Arts & Life

Pages

Commentary
12:12 pm
Tue October 9, 2012

One Debate, Two Very Different Conversations

Credit Saul Loeb / AFP/Getty Images
President Obama and Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney finish their debate at the University of Denver on Oct. 3.

Originally published on Tue October 9, 2012 2:13 pm

When you consider how carefully staged and planned the debates are and how long they've been around, it's remarkable how often candidates manage to screw them up. Sometimes they're undone by a simple gaffe or an ill-conceived bit of stagecraft, like Gerald Ford's slip-up about Soviet domination of eastern Europe in 1976, or Al Gore's histrionic sighing in 2000. Sometimes it's just a sign of a candidate having a bad day, like Ronald Reagan's woolly ramblings in the first debate with Walter Mondale in 1984.

Read more
Book Reviews
10:56 am
Tue October 9, 2012

Bits Of Beauty Amidst The Gloom In 'Building Stories'

For the characters of Chris Ware's astonishingly ambitious comics project Building Stories, leading lives of quiet desperation is surprisingly noisy business. Plaintive, regretful and bitterly self-recriminating thoughts play on shuffle-repeat inside their heads, like a mordant Litany for the (I Wish I Were) Dead:

"Lately, I've been thinking a lot about the end of the world."

"At that point I was starting to get acquainted with the unfairness of life and learning it was better not to expect anything rather than set yourself up for disappointment."

Read more
Music News
6:31 am
Tue October 9, 2012

Muse Displays Huge Musical Presence

Credit AFP/Getty Images
Muse's Matthew Bellamy includes the heartbeat of his son in utero on the song, "Follow Me."

Originally published on Tue October 9, 2012 12:54 pm

Author Interviews
2:33 am
Tue October 9, 2012

'Mr. Penumbra' Bridges The Digital Divide

Originally published on Tue October 9, 2012 11:25 am

Author Robin Sloan has spent time on both sides of the digital divide, both as a short-story writer and an employee at Twitter — where he described his job as "something to do with figuring out the future of media."

Read more
Shots - Health Blog
2:31 am
Tue October 9, 2012

A Lively Mind: Your Brain On Jane Austen

Credit L.A. Cicero / Stanford University
Matt Langione, a subject in the study, reads Jane Austen's Mansfield Park. Results from the study suggest that blood flow in the brain differs during leisurely and critical reading activities.

Originally published on Tue October 16, 2012 10:35 am

At a recent academic conference, Michigan State University professor Natalie Phillips stole a glance around the room. A speaker was talking but the audience was fidgety. Some people were conferring among themselves, or reading notes. One person had dozed off.

Read more
'Another Thing': Test Your Clever Skills
5:38 pm
Mon October 8, 2012

'Another Thing': Singing The Housework Blues

Credit iStockphoto.com

Originally published on Mon October 8, 2012 9:38 pm

Each week, All Things Considered and Lenore Skenazy, author of the book and blog Free Range Kids, bring you "Another Thing," an on-air puzzle to test your cleverness skills. We take a trend in the news and challenge you to help us satirize it with a song title, a movie name or something else wacky.

This week's challenge: A study out of Norway found that couples who split the chores equally are 50 percent more likely to divorce.

Read more
Three Books...
7:03 am
Mon October 8, 2012

Disaster Strikes! Three Books Where Things Go Awry

Credit iStockphoto.com

Things go wrong in most stories. It would be a dull plot that did not include an upset, a setback or an obstacle.

But it takes a special kind of reversal to turn one of these plots into a black comedy. Often it's a tiny slip that becomes a vortex of disaster; sometimes it's a growing avalanche of humiliation.

But it's always hewn from the stuff of everyday life, which we see transformed into a minefield using only the slightest shift in perspective. And it allows us to laugh while giving thanks it's not happening to us.

Read more
New In Paperback
7:03 am
Mon October 8, 2012

New In Paperback Oct. 8-14

Credit Back Bay Books

Fiction and nonfiction releases from Daniel Woodrell, Christopher Moore, Chuck Palahniuk, Susan Orlean and Wade Davis.

Copyright 2012 National Public Radio. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Games & Humor
7:34 pm
Sun October 7, 2012

Three-Minute Fiction: 'No Down Time'

Credit iStockphoto.com

Originally published on Sun October 7, 2012 8:11 pm

Round 9 of Three-Minute Fiction. The new judge this round is thriller writer Brad Meltzer. And the new challenge this round, participants had to write a story in 600 words or less that revolved around a U.S. President--fictional or real. Nearly 4,000 storied were submitted. Host Guy Raz presents one of the favorites selected by our readers, "No Down Time" by Fiona Von Siemens of Los Angeles, Calif. You can read the full stories below along with other stories at www.npr.org/threeminutefiction.

Read more

Pages