Voxman got started with a film camera after admiring the black-and-white photography of Floyd Peterson, then the director of UI’s School of Music. He still shoots mostly film, developing it in a ...
How Orhan Pamuk's television adaptation of 1970s Istanbul for Netflix is taking over Turkey with its portrayal of love, ...
When someone says they are not okay, advice often fails. This curated selection of ten deeply honest books offers steadier ...
Book of the day: The Women illuminates the bravery of those who served in roles that received too little recognition. Its ...
Debut novel about two immigrants, trying to navigate their lives in a country where bosses have no compunction about ...
And if you're going to swap your phone for anything, let it be Filipino literature. The past year has given us an incredible slate of new local releases—books that are urgent, intimate, and reflective ...
Fil-Am poet and activist Tony Robles is set to release his new book, “Soup for the Storm,” a collection of poems about community in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene. Born in San Francisco and now ...
Why is Bollywood not adapting more from India’s rich literary canon? This week's Cinematic Saturday explores the widening gap ...
The winner of the Dylan Thomas Prize 2025 is a debut novel by a Palestinian author about the complexities that lie at the ...
Dr. Bhui challenges the myth of clinical neutrality, arguing that culture informs not only patients’ experiences of distress but also clinicians’ judgments about what counts as pathology. From ...
Naruto took the battle shonen genre to new heights, surpassing Dragon Ball with its emotional depth, strategic battles, and ...
The New Yorker publishes ‘The Ramble, NYC 1969,’ a book that has taken six decades to see the light of day and which showcases the black and white images shot on his visits to one of the ‘wildest’ are ...