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Dubai's 'Floating Seahorse' Homes Are Partially Submerged And Totally Futuristic

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Dubai is known for its extravagant development projects, like the indoor ski resorts, rotating skyscrapers and "miracle gardens," to name just a few.

But the newest project, "The Floating Seahorse," is exceptionally lavish: it's a floating home with underwater rooms.



Dubai developer Kleindienst Group revealed the visually stunning renderings for "The Floating Seahorse" at the Dubai International Boat Show in March 2015. They say they'll build 42 of the structures, which are essentially boats without the propulsion, and plan to have them completed by the end of 2016. The floating properties were designed and engineered to be part of "The World," Dubai's large artificial island project.

The buoyant structures will have three levels: an upper deck, a main floor at sea level, and an underwater level. The master bedroom and bathroom will be completely submerged, with panoramic underwater views.



According to a Kleindienst Group press release, the name of the project is connected to protecting sea life in the Arabian Gulf: "We will create an artificial coral reef beneath the luxury retreats which will be a protected area in which seahorses can safely live and breed," the company said.

As of this month, 35 of the 42 units had already been sold, according to Gulf News. Considering the average summer temperature in Dubai is 104 degrees, living underwater sounds like a solid plan. Check out more images below:




All photos courtesy of Kleindienst Group.

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Here's Why The Biggest Slum In India Is Honoring A Fictional Rape Victim

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priya shakti comic book



Ram Devineni has been thinking a lot lately about shakti -- a word that translates loosely from the Sanskrit to "female power." It's a transformative concept in a country like India, where the highest profile criminal cases tend to revolve around sexual abuse.

The brutal gang rape in 2012 of a student in Delhi led Devineni to create Priya's Shakti, a groundbreaking comic book that aims to inspire empathy for rape survivors in readers. His moment of inspiration came during a conversation with a Delhi police officer, who seemed to blame the victim for her fate. Disturbed by the cop's view -- essentially, that good girls don't walk alone at night -- Devineni set about trying to write a new cultural narrative.

His book tells the story of Priya, a girl who is sexually assaulted, shunned and eventually finds justice with the help of Hindu gods. Comic books have long been the primary medium by which Hindu kids learn religious stories. To reach the next generation, Devineni turned to technology. Using an augmented reality app called Blippar, he embedded the book's images with barcode-like tags that trigger animation, videos, real-life stories, and other interactive elements when read through an iPhone. The digital creation has become a global sensation since its debut at Mumbai's Comic Con last December, garnering worldwide press and even Instagram love from Mindy Kaling and Hannah Simone -- actresses from across the globe who both share Indian roots.






The visual that's spread on Instagram is similar to the ones Devineni is propagating on the streets of India. For Hindus, the imagery recalls the popular iconography of the goddess Durga -- or Shakti, as she is also known. As the story goes, Durga was created by the most powerful gods in the universe to defeat Mahishasura, a demon who managed to secure a boon that rendered him killable only by a woman. Mahishasura, a half-buffalo, half-human hybrid, assumed this made him as good as immortal. Durga, who rides a tiger and carries a colorful range of weapons, including a scimitar and a lasso, killed him anyway.


priya shakti comic book




Devineni hopes to spread the parallel between Durga and Priya on the streets of India. Working with a non-profit community organization, he enlisted the skills of Bollywood sign painters who live and work in Dharavi, the sprawling, self-sufficient slum inside Mumbai. On walls inside the slum, they produced the comic's key image: Priya seated atop her own tiger, with a beatific smile not unlike Durga's. Because of their proximity to the works, the painters -- all of whom are men -- act as local "representatives" of the cause, Devineni says, fielding questions from local passersby and seeing that the paintings stay untouched.

The filmmaker recently chatted with The Huffington Post about the power of the artwork to change minds offline.

How did you find the muralists?

We worked with a local organization that has an arts center in Dharavi and a long tradition of doing cultural programs and art programs. [Some] local artists in Dharavi were former Bollywood movie poster painters. They also do political campaign art whenever somebody commissions them to paint on the walls. We gave them the image of the comic book and we allowed them to interpret it. I came in and added augmented reality on top of that [by taking] a photo of the wall and then used the Blippart app.


priya shakti comic book




Where are the murals?

We painted four: three in Mumbai and one in Delhi.

As opposed to muralists in the West, Indian sign painters belong to what amounts to a guild. They're born into the work, and tend to be male.

Yes, it’s basically labor. It’s working class work. Our goal is to make more murals and eventually work with street artists, not just mural painters, who of course will be male and female.


priya shakti




Are the men who paint Priya aware of her significance?

We tell them. They have to support [the idea]. Everyone in the community knows what they painted. They each have this distinct style. And people ask them about it. They become a representative for the mural, sharing what the meaning is.

How long will the murals stay up?

As long as possible. In India, local community boards decide how walls are used. They manage the villages, and we got permission from them to paint. The artist typically lives right next to his mural, so he makes sure it’s properly taken care of.


priya shakti comic book




How will you know if the images succeed?

We want to make this an iconic image, a reinterpretation of Durga, the ultimate feminist goddess. There’s always a debate or discussion that happens around the murals. People know it's an image representing Durga but of course they know it’s not Durga. So they end up talking about issues of female power and strength. Already, that's some success.



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Jessica Lange Is Headed Back To Broadway In A Familiar Role

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NEW YORK (AP) — Jessica Lange will return to Broadway next spring in a production of "Long Day's Journey Into Night," playing the same role she did 15 years ago in London.


The Roundabout Theatre Company said Tuesday that the Oscar- and Emmy-winner will join Gabriel Byrne in a revival of Eugene O'Neill's play in March. Jonathan Kent will direct the production at the American Airlines Theatre.


Lange previously played the role of Mary Tyrone in a 2000 production of O'Neill's familial drama in London, receiving an Olivier Award nomination for her performance as the morphine-addicted mother.


The "American Horror Story" star made her Broadway debut in a 1992 production of "A Streetcar Named Desire" and returned to the stage in the 2005 revival of "The Glass Menagerie."

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Instagram Feed Recreates The Experience Of Reading A Novel

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A great book will immerse you in its world -- you’ll feel like the characters are your dear friends, like the setting is a place you know. Finishing it will feel like a sad goodbye; starting a new book is a rehoming of sorts. Ideally, the words of a novel are enough to accomplish this, but a new Instagram feed hopes to take the world-building of fiction a step further.

The account is dedicated to Hanya Yanagihara’s A Little Life, a book that came out earlier this year, following the lives of four friends. Jude -- the group’s glue -- has endured unspeakable traumas, and has spent his adult life trying to move past them. Yanagihara brings their relationships to life with heartbreaking lucidity. By photographing literal manifestations of scenes and metaphors, alittlelifebook makes reading a community act.

