Happy October. Since my last newsletter, I’ve done some intense reporting for the New York Times–first on some pretty scary news, and then on some research that lets us all delight in the workings of nature.

 

First the bad news. Across the United States and Canada, the population of all birds has declined 29 percent since 1970. There are lots of other animals than birds we should be mindful of, of course, but birds speak to people in a special way. Even in the middle of cities, they can visit us from the natural world. And those visits are getting rarer, probably thanks to a number of human factors, from cats to industrial farming. Continue reading “Friday’s Elk, October 4, 2019”

Greetings! I wanted to get this update out in time to let folks in Washington DC know that I’ll be speaking about She Has Her Mother’s Laugh at the Smithsonian Institute on Tuesday. I’ll be in conversation with Kirk Johnson, the director of the National Museum of Natural History. Please join us! Details can be found here.


Mini-Brains in Space and More

Here are a few things I wrote for the New York Times since my last newsletter:

“Scientists Find the Skull of Humanity’s Ancestor, on a Computer “

“Why Aren’t Cancer Drugs Better? The Targets Might Be Wrong”

“Organoids Are Not Brains. How Are They Making Brain Waves? “

 

Upcoming Talks

 

September 17, 2019 Washington, DC. Smithsonian. “An Evening With Carl Zimmer.”

October 12, 2019 Morristown, NJ. Morristown Festival of Books.

October 16, 2019 Boston, MA. Allen Frontiers Symposium. Keynote address.

October 23, 2019 San Francisco. Arts & Ideas at the JCCSF–in conversation with author Annalee Newitz.

October 24, 2019 San Francisco. The Exploratorium.

November 9, 2019 Charleston, SC. Charleston To Charleston Literary Festival

December 3, 2019 Nashville. Vanderbilt University. Chancellor Lecture Series.

My latest book, She Has Her Mother’s Laugh, is now out in paperback. You can order it now from fine book mongers, including AmazonBarnes and NobleBAMHudson Booksellers, and IndieBound.

You can find information and ordering links for all my books here. You can also follow me on TwitterFacebookGoodreads, and LinkedIn. If someone forwarded this email to you, you can subscribe to it here.

Best wishes, Carl

Originally published September 15, 2019. Copyright 2019 Carl Zimmer.

Happy Fourth of July weekend! Recently, I taped a conversation with Bill Nye and his co-host Corey Powell on their new podcast, Science Rules, about She Has Her Mother’s Laugh. My daughter Charlotte first got the science bug in grade school by watching DVDs of Bill Nye the Science Guy. So I invited her to join me on the trip down to New York to meet her icon (knowing that she’d never forgive me if I went solo).

Once we got there, the producers invited her to join the conversation, since we were going to talk about heredity. I know I’m totally biased, but I think she did great. Charlotte’s heading to college this fall with plans to major in astrophysics–but maybe she should keep radio in mind. You can listen here. Continue reading “Friday’s Elk, July 5, 2019”

Today’s the day! She Has Her Mother’s Laugh is now available in paperback.

You can order it now from fine book mongers, including AmazonBarnes and NobleBAMHudson Booksellers, and IndieBound.

I’ve been hearing from a number of book groups who’ve chosen the book to read, and I’ve even spoken at a few of their meetings, either in person or via Skype. Dutton, my publisher, has put together a free discussion guide. Check it out.

I’m giving a burst of new talks around the paperback launch. Last week I spoke at the Bloom Festival in Copenhagen. You can watch the video of my talk about the past and future of heredity on YouTube. Check out the talk list at the bottom of this email for more events.

Speaking of speaking–back in February, I spoke with David Quammen at the Harvard Museum of Natural History on the joys and challenges of writing books about science. Now our conversation is up on Youtube, too.
 


The Billion-Year-Old Fungus

Fungi are nature’s invisible giants. Now, with the discovery of fossils in Canada, their record on this planet has more than doubled. A billion years ago, it seems, fungi had already evolved and might have been growing on land. But land plants, their key partner today, did not yet exist. They would not evolve for hundreds of millions of years. So what were the fungi up to? Here’s my story for the New York Times on this thrilling discovery/mystery.

