Book alert! She Has Her Mother’s Laugh is coming out in paperback on June 4. I’m delighted to share the snazzily updated cover:


You can pre-order it now from fine book mongers, including Amazon, Barnes and Noble, BAM, Hudson Booksellers, and IndieBound.


Seven Misconceptions about Heredity

In the cover story for the May/June issue of Skeptical Inquirer, I explore some of the biggest misconceptions about heredity. With the ongoing explosion of DNA testing, it’s urgent that we understand what the results of those tests can and cannot tell us.


So long, Denisova

Eight years ago, I had the privilege to introduce a new word into the New York Times lexicon: Denisovan. I was writing about the discovery of human-like DNA in a fossil tooth in a Siberian cave called Denisova. It represented a new lineage of humans, which the researchers named after the cave.

As the years passed, archaeologists found more Denisovan remains in the cave, spanning over 200,000 years. But they didn’t find any Denisovans anywhere else, despite compelling–albeit indirect–evidence that they lived across much of Asia, and perhaps beyond.

Now, at last, a Denisovan beyond Denisova has come to light. The irony is that the fossil was actually discovered 40 years ago in Tibet. You can read my story about this remarkable development here.

PLUS…

Here are some of the stories I enjoyed reading this past month–

Reassessing Seal Rescue, by Cathleen O’Grady (Hakai)

Jakarta Is Sinking, by Matt Simon (Wired)

US Science Academy Leaders Approve Plan to Expel Sexual Harassers, by Sara Reardon (Nature)

Permafrost Collapse Is Accelerating Carbon Release, by Merritt R. Turetsky et al (Nature)

U.N. Issues Urgent Warning on the Growing Peril of Drug-Resistant Infections, by Andrew Jacobs (New York Times)

Scientists Discover Nearly 200,000 Kinds of Ocean Viruses, by Jonathan Lambert (Quanta)

The World Lost a Belgium-sized Area of Primary Rainforests Last Year, by Mikaela Weisse and Elizabeth Dow Goldman (World Resources Institute)

How Kenya’s Push for Development Is Threatening Its Famed Wild Lands, by Adam Welz (Yale e360)

USDA orders scientists to say published research is ‘preliminary’ By Ben Guarino (Washington Post)

‘I Want What My Male Colleague Has, and That Will Cost a Few Million Dollars’, by Mallory Pickett (New York Times)

Scientists Partly Restore Activity in Dead-Pig Brains, by Ed Yong (The Atlantic)

Facing Up to Injustice in Genome Science, by Giorgia Guglielmi (Nature)

Upcoming Talks
May 16, 2019 Ames, Iowa. Genome Writer’s Guild

May 25-26, 2019 Copenhagen: Bloom Festival.

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.

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

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

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

November 21, 2019 Paris. TimeWorld 2019

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

Best wishes, Carl

Originally published May 3, 2019. Copyright 2019 Carl Zimmer.

I held off on the April edition of Friday’s Elk for a couple late-breaking pieces I’ve been working on. Here they are, plus some interesting reading from other writers if you’re looking for something to feed your mind. And be sure to check out the new entries in my speaking schedule at the end of this email. (Even more talks to come!)

Continue reading “Friday’s Elk, April 12, 2019”

Happy March! Here’s a late-winter selection of updates…


Doubling DNA, Twins CSI, and Mice in Conversation

Since the last Friday’s Elk, I wrote three pieces for the New York Times on three rather different topics.

1. Your DNA is spelled out in an alphabet of four “letters.” Now scientists have added another four, and found that this new eight-letter DNA can still work as a way to store genetic information. Perhaps we will use this molecule to store movies and spreadsheets someday. Leading the effort is a scientist named Steven Benner. You can listen to Benner and me talk about just how weird life can get in this episode of my podcast, “What Is Life?”

2. Identical twins are not exactly identical, even though they descend from a single fertilized egg containing a single genome. Mutations arise in embryos as their cells divide, and when twin embryos split apart, one may end up with a few mutations that the other lacks, and vice versa. Forensic scientists have wondered for many years if a DNA test could ever tell twins apart. I tell the story of the long search for such a test–and puzzle over why it isn’t being used right now to solve cold cases.

3. Our power of language may be one of the most important features that sets our species apart from all other living things. But language’s building blocks may have been evolving for 100 million years. I write about a strange singing mouse that seems to communicate in conversations–and uses some of the same brain circuitry we use to do so. (Mouse photo by Christopher Auger-Dominguez)


What’s In Your Genome?

The newest episode of Radiolab takes a look at that bizarre attic that is our genome. I talked with producer Pat Walters about some of the junk that, with a little evolutionary altering, has become downright useful–even essential. Take a listen. (Here’s a story I wrote for the New York Times Magazine about junk DNA, and here’s a blog post I wrote about the viral gene without which none of us would be born.)

By coincidence, a couple other podcasts have just posted interviews about She Has Her Mother’s LaughPoint of Inquiry and Curiosity Daily.

Cold, Hot, Cold

As spring approaches, I’m starting to scramble again, traveling hither and yon to give talks. This past week, I headed to snowy Cambridge, Mass., for a conversation with David Quammen, then journeyed to the sultry city of Adelaide in Australia for their writers festival, and finally returned to the snow to give a lecture at the University of Illinois.

Here is a nice write-up in the Harvard Gazette of my conversation with Quammen about the tree of life, writing about nature, and more. The video will be available within a few weeks; I will keep you posted.