"He felt he had awakened Harold's curiosity, which he imagined as a perked, bright-eyed dog," one caption reads. "A terrier, something relentless and keen -- and wasn't sure that was such a good thing." The image is of a sad-eyed black lab, looking expectantly upward. Another, of a splattered canvas, reads, "Cleaning was boring; it was particularly boring while sober."

Whether or not the project captures the Yanagihara’s words, it's a fun supplemental scrolling experience.


































































































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Stunning Projections Turn The Sydney Opera House Into A Vibrant 'Living Mural'

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by Karissa Rosenfield



Universal Everything has transformed the Sydney Opera House into a “Living Mural,” as part of Vivid Sydney, held in Australia from May 22 to June 8, 2015. Drawing inspiration from the early pioneers of animation –- Len Lye, Norman McLaren and Walt Disney –- the global animation studio first began to design their mesmerizing light show with a simple drawing.

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David Hyde Pierce Looks Back On 'Frasier' And Its Then-Progressive Take On Gay Issues

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Emmy Award-winning actor David Hyde Pierce opened up about his time on the smash NBC sitcom, "Frasier," in an interview on HuffPost Live this week, recalling -- among other things -- the show's then-progressive treatment of gay issues.

Many of the gay-themed jokes on the series, Pierce said, were created to acknowledge the fact that Frasier Crane (Kelsey Grammer) and Niles Crane (Pierce) engaged in a lot of behavior, including "wine-tasting, going to the opera and all," that would be "seen as gay by a lot of people."

The comedy, he noted, never included "jokes at the expense of gay people," but rather acknowledged "the preposterousness of stereotypes."

Pierce's latest project finds him in the director's chair. Starring Tyne Daly, Harriet Harris and David Burtka, the ensemble musical "It Shoulda Been You" opened on Broadway in April and is a collaboration with Pierce's husband, Brian Hargrove, who penned the book and lyrics.

"We've always been there for each other, we've always advised each other," Pierce said. "He knows me better than anyone ...This was a high-stakes, high-pressure version of what we've been doing all along."



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This Program Is Reclaiming Hip-Hop As A Tool For Success

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usc

On the corner of Holt and Gary Avenues in downtown Pomona rises a massive, 24-thousand-square-foot cobblestone building. It once protected the savings and investments of Pomona residents, but now it serves a different purpose.

Spray-painted graffiti and images of hip-hop moguls decorate the walls of the former PFF Bank & Trust. A life-sized boom box has replaced the teller-counter. Walls that read, “Poppin’ & Lockin,’” and “Radiotron” were built from scratch to frame state-of-the-art dance floors. The only trace left of the former bank is a steel-door vault renamed “The Hip-Hop Library.” The Hip Hop School of Arts has turned the old bank into its new home, hoping to make a different kind of investment in the city of Pomona.

Near the entrance, an ocean-blue, spray-painted mural depicts Julio ‘Lil Cesar’ Rivas midway through his signature b-boy head-spin, among images of disc jockeys, rappers, and other dancers.

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A hip-hop mural decorates the exterior wall of the Hip Hop School of Arts on Garey Avenue.

Rivas founded the school in 2012, opening doors for the children in Pomona, the way Radiotron, a youth center in the MacArthur Park area of Los Angeles did for him when he moved from El Salvador at the age of 12. He sees it as a way to chip away at Pomona’s crime and offer a refuge from problems that often entangle youth in his community. His dream is to open similar centers in Los Angeles, New York and other global cities.

Radiotron became a sanctuary for Los Angeles youth to participate in all elements of hip-hop culture including graffiti, breakdancing, emceeing, and disc jockeying, in Los The South Bronx is called the birthplace of hip-hop culture that developed among Black and Latino youth in the 1970s. Hip-hop became a tool of expression for Bronx natives, and quickly spread throughout the country. Radiotron was the first West Coast youth center that catered to the hip-hop generation. Despite its popularity, the center ran out of money and was demolished in 1985.

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Cesar Rivas leads a one-on-one breakdancing class with one of HHSA’s youngest students.

“Everyone who used to go to Radiotron went back to the streets,” says Rivas. “We had no other place to go. We were no longer dancing. We were just running for our lives.”

Rivas, who has danced and choreographed for hip-hop legends like Kurtis Blow and Run D.M.C., was no stranger to the menacing behaviors that consumed the streets of his Los Angeles upbringing. After his own run-ins with the law, he decided the West Coast needed another center that could act as an educational safe haven for those who love hip-hop culture.

Rivas realized his vision after a million-dollar donation from filmmaker Charlie Evans. The center functions as a volunteer-based, after-school program that offers classes on every element of hip-hop, ranging from hip-hop choreography to music production and entrepreneurial classes.

Community members and close friends of Rivas have donated most of the technological equipment and paintings. The founder was impressed by the support he received from Mayor Elliot Rothman, the Chamber of Commerce and local businesses. He said that each of these organizations saw a need for a place like the Hip Hop School of Arts in the neighborhood.

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Saul Ochoa, HHSA b-boy instructor, freestyle dances during b-boy practice.

Of 270 neighborhoods, Pomona ranks 59th this year on the Los Angeles Times list of deadliest areas. Rivas says that the community saw a special need for a center like the Hip Hop School of Arts, due to the high rates of prostitution and violent crime.

In 2013, over 21 percent of Pomona residents lived below the poverty line, according to the U.S. Census. Most of the students at the Hip Hop School of arts qualify as low-income. These families pay $75 a year for unlimited access to classes. Hip-hop was born in a low-income environment in the South Bronx, and Rivas and his wife do not want finances to limit access to the art form.

Although the school’s formal mission is “to provide a unique technical trade program to transform each student’s creative energy through marketable skills, education, guidance and self-expression,” what is most important for Rivas is that the young people of Pomona have a place to learn the elements of the culture that saved his life instead of being on the streets.

“When I stop coming here and when I stop exercising or eating right, everything just seems impossible again,” says Josue Martinez, 20.

Martinez is an emcee student at the Hip Hop School of Arts. He grew up on Magnolia Street in El Monte, Calif., which he describes as a trailer park area ridden with gang activity. Martinez never participated in the gang culture that surrounded him, but he began to experiment with drug use after befriending those who did.

“I was a meth addict for like a year,” says Martinez. “I tried cocaine, ecstasy, even LSD and those are things I’m really not proud of.”

Martinez turned his life around through music. He discovered the school after researching places where he could express himself through rap. His instructors saw untapped potential when they began working with him at the center.

“All we had to do was listen to him, love him, and care for him, and show him that there is hope,” says Rivas. “We don’t tell them, ‘Stop, don’t do that,’ because then we’re choosing for them.”

Mike Cook, a production and vocal instructor, saw so much potential in Martinez that he decided to help the young emcee build a recording studio at home. When Martinez is not working at Target, or picking his siblings up from school, the writer sits in his home studio, penning lyrics about his most trying moments.

