational. But Will It Get More Honest? (NYT)

Tuesday, February 14, 2023

Morning Coffee Link Roundup (2/14/23)

Today is Tuesday. Unfortunately we're opening with something awful that was breaking as I was heading to bed last night, so I haven't read a ton yet, but linking you to updates...

Live Updates: Gunman Is Dead After Killing 3 at Michigan State, Police Say (NYT)

Netanyahu launches contentious overhaul as thousands protest (WaPo)

Dissident Iranian director Mohammad Rasoulof released from prison (The Guardian)

Cyprus’ ex-Foreign Minister Christodoulides elected president (Politico EU)

Ugh: A judge blocks the release of most of a grand jury report in Georgia election probe (NPR)

UGH: New ‘provisional ballot’-type system to debut next week during Rochester special election (NH Bulletin)

The U.N. Secretary-General’s Searing Message for the Fossil-Fuel Industry (New Yorker)

“Loving” Christian Super Bowl ads connected to anti-LGBTQ+ hate group (LGBTQ Nation)

A New Discovery Puts Panama as the Site of the First Successful Slave Rebellion (Smithsonian)

William Hogarth works at London’s oldest hospital to be restored (The Guardian)

And some longer reads:

Amnesty in Turkey for Construction Violations Is Scrutinized After Quake (NYT)

The U.S. effort to arm Ukraine starts in Scranton, Pennsylvania (Grid)

A philosopher’s death and the two realities of Orbán’s Hungary (Politico EU)

Coming soon: Beef, coffee, and chocolate, without a side of environmental destruction (Vox)

‘I’ve been in that room’: How HBO’s ‘The Last of Us’ resonated for a survivor of the AIDS crisis (The 19th*)

Wednesday, February 8, 2023

Morning Coffee Link Roundup (2/8/23)

Somehow it is only Wednesday, but we can get through it together! BTW, I haven't had time to read much SOTU analysis yet so there will probably be more to come of that in the next few days, but there's a decent overview at the top of the "longer reads" section below if you're looking for that.

This is just tragic, and obviously still unfolding, so pointing you to another page for live updates today: Live Updates: Quake Death Toll Passes 11,000 in Turkey and Syria (NYT)

Iranian Activists Greet Prisoner Amnesty With Skepticism, Calling It An Attempt To Change The Narrative (RFE)

This is so great! Hong Kong’s top court rules surgery is not needed to register gender change (WaPo)

Don't love this!! French Senate backs AI-powered video surveillance for Paris 2024 Olympics (Politico EU)

Such an important step: AbbVie's blockbuster drug Humira finally loses its 20-year, $200 billion monopoly (NPR)

This is SO LATE: After this weekend’s cold, 'ice-in' is declared on Lake Winnipesaukee (NHPR)

I love this idea: A new bill in the Mass. Legislature could subsidize local newspaper subscriptions (Boston Globe)

Oh phew: Radioactive Capsule Safely Recovered in Western Australia (Smithsonian)

Picture imperfect: light pollution from satellites is becoming an existential threat to astronomy (The Guardian)

Quarry workers make 'unexpected' discovery of ship from Queen Elizabeth I's reign (Live Science)

And some longer reads:

5 winners and 2 losers from Biden’s 2023 State of the Union (Vox)

Russia after Putin: When and how it might happen — and how dangerous it might get (Grid)

The Crisis of Missing Migrants (New Yorker)

Somalia hunger crisis raises a question for the world: When is a famine a famine? (Grid)

How to Write English Prose (The Lamp)

Sunday, February 5, 2023

Morning Coffee Link Roundup (2/5/23)

Today is Sunday and it's above zero out already!!! Balmy!

The U.S. has downed a Chinese spy balloon off the coast of South Carolina (NPR)

Pervez Musharraf, Pakistan's ex-president, dies aged 79 (BBC)

Heartbreaking and terrifying: Hide your books to avoid felony charges, Fla. schools tell teachers (WaPo)

Ukrainian Artist Creates Mirror Mandala At Jewish Cemetery In Poland (RFE)

I think this is GREAT and truly cannot wait to see the fallout here in NH: Democrats Overhaul Party’s Primary Calendar, Upending a Political Tradition (NYT)

I hate this so much. This is money from the public school budget. Amazon, private schools are among the top beneficiaries of NH's school choice program (NHPR)

California’s dark history of forced sterilizations comes into focus as it seeks victims to pay reparations (STAT)

Social Media Use Is Linked to Brain Changes in Teens, Research Finds (NYT)

Charles Tuckett Senior and the British Museum Bindery fire of 1865 (Untold lives blog)

True: America Deserves Coffee Cubes (The Takeout)

And some longer reads:

How the ‘contagion effect’ leads to group use of excessive force by police: Expert (Grid)

Muzzled by DeSantis, Critical Race Theory Professors Cancel Courses or Modify Their Teaching (ProPublica)

Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act is no end-run around abortion bans (STAT)

The Science Behind the Oldest Trees on Earth (Smithsonian)

The Archaeological Excavation of Clachtoll Broch (History Hit)

Saturday, February 4, 2023

Morning Coffee Link Roundup (2/4/23)

Good morning! Today is Saturday and it is VERY COLD here in New Hampshire.

Chinese balloon punctures Blinken's plans, leaving U.S.-China ties adrift (NPR)

‘We’re fighting for a free future’: the Chechen battalions siding with Kyiv (The Guardian)

Jordan, Latvia and Israel Shake Up Diplomatic Corps After “Shadow Diplomats” Investigation (ProPublica)

EU top court: Belgium can’t refuse to extradite Catalan separatists without very good reason (Politico EU)

What a good list of senators: Senators ask mifepristone manufacturer to list miscarriage as a use for abortion pill (The 19th*)

True: Sexual orientation census undercounts older people and those who shun labels (The Guardian)

YUP: Charging for Twitter API access risks killing the things that made Twitter great (Grid)

This story is WILD: Painter Peter Doig Wins $2.5 Million in Sanctions Against a Gallery That Tried to Force Him to Take Credit for Another Artist’s Work (Artnet)

‘Self-Healing’ Concrete May Have Preserved Ancient Roman Structures (Smithsonian)

8 Brilliant Dark Academia Books by Authors of Color (Book Riot)

And some longer reads...

Who is Yevgeny Prigozhin? The bloodsoaked rise of a key figure in Putin’s Ukraine war (Grid)

Atlanta shooting part of alarming US crackdown on environmental defenders (The Guardian)

A Toxic Stew on Cape Cod: Human Waste and Warming Water (NYT)

8 Memoirs by Women About Multicultural Identity and Belonging (Electric Lit)

A Philosophy Professor’s Final Class (New Yorker)