 

From Bellybuttons to the Roman Empire

Tim Flannery, an Australian biologist and author of many fine books, wrote a gratifying review of She Has Her Mother’s Laugh for the New York Review of Books. (First time I’ve been reviewed in their pages!)

Snip:

“A grand and sprawling book that investigates all aspects of inheritance, from ancient Roman law to childhood learning, and on to the bacteria that inhabit our belly buttons (which are surprisingly varied among individuals). Along the way, the book provides many amusing historical anecdotes and important scientific insights…Some of the most fascinating material Zimmer covers concerns the phenomena of mosaicism and chimerism, in which individuals are made up of cells with differing genetic inheritances.”

 

Upcoming Talks
More talks coming soon…

March 15, 2019 Brookline, MA.“Science On Screen” at the Coolidge Theater. (A double-feature: a talk about heredity and a screening of the heredity-based comedy, Flirting With Disaster.)

April 9, 2019 Wellesley College. Mayer Lecture. Details to come.

May 25-26, 2019 Copenhagen: Bloom Festival.

If you’ve enjoyed reading She Has Her Mother’s Laugh, please rate/review it on your favorite book site, such as Goodreads or Amazon. Thanks!

You can find information and ordering links for my other 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 March 8, 2019. Copyright 2019 Carl Zimmer.

New Year, New Podcast

For the first Friday’s Elk of 2019, I have some good news. In some earlier newsletters I wrote about a live series of conversations I hosted in New York about the nature of life itself. Now you can listen to the podcast edition of “What Is Life?”–eight episodes of talk with fascinating thinkers about what it means to be alive. Here’s a link to iTunes. Also I’ve put together a page on my web site with show notes and embedded recordings, plus a set of pages on Medium. It should also be propagating itself to Sticher and other podcast services. Thanks to Ben Lillie and all the good people at Caveat for making this happen!

Decoding Watson

PBS recently ran a thorough and provocative documentary about Jim Watson, who shared the Nobel Prize for discovering the structure of DNA. You can watch it here. I show up from time to time to offer some talking-head narration. For more on the show, you can read this New York Times article by Amy Harmon–and her follow-up piece on the fall-out that ensured after the show aired.

CRISPR on The Daily

Jennifer Senior interviewed me about the ongoing CRISPR baby saga for the Daily podcast from the New York Times. Listen here.

Crickets and Spies

Here’s what I’ve been writing for the New York Times since the last Friday’s Elk:

1. Numerous remains of Aboriginal Australians are scattered in museum collections around the world. DNA may help bring them back home to rest.

2. In Cuba, American diplomats have suffered mysterious neurological symptoms. One common report was that they heard strange sounds before falling ill. Was it a sonic weapon–or Cuban crickets?

3. There’s evidence suggesting that our microbiome is talking to our brains. And that conversation may have an influence on the development of conditions ranging from Alzheimer’s to autism. For this feature, I tried to balance the excitement of the science with the profound mysteries that remain. Don’t expect a quick probiotic cure for Parkinson’s any time soon.

4. A quarter million years of Denisovan history. The Denisovans are an extinct branch of the human family, known only from a single Siberian cave. Now their fossils have a clear-cut timeline. They lived in the cave for at least 250,000 years and may have gained the powers of self-expression along the way.

New to the Calendar

A couple updates to my upcoming appearances:

If you’re heading to the annual AAAS meeting in Washington DC, please consider coming to my lecture on Saturday at noon. I’ll be signing books afterwards.

I’m looking forward to a live conversation with David Quammen at Harvard on February 28.

Upcoming Talks

February 16, 2019 Washington DC AAAS Topical Lecture: “Heredity: Our Defining Mystery”…followed by a book signing.

February 20, 2019 Connecticut College, New London CT: “The Deep History of Global Affairs”

February 28, 2019 Harvard Museum of Natural History: A Conversation with David Quammen.

March 3, 2019 Adelaide Writer’s Week

March 7, 2019 University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. Thomas M. Siebel Lecture Series in Science and Society. Details to come.

March 15, 2019 Brookline, MA. “Science On Screen” at the Coolidge Theater. (A double-feature: a talk about heredity and a screening of the heredity-based comedy, Flirting With Disaster.)
April 9, 2019 Wellesley College. Mayer Lecture. Details to come.

May 25-26, 2019 Copenhagen: Bloom Festival. Details to come.

 

If you’ve enjoyed reading She Has Her Mother’s Laugh, please rate/review it on your favorite book site, such as Goodreads or Amazon. Thanks!

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

Best wishes, Carl

Originally published January 31, 2019. Copyright 2019 Carl Zimmer.


A Year in Friday’s Elk!

 

Thanks to everyone for subscribing to this newsletter through the year. Wrapping up 2018, I have some additional news to share about She Has Her Mother’s Laugh

1. The New York Times Book Review named it one of the notable books of the year.

2. The Guardian picked it as the Science Book of 2018.

3. She Has Her Mother’s Laugh also got onto a variety of other Best-of-2018 lists, including The Sunday Times (UK)Kirkus ReviewsNew Scientist,Smithsonian,Science News, and Science Friday

4. I made the long list for the PEN/EO Wilson Literary Science Writing Award alongside some amazing writers–both veterans and first-timers. Check them all out! Continue reading “Friday’s Elk, December 14, 2018”