Martinez performed some of his emotionally driven lyrics on behalf of the Hip Hop School of Arts in October at the Choices Expo in Los Angeles.

“And I don’t know what to do,” he raps. “I am lost as well like you, oh no, no, no.”

Every word is filled with raw emotion, as he bounces up and down with his eyes scrunched shut. His confident demeanor captures the crowd as they clap along to his intimate lyrics.

The school performs six times throughout the expo, showcasing various hip-hop elements. Student Kassandra Ramirez is hard to ignore as she backup dances during a performance by vocal instructor, Ariel Sweet. Ramirez, 17, wears a sassy smirk as she whips her hair and carefully hits each beat. She describes herself as an introvert, but her movements tell a different story.

“Hip-hop is special to me because it’s kind of who I am,” she says. “It just flows with me.”

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Kassandra Ramirez, 17, stretches before her b-boy class at the Hip Hop School of Arts.

Ramirez is midway through her junior year of high school at a public charter school down the street from HHSA. When she is not working towards her dance concentration, Kassandra can be seen sweeping up the floors at the Hip Hop School of Arts in a ponytail and sneakers.

“I kind of had a rough upbringing and where I’m at right now, I don’t really feel so comfortable at my home,” she says. “I find time to escape here when I can to be comfortable. I love being in places that let me feel free.”

Ramirez considers the instructors and the students at the school to be a family. This is exactly the type of relationship Rivas hoped to foster between the instructors and the students at the school.

“The instructors that we have here, we all come from that world so I can relate to that kid’s life,” he says. “We got the best experience, not just by a degree but also by being there. You’re going to tell me that you can’t do and fulfill your dreams. How is it that I did it?”

Some parents are initially skeptical about enrolling their children in a school that focuses on hip-hop. Many have questions about the type of music and behaviors that students will be exposed to upon arrival.

“I do think that hip-hop is misunderstood,” says Tyrone Stokes, emcee instructor. “It’s because of the way it’s portrayed in the media and also because of the kind of music the industry is pushing because they know it will make money.”

Stokes says that misconceptions about hip-hop are the reasons why the Hip Hop School of Arts in Pomona exists. Rivas wants to bring the roots of hip-hop back to the forefront.

“Hip hop is for change, it’s to make things better,” says Rivas.

The 1970s “Hoe Avenue Peace Meeting” in New York marked a major event in the beginning of hip-hop history. Afrika Bambaataa, a legendary disc jockey and former gang member, was among the attendees who called for peace between neighborhood gangs and eventually pushed for self-expression via hip-hop. Rivas recalls this historical turning point, and wishes to inform his students of other events that served as catalysts for moments of change in hip-hop history.

“Here we go again,” says Rivas. “Hip-hop reinvents itself and we’re here, servicing the community.”

Why did rap get so big? How did b-boying make it into the movies? Who are the founding fathers of hip-hop? These are all questions that Rivas addresses in the school’s curriculum.

“It’s not just teaching you how to rap or teaching you how to breakdance,” says Stokes. “It’s teaching you some skills that you can take later on in life even if you don’t pursue hip-hop.”

“The kids who want to become rappers, they have to learn English and if they don’t like that subject, well, guess what?” says Rivas. “You’re going to have a challenge becoming an emcee.”

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An HHSA student pens rap lyrics during his “emcee” class with Tyrone Stokes.

Rivas and his wife, Norma Umana, put their careers on hold in order to ensure the success of the school. One of his main concerns is making sure that the school gets enough funding to keep the lights on.

“Some people might think that we’re making this great money but that’s not the case,” says Rivas.

“Shoot, we’re not getting paid,” he laughs.

The amount of time and dedication that is required to make a change in the lives of the students at the Hip Hop School of Arts does not affect the mission of the volunteers.

“We come here, we’re volunteering all of our time and we’re helping these kids in whatever it is they want,” says Stokes. “If they need food, we’re going to buy them some food.”

Rivas and his volunteers have created a program that inspires students like Martinez and Ramirez, by their willingness to go above and beyond their mission statement. The Hip Hop School of Arts of Pomona serves as the prototype for what is to come. Rivas would eventually like to build centers in Los Angeles, New York, and other major cities across the globe. In the future, ‘Lil Cesar’ hopes to fulfill dream jobs for the school’s volunteers. If all goes as planned, the volunteers will eventually transition into paid, full-time instructors as the center slowly transforms itself into a full time charter school. The center currently serves about two-dozen students, with room for nearly 1,000.

The school marked its two year anniversary on February 27. What has developed in the former bank building is more valuable than money for all of those involved.

“This is what I was designed to do,” Rivas says.

This story is part of a partnership with USC Annenberg to explore what's working in Los Angeles and beyond.

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The Beautiful Things Music Does To Your Brain

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Few things are better than listening to your favorite songs--no debate there. But what actually happens inside your brain when you tune in to music?

Zoe Cormier, the author of Sex, Drugs and Rock 'N' Roll: The Science of Hedonism and the Hedonism of Science, explained to HuffPost Live why music makes you feel so damn good.

"Every part of your brain gets involved in this neural-symphony," Cormier said.

Watch her explanation of your brain on music in the video above, and click here for the full HuffPost Live conversation about the science of summer songs.

Sign up here for Live Today, HuffPost Live's new morning email that will let you know the newsmakers, celebrities and politicians joining us that day and give you the best clips from the day before!

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'Live From Snack Time!' Instagram Illustrates All The Hilarious Quotes Teachers Hear Their Students Say

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Parents aren't the only ones who get to hear the hilarious, creative and oddly wise things their children say on a daily basis. Their kids' teachers also get quite an earful.

A New York City elementary school teacher is sharing some of her students' best quotes on an Instagram account called "Live from Snack Time!" She also invites other teachers and parents to submit standout sayings from their own students and children.

Good to know for parent/teacher conferences (submitted by @ariellem6)

A photo posted by Live from Snack Time! (@livefromsnacktime) on





Though the teacher behind the account -- who prefers to remain anonymous out of respect for her students -- currently teaches second graders, she was inspired to launch "Live from Snack Time" on Twitter a year ago while working in a kindergarten classroom. "The way the students were responding to my teaching was too good not to share," she told The Huffington Post.

"Their thoughts are genuine and pure. The way they think out loud and try to figure out the world in a creative way makes me love my job so much! They keep me laughing from the second I walk in the door until I leave."

With the help of a friend, the self proclaimed "professional educator/eavesdropper" started adding visuals to the quotes and sharing them on Instagram in November. She also shares the quotes on a Tumblr and recently created Facebook account.

"I hope people realize how funny and curious kids can be," she said. "I recommend not taking their questions lightly, they are trying to figure out the world... but it doesn't hurt to laugh about it once in a while."

Because a dump truck will never dump you...

