What We Are Reading Today: Moths of the World

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Updated 30 March 2025
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What We Are Reading Today: Moths of the World

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  • Moths of the World is an essential guide to this astonishing group of insects, highlighting their diversity, metamorphoses, marvelous caterpillars, and much more

Author: David Wagner

With more than 160,000 named species, moths are a familiar sight to most of us, flickering around lights, pollinating wildflowers about meadows and gardens, and as unwelcome visitors to our woolens.

They come in a variety of colors, from earthy greens and browns to gorgeous patterns of infinite variety, and range in size from enormous atlas moths to tiny leafmining moths. 

Moths of the World is an essential guide to this astonishing group of insects, highlighting their diversity, metamorphoses, marvelous caterpillars, and much more.

 


REVIEW: Kuwaiti Palestinian author looks at women and disability in a transformative, speculative memoir

REVIEW: Kuwaiti Palestinian author looks at women and disability in a transformative, speculative memoir
Updated 10 April 2025
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REVIEW: Kuwaiti Palestinian author looks at women and disability in a transformative, speculative memoir

REVIEW: Kuwaiti Palestinian author looks at women and disability in a transformative, speculative memoir

JEDDAH: Kuwaiti Palestinian writer Shahd Alshammari’s new speculative memoir “Confetti and Ashes” is a bold departure from her previous work “Head Above Water,” which was longlisted for the Barbellion Prize in 2022.

Alshammari’s layered meditation on the disabled body as both a site of loss as well as endurance is propelled forward by sharp observations and a quiet brilliance that had me turning pages well into the night.

Her first memoir, “Head Above Water,” offered an unflinching look at navigating multiple sclerosis as an Arab woman teaching literature in Kuwait. Her latest, however, ventures into a realm where memory and personal narrative intersect with poetry, imagination, and otherworldly presences.

The voices of ghosts and Zari, her qareen — the jinn-companion assigned to each person in Islamic belief — transform Alshammari’s personal narrative. It becomes a dialogue, a captivating dance between the seen and unseen worlds.

This inclusion shakes up the conventional memoir structure to broaden the scope beyond Western frameworks of storytelling. It also offers readers a visceral look at the ways living with disability and chronic illness can disrupt and reshape an individual’s perspective and worldview.

The dreamlike and omniscient voice of the qareen also mirrors the disorientation and internal struggles that come with living with chronic illness and disability.

Alshammari astutely draws parallels between the disabled body and the female body in the social and cultural context of Kuwait. In a world of able-bodied norms, she reflects on their intersecting experiences of marginalization, scrutiny, and resistance.  

She rejects predictable storytelling, and not just in her writing, but also in life. Her body rebels, yet she defies societal stigmas — including concerns voiced from other women with MS.

She explores holistic wellness practices and eventually takes up squash, expanding her social circle and pushing her limits to build her mental and physical endurance.

In capturing her dual journeys of illness and wellness, the author invites readers to reflect on the disabled body not as a burden, but as a site of poetic possibility.

In “Confetti and Ashes,” Alshammari presents a profound reclamation of the self and cements herself as a vital voice in reimagining the female disabled experience.


What We Are Reading Today: ‘Whale: The Illustrated Biography’ by Asha De Vos

What We Are Reading Today: ‘Whale: The Illustrated Biography’ by Asha De Vos
Updated 09 April 2025
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What We Are Reading Today: ‘Whale: The Illustrated Biography’ by Asha De Vos

What We Are Reading Today: ‘Whale: The Illustrated Biography’ by Asha De Vos

Whales are the majestic giants of the ocean, yet much of their world remains a mystery to us. The routes of their vast oceanic migrations are largely elusive, as are the intricacies of their behavior and social dynamics.

This narrative biography takes you out beyond our shorelines and into the depths, providing an up-close exploration of the life of the whale.

Written by internationally acclaimed expert Asha de Vos, “Whale: The Illustrated Biography” blends engaging profiles of the best-known species with stunning illustrations to tell the story of these magnificent creatures in all their diversity and complexity.


What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Measure of Progress’ by Diane Coyle

What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Measure of Progress’ by Diane Coyle
Updated 08 April 2025
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What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Measure of Progress’ by Diane Coyle

What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Measure of Progress’ by Diane Coyle

The ways that statisticians and governments measure the economy were developed in the 1940s, when the urgent economic problems were entirely different from those of today.

In “The Measure of Progress,” Diane Coyle argues that the framework underpinning today’s economic statistics is so outdated that it functions as a distorting lens, or even a set of blinkers. 

When policymakers rely on such an antiquated conceptual tool, how can they measure, understand, and respond with any precision to what is happening in today’s digital economy?


What We Are Reading Today: ‘Stranger in the Village’

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Updated 08 April 2025
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What We Are Reading Today: ‘Stranger in the Village’

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  • Baldwin’s narrative transcends mere anecdote, evolving into a meditation on the legacy of Western colonialism and slavery

Author: James Baldwin

James Baldwin’s 1953 essay “Stranger in the Village,” from his seminal collection “Notes of a Native Son,” is a searing exploration of race, identity, and the weight of history.

Baldwin juxtaposes his experience as the first Black man in a remote Swiss village — where villagers gawk, children shout racial epithets, and his presence sparks both fascination and fear — with the entrenched racism of America.

Through this contrast, he dissects the paradox of being perceived as an exotic “stranger” in Europe while remaining an oppressed outsider in his homeland.

Baldwin’s narrative transcends mere anecdote, evolving into a meditation on the legacy of Western colonialism and slavery.

In Switzerland, the villagers’ “innocent” othering lacks the violent history of American racism, yet Baldwin reveals how both contexts dehumanize Blackness.

He argues that white America, built on the subjugation of Black people, cannot escape its past — a past that distorts both the oppressor’s and the oppressed’s sense of self.

“People are trapped in history,” he writes, “and history is trapped in them.”

The essay’s power lies in Baldwin’s ability to weave personal reflection with incisive social critique. His encounters in the village mirror the broader African American experience: the exhaustion of being perpetually “seen but not seen,” and the rage born of systemic erasure.

Yet Baldwin resists despair, asserting that acknowledgment of this shared history is the first step toward liberation, even as he questions whether true equality is achievable.

Stylistically, Baldwin’s prose is both lyrical and unflinching, blending vivid imagery with philosophical depth.

The essay’s enduring relevance lies in its piercing examination of otherness and its challenge to confront uncomfortable truths.

Published over seven decades ago, Baldwin’s call to reckon with history’s ghosts remains urgent, a testament to his unparalleled vision and moral clarity.

 


What We Are Reading Today: ‘Elephants and Their Fossil Relatives’

What We Are Reading Today: ‘Elephants and Their Fossil Relatives’
Updated 07 April 2025
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What We Are Reading Today: ‘Elephants and Their Fossil Relatives’

What We Are Reading Today: ‘Elephants and Their Fossil Relatives’

Authors: Asier Larramendi & Marco P. Ferretti

Today, only three species of elephants survive—the African savanna elephant (Loxodonta africana), the African forest elephant (Loxodonta cyclotis), and the Asian elephant (Elephas maximus).

However, these modern giants represent just a fraction of the vast and diverse order of Proboscidea, which includes not only living elephants but also their many extinct relatives. 

Over the past 60 million years, proboscideans have evolved and adapted across five continents, giving rise to an astonishing variety of forms.