Audio

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Why aren't there more realistic portrayals of scientists in literary fiction?  Cell biologist and novelist Jennifer Rohn founded LabLit.com, a website that's at the center of the new movement calling for more and better science in fiction. 

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Psychologist Stanley Coren tells Jim Fleming how the modern dog developed and why they have such an important place in people's lives.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

The protest at the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation has caught fire. Its camp is now larger than most small towns in North Dakota. The protest is not just about an oil pipeline from North Dakota to Illinois. It's about water. Journalist John Fleck, who's spent decades writing about water disputes in the West, tells Anne Strainchamps how the Standing Rock protest figures into this history.

 

 

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Sherman Alexie is one of America’s most acclaimed young writers with strong opinions about what it means to be a “real” Indian.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Steve Paulson reports on the tremendous influence and great power of the Pulitzer Prize winning Michiko Kakutani.  She’s the provocative and controversial daily book reviewer for the New York Times.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

A film from the point-of-view of the perpetrators, not the victims, of the 1965 killing of over 1,000,000 suspected Communists in Indonesia.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Travel writer Tony Perrotet has spent his career traveling all over the globe, but he skipped the Mediterranean tour, choosing Tierra del Fuego or the Amazon over Rome. But the discovery of an ancient guide book launched him on his most exotic journey yet, in the footsteps of the Ancients.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Sarah Winchester (born 1840) was the heiress to the Winchester Estate with a 50% holding of the Winchester Repeating Rifle Company. She used her vast fortune to construct a mansion for 38 consecutive years.

Popular legend held that she was cursed by all those who were killed by Winchester rifles. The only way to alleviate her suffering was to continue to add on to her mansion, filling it with strange sealed rooms and staircases and corridors leading nowhere. Pamela Haag tells her tale and gives it some meaning beyond a mere ghost story.

Pages

Subscribe to Audio