A photo posted by Live from Snack Time! (@livefromsnacktime) on





Tomorrow's lesson will be about idioms #livefromsnacktime

A photo posted by Live from Snack Time! (@livefromsnacktime) on





Everything's exciting on a Friday

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Big bad plot twist

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27 years old and feeling the same ☺️

A photo posted by Live from Snack Time! (@livefromsnacktime) on





Solid Sunday advice #kidquotes

A photo posted by Live from Snack Time! (@livefromsnacktime) on





Day dreaming about cupcakes

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Where Mike Tyson went wrong. #kidthoughts

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Just a question girl .. Livin' in a lonely world #curiouskids #kiddiequotes

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Kindergarten divorce rate is increasing. #KeepingUpWithKindergarten #livefromsnacktime

A photo posted by Live from Snack Time! (@livefromsnacktime) on





Just because you just got your allowance doesn't mean I'll take a bribe #kidquotes

A photo posted by Live from Snack Time! (@livefromsnacktime) on





Because there aren't enough bathrooms!

A photo posted by Live from Snack Time! (@livefromsnacktime) on





Mine too!

A photo posted by Live from Snack Time! (@livefromsnacktime) on





That is not even remotely true! Well I know what I need to teach tomorrow ....

A photo posted by Live from Snack Time! (@livefromsnacktime) on





Good one? #AprilFoolsDay #KidQuotes

A photo posted by Live from Snack Time! (@livefromsnacktime) on





I guess I see the logic here #livefromsnacktime

A photo posted by Live from Snack Time! (@livefromsnacktime) on





Well then .. Guess what I'm bringing to recess this week!

A photo posted by Live from Snack Time! (@livefromsnacktime) on




H/T Shuggilippo



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This Anagram-Packed Love Story Is The Ultimate Ode To Scrabble

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Her name is Augustina. His, Santiago. She lives in Tokyo. Him, in Kyoto. She's a cab driver. He's a crab diver. If ever there was a love story written in the stars -- with Scrabble letters, of course -- this would be it.



Of course, their story is an enchanting ode to the classic Mattel game, created by agency Lola Madrid and directed by Rodrigo Saavedra.

The whimsical short follows the two complete strangers throughout their Instagram-filtered yet romantically unfulfilling daily lives, their every verbalized detail an anagram of their future partner's equivalent. (She fears being "forever alone," he feels as dull as "a veneer floor.") Eventually, the two Scrabble-crossed lovers meet up at a costume party, and the romantic equivalent of a triple word score ensues.

Word nerds: this is your "Fifty Shades." Experience all the magic of the written word above, and, while you're at it, start brainstorming potential anagram variations of your name to fall in love with in the future.

cab

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Beloved Documentary Photographer Mary Ellen Mark Dies At 75

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NEW YORK (AP) — Documentary photographer Mary Ellen Mark, called "a snake charmer of the soul" for her gift of capturing searing images of human vulnerability, has died at age 75.

She died Monday at a New York hospital after a long battle with a blood illness caused by bone marrow failure, her close friend Kelly Cutrone said. Mark's subjects ranged from runaway children and heroin addicts to celebrities and world leaders. She also pointed her lens at members of the Ku Klux Klan, a women's security ward in a mental institution and various celebrities.

Over the decades, "what resulted was, in fact, a lamentation: one of the most delicately shaded studies of vulnerability ever set on film," wrote the late Time magazine art critic Robert Hughes.

A collection of Mark photographs in a book titled "Streetwise" documents the life of Tiny Blackwell, a Seattle prostitute and drug addict Mark met in the 1980s when Tiny was 13. A new book on Blackwell photographed over decades is yet to be published, titled "Tiny: Streetwise Revisited."

The photographer chose Seattle "because it is known as 'America's most livable city,'" she wrote in the preface to her book on the subject. "By choosing America's ideal city we were making the point: 'If street kids exist in a city like Seattle then they can be found everywhere in America, and we are therefore facing a major social problem of runaways in this country.'"

Mark's work appeared in prominent publications including Life, the New York Times Magazine, The New Yorker, Rolling Stone and Vanity Fair. She also published 18 books.

Her latest project, for CNN, was New Orleans on the 10th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina.

Mark was born and raised in Elkins Park, Pennsylvania, just outside Philadelphia. In 1962, she graduated from the University of Pennsylvania with a bachelor of fine arts in art history and painting, followed by a master's in photojournalism.

Her work drew attention in the 1960s, when she photographed heroin addicts in London, steeping herself in the humanity of overlooked subjects.

"She was a snake charmer of the soul," said Cutrone, an author and publicist who considered Mark "like my divine mother and mentor." ''She had the ability and intuition to see inside people, to evoke their soul."

Mark, in her SoHo neighborhood, knew people in the street and in shops, Cutrone said.

"She talked to everybody," she said. "She was really connected."

Mark, a photographer's photographer, never really switched to digital cameras.

"I'm staying with film, and with silver prints, and no Photoshop," she told The Philadelphia Inquirer in 2008. "That's the way I learned photography: You make your picture in the camera. Now, so much is made in the computer. ... I'm not anti-digital, I just think, for me, film works better."

Mark is survived by her husband, filmmaker Martin Bell, who directed the documentary "Streetwise" based on her images.

A New York memorial is planned for Sept. 10.

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Newport Folk Festival Celebrates 50 Years Since Bob Dylan Went Electric

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NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) — This year's Newport Folk Festival plans to pay tribute to the moment when Bob Dylan made rock history by going electric 50 years ago.

The festival, noted for introducing performers who later became big stars, will have a secret lineup of musicians billed as '65 Revisited. Festival producer Jay Sweet said on Tuesday that nearly a dozen contemporary musicians are included in an "all-star lineup," but the audience won't know who they are until they take the stage to close the festival with a "massive" set celebrating Dylan's 1965 performance.

Dylan first appeared at Newport as a guest of Joan Baez in 1963. His three-song electric set two years later — including "Like a Rolling Stone" and "Maggie's Farm" — is widely viewed as one of the most pivotal moments in rock 'n' roll history. It marked Dylan's break with the folk movement and spurred others to go electric as well.

The Fender Stratocaster guitar Dylan played in the performance sold at auction in 2013 for nearly $1 million, the highest price paid for a guitar at auction.

Dylan is not playing at this year's festival, although Sweet said he's invited to play every year. If there's any year Dylan wouldn't come, it's Sweet's guess it would probably be this one.

"Having him back would be the least Newport way to celebrate it," he said.

Dylan last played Newport in 2002.

"Trying to recreate that moment is a fool's errand," Sweet said. "We're about the future, not about reliving the past."

But Sweet said without that moment, when Dylan struck out a new path for music, the Newport Folk Festival probably would not be celebrating its 56th anniversary this year.

"Every once in a while, you have to acknowledge, that allowed us to be here," he said.