Also this month, I wrote about a milestone in synthetic biology. Scientists in England have synthesized a genome for bacteria from scratch.

Finally, here’s my “Matter” column on a quest to bring Big Data to ordinary medicine–led by a scientist who invented “the narcissome.”
 

PLUS…

Here are some of the stories that stuck with me over the past month:

Gene edits to ‘CRISPR babies’ might have shortened their life expectancy, by Sara Reardon (Nature)

How a Chinese Scientist Broke the Rules to Create the First Gene-Edited Babies, by Preetika Rana (Wall Street Journal)

Plenty of Fantasy in HBO’s ‘Chernobyl,’ but the Truth Is Real, by Henry Fountain (New York Times)

One million species face extinction, U.N. report says. And humans will suffer as a result, by Darryl Fears (Washington Post)

A million threatened species? Thirteen questions and answers, by Andy Purvis (IPBES)

Children Change Their Parents’ Minds about Climate Change, by Lydia Denworth

Saving Ecosystems to Protect the Climate, and Vice Versa: a Global Deal for Nature, by Sabrina Shankman (Inside Climate News)

Trump Administration Hardens Its Attack on Climate Science, by Coral Davenport and Mark Landler (New York Times)

E.P.A. Plans to Get Thousands of Pollution Deaths Off the Books by Changing Its Math, by Lisa Friedman (New York Times)

How a Half-Inch Beetle Finds Fires 80 Miles Away, by Jennifer Frazer (Scientific American)

Navigating Newsrooms as a Minority, by Kendra Pierre-Louis (The Open Notebook)

Huge Racial Disparities Found in Deaths Linked to Pregnancy, by Roni Caryn Rabin (The New York Times)

U.S. Fossil Fuel Subsidies Exceed Pentagon Spending, by Tim Dickinson (Rolling Stone)

Eugenics, Anti-Immigration Laws Of The Past Still Resonate Today, Journalist Says (Fresh Air, NPR)

Viruses Can Scatter Their Genes Among Cells and Reassemble, by Viviane Callier (Quanta)

The devastating biological consequences of homelessness, by Amy Maxmen (Nature)

Shrinking Success, by Scott Stossel (The American Scholar)

The domino effect, by Raychelle Burks (Chemistry World)

Threats By Text, A Mob Outside The Door: What Health Workers Face In The Ebola Zone, by Nurith Aizenman (Goats and Soda, NPR)

Fighting Ebola When Mourners Fight the Responders, by Joseph Goldstein (The New York Times)

“5-HTTLPR: A Pointed Review,”by Scott Alexander (Slate Star Codex) [Since it’s not a great headline, here’s a snippet to whet your appetite: “How many of our scientific edifices are built on air? How many useless products are out there under the guise of good science? We still don’t know.”]

 

Upcoming Talks
June 13, 2019 Harvard Club of New York

June 23, 2019 Providence, RI. Society for the Study of Evolution. Vice Presidential Symposium: Politics, the Public, and Science: Navigating the New Reality”

July 2, 2019 Lausanne, Switzerland. World Conference of Science Journalists

July 13, 2019 New York. Northeast Conference on Science and Skepticism Keynote Address

August 31, 2019 Decatur, GA. Decatur Book Festival.

September 17, 2019 Washington, DC. Smithsonian. “An Evening With Carl Zimmer.” Details to come.

NEW–> October 12, 2019 Morristown, NJ. Morristown Festival of Books. Details to come.

October 23, 2019 San Francisco. Arts & Ideas at the JCCSF. Details to come.

October 24, 2019 San Francisco. The Exploratorium. Details to come.

You can find information and ordering links for my books here. You can also follow me on TwitterFacebookGoodreads, and LinkedIn. If someone forwarded this email to you, you can subscribe to it here.

Best wishes, Carl

Originally published June 4, 2019. Copyright 2019 Carl Zimmer.