- Wildlife making comeback after Eaton fire
. Daily Edition • May 3, 2025 SUPPORTED BY When was the last time you wrote a letter — not an email or a long-winded text, but a real pen-to-paper correspondence? If you’re anything like us, it’s maybe been awhile, but writer Rachel Syme wants to change that. During the pandemic, she started a letter-exchanging program that now has over 10,000 members, and she published a book on the communication medium in January. Get Syme’s “practical and whimsical advice” for starting a letter-writing…Read more
- The 5 cities most prepared for the future of mobility
Wake up to good news. Supported By Friday • January 5, 2024 Did you know some houseplants can live for decades, even being passed down through generations? That may sound impossible to anyone with a history of forgetting to water their indoor greenery, but if you need proof, simply look to Lisa Eldred Steinkopf. She cares for her late mother’s Boston fern, which appears in family photos from as far back as the 1960s. “Every time I water, I think of [my mom],” Steinkopf told The Washington...
- A major insulin win
Wake up to good news. Supported By Thursday • January 4, 2024 As 2023 came to a close, many public libraries around the country — from the three expansive New York City systems to Minnesota’s Hennepin County — compiled lists of the most borrowed books of the year. Bonnie Garmus’ Lessons in Chemistry, which was adapted into an Apple TV+ series in October, took the top spot in many cities, including New York, Seattle, Boston, and Cleveland. Meanwhile, Libby, an app that compiles e-books and...