The festival runs July 24-26. Tickets are sold out for the last two days, but a few are available for the first day. Other headliners include Roger Waters and The Decemberists.

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Historian And Author Of 'The Pacific' Hugh Ambrose Dead At 48

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HELENA, Mont. (AP) — Hugh Ambrose, who wrote the World War II history "The Pacific" after years of researching for his father, the renowned historian Stephen Ambrose, has died at age 48.

Ambrose died of cancer Saturday in Helena, sister Stephenie Ambrose Tubbs said Tuesday. Hugh Ambrose began research for "The Pacific" with his father, and he carried on after Stephen Ambrose's death in 2002.

That culminated in the book and a 2010 HBO miniseries produced by Steven Spielberg and Tom Hanks that tells the story of the war's Pacific Theater through the eyes of individual Marines.

Ambrose began his career while he was in graduate school at the University of Montana in the mid-1990s by helping his father research books such as "Undaunted Courage," the story of the Lewis and Clark expedition.

He continued to conduct research for Stephen Ambrose's books, including "Nothing Like it in the World" and "Citizen Soldiers," and worked on the HBO miniseries "Band of Brothers" that was based on his father's book.

But Hugh Ambrose found his own success with the best-selling "The Pacific."

"His dad's legacy was important to him, but he definitely was a historian in his own right," his wife, Andrea Ambrose, said Tuesday.

Ambrose grew up in Louisiana, where his father was a professor at the University of New Orleans. He was on the board of directors and later the vice president of development for the National World War II Museum in New Orleans, which his father helped create.

He and his family moved to Helena after Hurricane Katrina struck New Orleans in 2005. The Ambrose family had lived in Montana part time, and Hugh Ambrose had earned his undergraduate and graduate degrees at the University of Montana.

Ambrose continued to work on "The Pacific" and raise money for the National World War II Museum after the move to Helena.

He was a trustee for Helena's Lewis and Clark Library, was on the board of the Myrna Loy Center for the Performing and Media Arts and was the father of two children.

"He was an amazing father and husband and friend, and just the most solid, honest person that I've ever met in my life," Andrea Ambrose said. "He was the kind of guy who just wanted to do the right thing."

A funeral Mass for Ambrose will be held Friday at Saint Mary Catholic Community in Helena.

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The Bottom Line: 'The Sunlit Night' By Rebecca Dinerstein

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sunlit night


When you get far enough north, you reach a latitude at which the sun no longer sets during the summer months. (It also, incidentally, doesn’t rise during the winter, but that’s a far less romantic image.) You can look out the window in the middle of the night and find the sun resting comfortably on the horizon, imbuing the sky with a warm reddish light like a perpetual sunset.

It’s a seductive setting -- isolated, beautiful, alien -- and an inspired one for Rebecca Dinerstein’s debut novel, The Sunlit Night. Dinerstein draws two standard characters of New York City literature -- the neurotic, artsy young woman; the identity-conflicted Russian Jewish immigrant -- then implacably pushes them out of the city, all the way to a small island in the Norwegian Sea where it’s daylight for weeks on end.

Frances, shaken by a brutal breakup with the college boyfriend she’d intended to follow to Japan for the summer, takes an artist’s residency at the Viking Museum on the island. With her quarrelsome, eccentric parents on the brink of divorce, and her younger sister’s unexpected engagement stirring up even more family drama, the dream-like remove of the Far North is a welcome escape.

Yasha has lived in Brighton Beach with his father for ten years, ever since his mother sent them off to New York and then failed to follow them as promised. His father runs a bakery with his help; Yasha’s springy curls and aloof manner makes him an object of desire amongst his female high school classmates. But his father’s sudden death leaves 17-year-old Yasha with a final duty to the one person he loves: to bury him at the top of the Earth, where it’s peaceful.

While Frances spends undifferentiated hours of the sunlit day and night helping the resident artist, Nils, swathe a barn, inside and out, in shades of yellow paint for a major art installation, Yasha arrives with a motley entourage: His father, in a cheaply made casket; his coquettish, self-absorbed mother, who’s made a sudden reappearance with a new boyfriend in tow; his uncle, escorting his brother’s body.

Two lost young souls adrift on a mostly unpopulated island, Frances and Yasha move inexorably into orbit around each other. They find comfort in their shared need, their shared youthful confusion, and the unending light surrounding them. Except, of course, that the light isn’t unending. With autumn looming, the two have to decide whether to follow the sun, together or alone.

The oddball humor and pensive lyricism of Frances’s narrative, as well as Yasha’s poignant quest, feel alive and engaging, but the unlikely romance between Frances and Yasha (reminiscent of something from a Wes Anderson film) smacks a bit of fairy-tale wish-fulfillment -- or even a device to ensure the two narrative seem adequately linked together. As offbeat and quiet as their courtship is, it ultimately jars against their dreamlike, inwardly focused narratives.

It’s their individual stories, which give Dinerstein ample opportunity to explore the infinite shades of light and how subtly it governs the rhythms and textures of our lives. Both the pure light and pure darkness offer healing power in the sheer disconnect they create from the gray of the everyday, and Dinerstein evokes this powerful shift with blunt, visual language that brings the reader back to the most basic senses.

The Bottom Line:
Despite its Pollyannaish moments, The Sunlit Night heralds the beginning of an intriguing career in fiction during which Dinerstein will hopefully continue to take us off the beaten path.

What other reviewers think:
Publishers Weekly: "With provocative insights about the cruelty of abandonment, the concept of home, and the limits of parental and filial love, Dinerstein’s novel is a rich reading experience."

Kirkus: "Dinerstein’s writing is light and lyrical, and her descriptions of the far north are intoxicating."

Who wrote it?
The Sunlit Night is Rebecca Dinerstein’s debut novel. She previously published a bilingual English-Norwegian poetry collection entitled Lofoten. She lives in Brooklyn, and researched The Sunlit Night during a fellowship in the Far North, on an island in the Norwegian Sea.

Who will read it?
Readers who enjoy whimsical prose and offbeat narratives with bittersweet themes. Fans of Jonathan Safran Foer and Wes Anderson's quietly quirky, meticulously visualized films.

Opening lines:
“In the moment after Robert Mason’s condom broke he rolled off me, propped himself on his elbow, and said, ‘What you do doesn’t help anybody.’”

Notable passage:
“The world was perpetually visible, so I looked at it. Conditioned by hours in the Yellow Room, I saw the landscape in colorblock. The midnight sun came in shades of pink. The fjords rushed up onto white-sand beaches, and the sand made the water Bermuda-green. The houses were always red. They appeared in clusters, villages, wherever there lay flat land. Mountains rose steeply behind each village -- menaces and guardians. Each red house was a lighthouse, marking the boundary between one terrain and another, preventing crashes, somehow, providing solace. Nils told me, ‘There are no dangerous animals here, bare flott,’ which meant either ‘only nice ones’ or ‘only ticks.’”


The Sunlit Night
by Rebecca Dinerstein
Bloomsbury, $26.00
Publishes June 2, 2015


The Bottom Line is a weekly review combining plot description and analysis with fun tidbits about the book.


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Julianne Moore Articulates Why The Fight For LGBT Rights Doesn't End With Marriage Equality

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Too many think the battle for gay rights ends with marriage equality. Even with the Supreme Court forecasted to rule in favor of the matter come June, it takes prominent voices to shift the core thinking to a wider spectrum of LGBT issues. One person working toward that is Julianne Moore, who recently recorded a PSA for Lambda Legal's #IDo campaign to raise funds and awareness.

In the video, the reigning Best Actress winner, who nabbed the Oscar earlier this year for her touching performance in "Still Alice," enumerates reasons why the crusade for gay civil rights must continue once marriage is legal for all. Moore cites school bullying, medical care and violence against transgender individuals as three such examples, urging others to say "I do."

Those who join Moore in this next stage of the fight can donate to Lambda Legal, the nation's oldest LGBT legal organization. The organization’s board co-chair, Karen Dixon, and her wife, Nan Schaffer, will match up to $1 million in contributions, dollar-for-dollar. All said, the 54-year-old actress is the perfect spokeswoman for Lambda's efforts. Her résumé contains a diverse mix of LGBT projects, including roles in 2002's "The Hours," 2009's "A Single Man," 2010's "The Kids Are All Right" and the upcoming "Freeheld," in which she plays a terminally ill police officer who must fight to secure pension benefits for her partner (Ellen Page).

“I think it’s a very basic human-rights issue," Moore said in 2011. "Everybody has the right to marry the person they love and be represented as a couple and family. ... It’s something that people will look back on in years to come and say, ‘I can’t believe it took so long for us to recognize this.’ It’ll be like segregation and giving women the right to vote.”

Moore's PSA premieres exclusively on The Huffington Post. Learn more about the #IDo campaign at Lambda Legal.

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Ballerina Makes Spectacular Return To Stage After Tumor Left Her Blind, Paralyzed

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A young ballerina is dancing her way through a remarkable recovery.

Anna Mott, a talented young dancer, has made a remarkable return to the stage after a brain tumor in 2012 left her blind and partially paralyzed, WXIA reports. The 18-year-old from Marietta, Georgia, has undergone a multitude of treatments since her diagnosis, and ballet has proven to be among the most powerful.

"This is honestly the best I have felt in the past three years, “ Mott told the local news outlet after her comeback performance.



Throughout her life, Mott has been a dedicated and avid dancer, and was a pre-professional ballerina at the age of 16, her family describes on the support Facebook page, “Anna’s Prayer Warriors.” In August, 2012, after waking up with a terrible headache, Mott was taken for a CT scan that revealed a pineoblastoma brain tumor. She underwent 32 radiations followed by intense chemotherapy, which she completed in 2013. Since then, Mott has remained cancer free and has used ballet to help her heal.

“While we were in the inpatient rehab unit they said that her ballet training totally helped her bounce back quicker and overcome lots of things others without it most likely would not,” Mott’s mother, Melissa, told Gwinnett Daily Post. “They said her excellent physical shape made all the difference.”

Ballet was worked into Mott’s therapy and helped her regain control after left side paralysis, the Post reported. Her recovery is visible in her graceful movements as she dances, as shown in the video above. Mott remains positive as she heals, telling WXIA, “No matter what happens to you in life, you can do anything."


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'300 Sandwiches' By Stephanie Smith Is The Best Worst Recipe Book/Memoir Ever

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300 sandwiches




Sandwiches don't get enough love these days, and by love, I mean books written exclusively about sandwiches. 300 Sandwiches, by Stephanie Smith, isn't quite that, but it's pretty close -- and after her blog (upon which the book is based) caused a media firestorm (of the fun, gossipy variety) last year, I was doubly excited to take a huge, crusty bite. And once I started, I just couldn't stop cramming my metaphorical mouth with the juicy, if slightly unhealthy, goodness of this literary equivalent of junk food. Let's break it down.

What is this book?

It’s a book about sandwiches, and the many delectable forms they come in. It’s also a book about crepes, burritos, steamed buns, and other non-sandwich foods, which are perplexingly labeled as sandwiches. This is a book of lies.

crepe
This looks delicious and is not a sandwich.


Who is this book about?

Remember a while ago, when everyone was upset at some woman for telling girls to only marry Ivy League graduates? Well, it’s not about her. Sorry, my bad. But remember later that year, when everyone was abuzz about some lady who was making 300 sandwiches in exchange for an engagement ring? She worked for Page Six during the day, and roasted brisket to fill her man’s breadbaskets at night? It IS about her (Stephanie Smith), her now-fiancé (E) and the unbridled feminist empowerment that fueled their food-for-bling bargain.

What happens to them?

Stephanie is just a devil-may-care city gal, working a glam job as a reporter for Page Six, kicking it with celebs by day and kicking it with even more celebs by night. But one day she meets a man she claims looks just like Alexander Skarsgård (risky claim to make about your boyfriend in a public forum, but go on) at a bar. He makes her wear a bikini on their first date, and they fall in love over toothsome meals he cooks for her.

BUT SOMETHING ISN’T RIGHT. Because even though E cooks like he’s the lovechild of Alexander Skarsgård and Mario Batali, Stephanie doesn’t, and therefore their relationship can never be fair. You see, if a woman makes dinner, she should feel grateful if her boyfriend does the dishes. If a man makes dinner, his girlfriend should realize that doing the dishes is such an inadequate form of repayment for his edible work of genius that she must make him sausage out of her own blood to thank him.

Stephanie knows she should be cooking for him, because her mom made her dad gourmet turkey sandwiches on demand throughout their entire marriage, and that’s why they remained happily married. So she makes E a turkey sandwich. And then 299 more! Again, even though E is an excellent cook. Once upon a time, they would host parties and he would cook while she looked after the guests, but we all know a woman belongs in the kitchen -- so she begins hosting sandwich parties. Problem solved; gender norms restored.

sandwich
This is just someone's sandwich from Flickr, but it looks good.


Some very awful and tragic things happen along the way -- Stephanie’s father falls very ill and dies, and she herself experiences a scare in the form of a breast lump -- but the need to make 300 sandwiches so she can get married remains.

Stephanie’s blog about her 300-sandwiches-to-proposal challenge earns her a feature in The New York Post (her employer), sparking somehow-unforeseen feminist backlash -- but the drive to make 300 sandwiches and get married remains.

E takes Stephanie snowboarding and kitesurfing and makes her duck confit you couldn’t buy at the finest restaurants in NYC, but -- you guessed it -- no sandwiches, no proposal.

Eventually, somehow, she gets engaged, locking herself into a lifetime of trying to prove her worthiness to her future husband and children through sandwich craft.

What about the recipes though?

I do not know if they work, because I refuse to put effort into a sandwich that takes more time to assemble than an Ikea bookcase. But reading them resulted in some uncomfortable public drooling that my boyfriend probably could have gone without seeing. Someone should try them and report back to me, preferably with samples for me to taste.

sandwich
Like this one. People of Flickr, send me your sandwiches.


What is the best part of this book?

Sammy recipes. Do not read while hungry.

What is the worst part of this book?

Though a professional writer, Smith betrays an amateurish discomfort with the memoir form through hilariously inappropriate word choices that really keep the reader guessing. To wit:

"'That’s a lot of sandwiches. Can you eat all of them?' 'Probably not,' I warned. 'But I can make them.’”

Did Stephanie’s friend place a substantial bet that she would be eating all of the sandwiches? Does Stephanie need to eat all of the sandwiches to save her friend from otherwise certain death? Probably one of those things, or else I can’t imagine the choice of the word “warned” here. Writers, "said" is your friend. Use it as much as you need.

Most abused words: “coo” and “moan,” the former of which is once used twice within a page, and the latter of which is frequently used in a totally nonsexual context. Bonus twofer example: “You could hear the low moans of customers cooing over the shiny pieces as the light danced over the stones.” Yes, this is from a description of a jewelry store. Presumably a jewelry store with a light S&M theme.

She also pens sentences like, “We all spoke in excited conversation.” Read with a red pen to vent your feelings of frustration through vigorous marginalia and editorial markings.

What is the best worst part of this book?

There’s something compulsively readable about this memoir/recipe book/relationship guide/feminist manifesto. Probably the fact that it tries to be all of those things but only really succeeds at one (presuming those sandwich recipes work?), while the others sort of cancel each other out, leaving an oblivious, self-righteous mess.

First of all, she bristles at the insinuation that her 300-sandwiches-to-ring deal is anti-feminist, pointing out that her boyfriend does loads of cooking and it was an inside joke we simply don’t get because we don’t understand humor. That, or she isn’t a talented humorist, as I kept waiting for the punchlines to this thigh-slapper, and it seems like no one else caught them either. It’s funny because ... it’s true that women should make men sandwiches? That can’t be it. Stephanie: You can't just say "But here's the thing, I'm really funny." Execution matters.

Next, she loads the book up with pseudo-expertise about how maternal (and wifely) devotion must be conveyed through food. If you don’t send a good sandwich to school with your child, he will not feel loved. That is true. Seriously though, send a Lunchable; sandwiches haven't made children feel loved since the 1980s.

She writes:

When a woman cooks for her family, she has the power to take care of herself, nurture her body, feed her family. She can make herself more fertile, ward against cancer, provide energy for a workout, or simply satisfy a sweet tooth. She can help her husband lower his cholesterol or prep for a big day at the office. She has the power to satisfy his hunger, his lust, his cravings. And how do you expect your children to survive if you don’t know how to make chicken noodle soup that’s not out of a can? They can’t live on peanut butter and jelly alone.




See, she’s not taking one step backward for feminism! She just thinks that it’s a woman’s job to make sure the children have edible food and her husband isn't coating his arteries in plaque, even though her partner is A GOURMET COOK. It would be great if the dude could provide nourishment for his family, but it’s simply not how families work. Plus, if she doesn’t spend her life in the kitchen, her kids will probably die due to overdoses of peanut butter. (Side note: My boyfriend’s mom doesn’t have measuring spoons in her house, but she does have a devoted husband, two totally alive sons, and the ability to convey love without making cookies.)

vintage mother dinner
That family looks so healthy. Must be the sandwiches.


While working a full-time job, spending 100 percent of her free time making sandwiches for her boyfriend, and generally being a responsible adult, she realizes that she's done the cruelest thing possible to E -- she hasn't pole danced for him in MONTHS, like, if ever. Fortunately she castigates herself for not being sexy enough while making him sandwiches and gets herself to a sexiness class. Relationship saved, feminism-style.

Finally, she insists the sandwiches were a fun challenge, a way to grow closer to E, an empowering moment of one-upmanship -- not a way to manipulate him into marriage. But then she spends the second half of the book complaining that she needs to speed up her sandwich production to get him to propose faster, fretting that he won’t want to propose the minute she’s done making sandwiches, and summarily going off birth control without telling him (??) so they can just start their family. (She does, apparently, give this plan up after she mentions it to E and notes his horror.)

Yep, just an empowered, non-desperate lady, non-desperately making sandwiches at warp speed to non-manipulate her boyfriend into proposing.

The delectable flaw in 300 Sandwiches is its premise: While Stephanie wants to convince us she’s a strong, feminist woman who took on a fun challenge to grow closer to her partner and better at cooking, the central conflict of the book is her desperate need to finish making sandwiches as soon as possible so she can get a huge rock, get married and have babies. These two concepts are diametrically opposed. Watching her try, like F. Scott Fitzgerald, to hold those two opposing thoughts simultaneously -- and convince her readers of both of them! -- is the best worst fun you’ll have while thinking about sandwiches.

The best fun you'll have while thinking about sandwiches is probably eating eggnog French toast sandwiches (recipe #210), so someone please get on that, and invite me over for brunch. I will show my womanly appreciation by bringing mimosas.

300 Sandwiches was published May 19.

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10 Innovative Writers Who Are Shaking Up The Book World

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innovative writers



It’s common for a writer to be hailed as revolutionary by a contemporary, a publisher, a reviewer or a peer -- so common, in fact, that it’s tough to distinguish new gems from old tropes. And while “new” shouldn’t be the standard when judging whether a book is valuable or exciting, it’s worth noticing when an author challenges conventions, possibly enough to introduce new modes of storytelling.

Merritt Tierce, for example, writes about the South, but she’s no Flannery O’Connor. She’s one of few writers rethinking how we depict the region, as it becomes more complex than the otherworldly, closed-off underbelly it’s been characterized as. Outside the realm of fiction, there are those continuing the inevitable fusion of memoir and fact-laden reporting; Eula Biss and Maggie Nelson have lead the charge recently, with their respective personal stories peppered with data and historical context.

Regardless of your genre of choice, The Huffington Post recommends several writers if you're looking to shake up your reading routine.

nell zink

Nell Zink
She published her first book after 50, working boldly and admirably against the notion that being a good writer means being endowed with a sort of inherited genius that’s fostered from grade school onward. Rather than working her way through the ranks of MFA programs, she’s led a fascinating life as an activist and longtime expat -- earning the attention of none other than Jonathan Franzen with an impassioned letter she wrote to him. If nothing else, Zink’s got guts.
Read our interview with Nell Zink

merritt tierce

Merritt Tierce
Tierce is a National Book Foundation "5 Under 35" honoree, and with good reason. Her novel, Love Me Back, is a painfully gritty story about a waitress working in Dallas, whose life is quickly spiraling. Tierce manages to circumvent the stereotypes so often succumbed to when writing about the South -- eerie, Gothic isolation and otherness -- and instead creates a unsentimental, exciting work.

amelia gray

Amelia Gray
Gray comes from the world of flash fiction -- that is, stories that are fewer than 1,000 words long -- so she knows a thing or two about crafting a very short, yet deeply emotive scene. She manages to fit violence, humor, discomfort, gripping plot, and human connection all within very short, elliptical stories. Of the handful of women breaking boundaries by writing about themes and moods once reserved for men, she’s the boldest.
Read our review of Gutshot

roxane gay

Roxane Gay
She may be a proud feminist, but her writing bears little resemblance to Sheryl Sandberg's. You’ve probably heard of Gay’s essay collection, Bad Feminist, which is a welcome addition to the chorus of voices, at least as commentary that’s blunt, honest and that offers an alternative to leaning in. Gay fuses her thoughts with observations on literature -- as a fiction writer herself, she’s more than capable of doing so eloquently.

eula biss

Eula Biss
Unlike most writing out there about anti-vaxxers, Biss’s On Immunity doesn’t just wag a finger at those against vaccinations -- although she does cite studies and historical tidbits that clearly refute their claims. By telling her own story of motherhood, she attempts to understand exactly why a person would fight against a medically beneficial choice, and in doing so builds a story that’s part memoir, part research and completely fresh.
Read our review of On Immunity

maggie nelson

Maggie Nelson
Like Biss, Nelson (who’s not-so-coincidentally published by the same press) completely subverts the conventions of memoir to create a story that frames theory through the lens of her personal life. Nelson’s personal life involves the birth and rearing of her son, Iggy, and her romantic relationship with an artist, Harry Dodge, who identifies as fluidly gendered. In relating how they fell in love, she confronts her tendency to believe that language can sufficiently describe a person, a relationship, a feeling. She takes the reader to art exhibits, and to the room where she delivered her son.
Read our review of The Argonauts

dave eggers

Dave Eggers
Love him or hate him, Dave Eggers continues to make waves in the book world. His books themselves might experiment with different ways to tell a story, but it’s the work he’s doing outside of his own writing that’s made the biggest difference. Yes, he edits McSweeney’s, which recently made the notable choice to change its status to nonprofit, but he also founded 826 National, a creative writing tutoring center.

patricia lockwood

Patricia Lockwood
The tradition that poetry should be revered as a quiet meditation on the truth and beauty of life is not quite what Patricia Lockwood’s work is all about. She has more than 50,000 Twitter followers, and creates hilarious memes about “gentlemanly colognes.” Her work is loud, too -- The New Yorker even calls it “crowd-pleasing.” But she’s not silly or gratuitously bombastic; her shouted words carry a message, and pave the way for other poets to use their language to do the same.
Read Patricia Lockwood’s hilarious take on the future of poetry

jeff vandermeer

Jeff VanderMeer
VanderMeer’s Southern Reach trilogy was released under what publishers call the Netflix model -- all three books came out in one year, a few months apart, allowing readers to engage in so-called binge-reading rather than waiting years for the story to conclude (ahem, we're looking at you, George R.R. Martin). It's helpful that the story is driven more by its characters and the perplexing thought experiments it introduces than by its events -- another innovative approach to science fiction.
Read our review of the Southern Reach trilogy

teju cole

Teju Cole
Teju Cole's somewhat of a modern-day flâneur, but he's comfortable moving at a faster-than-leisurely pace too. His novel Open City involved a man reflecting on more philosophical questions while strolling around New York, and his even more compelling Every Day is for the Thief imbued daily observations of his home country with literary history and the writer's own abstract, atmospheric photos. Though he's at his best when quietly reflecting, he's pithy on Twitter, constructing both stories and arguments on the platform.
Read our review of Every Day is for the Thief





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Meet 12 Women In STEM Who Just Broke The Glass Ceiling

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Science, technology, engineering and math have long been male-dominated fields. Though barriers still exist, female scientists are making inroads into the old boys' club more than ever before.

As more women assume positions of power in the STEM world, scientists hope more women may be encouraged to pursue STEM careers of their own.

"There were very few senior women ahead on the path, and mentoring opportunities were rare, but just knowing those few women were successes gave me hope," Dr. C. Megan Urry, professor of physics and astronomy at Yale University in New Haven, Conn., told The Huffington Post about her own experience as a young scientist. "Although people may be tired of the word 'role model' the fact is, role models are incredibly important."

To acknowledge recent achievements of female scientists, engineers, and mathematicians -- and in conjunction with its 10th anniversary -- HuffPost has assembled a list of 12 women who were pioneers in their fields in the past decade:

1. In 2006, Dr. Frances Allen, an American computer scientist, became the first woman to win the A.M. Turing Award, often referred to as the "Nobel Prize of computing."

frances allen turing

2. From 2008 to 2010, Irish astrophysicist Dr. Jocelyn Bell Burnell served as the first female president of the Institute of Physics, a non-profit organization with a membership of over 50,000 scientists "working together to advance physics education, research and application."

jocelyn bell burnell

3-6. Women scored big in the Nobel Prizes of 2009 (see slideshow below). With four women taking home prizes in the sciences, it was the first year when more than one woman was selected as a science laureate. Among them, political scientist Dr. Elinor Ostrom became the first woman to win the Nobel Prize in Economics.



7. In 2010, Dr. Carolyn Bertozzi, an American chemist, became the first woman to win the prestigious MIT-Lemelson Prize, a $500,000 award that honors mid-career inventors.

carolyn bertozzi

8. In 2012, pilot and astronaut Liu Yang became the first Chinese woman in space.

liu yang

9. In 2014, Italian physicist Dr. Fabiola Gianotti was selected as the next (and first female) director-general of CERN (the European Organization for Nuclear Research). She will take up the position in 2016.

fabiola gianotti

10. In 2014, Megan Smith, an "entrepreneur, engineer, and tech evangelist," was named as the first female chief technology officer of the U.S.

megan smith chief technology officer

11. In 2014, Iranian mathematicianMaryam Mirzakhani became the first woman to win the Fields Medal, often referred to as the "Nobel Prize of math."

maryam mirzakhani

12. In 2014, Samantha Cristoforetti, a European Space Agency astronaut, became the first Italian woman in space.

samantha cristoforetti

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28 Unusual Majors You Didn't Know Existed

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“What’s your major?” The often dreaded question a college student gets asked approximately 3,987 times throughout their college career. About one-third of incoming freshman are undeclared, but the rest seem to have a pretty clear understanding of where they want their professional lives to take them. From poultry to puppetry and The Beatles to bowling, we have the most unusual (and awesome) majors below. Can I return my degree and start over?

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