Share this page
FEATURED: latest book by geneticist & DNA Science blogger Ricki Lewis, PhD

The Forever Fix: Gene Therapy and the Boy Who Saved It is narrative science exploring the next frontier in medicine and genetics through the very personal prism of the children and families gene therapy has touched.
Latest Network Comments
- Hello, I am an italian architect and cura... by sabina barcucci in At the Interface
- Thanks for the tips you are discussing on... by Weston Stepleton in The Integrative Paleontologists
- So happy for you Flo & such a great r... by buy credit card processing in high risk business in Speakeasy Science
- On a specially adapted, albeit demanding ... by iphone free credit card terminal in genomeboy
- Oh and I'm not a Liverpool or Chelsea sup... by Dwana Bodford in Work In Progress
- Hello! This is kind of off topic but I ne... by orange county wedding photography in The Integrative Paleontologists
- I'm still learning from you, as I'm tryin... by Danilo Pipho in Speakeasy Science
- We need real people that are doing the re... by television advertising market in Speakeasy Science
- Honestly if you havent watched this yet y... by direct response marketing magazine in genomeboy
- Man, this blog is just great! I cant wait... by Westminster Maternity Suite in Speakeasy Science
-
Recent Posts
- Do rising rates of antidepressant prescription translate into lower rates of suicide? Evidence from 29 countries
- CERN Workshops on Innovations in Scholarly Communication (OAI8)
- It’s for the birds: Citizen science reveals shift in winter bird homes
- Why Art and Science?
- Climate Change; No Laughing Matter
Blog Archives
“Electric Shock”: Inspiring new Matter story; reason for hope in the future
By Seth Mnookin
Posted: December 18, 2012
Posted: December 18, 2012
Category: e-reading, Journalism, Science Writing
|
Tagged Anil Ananthaswamy, Atavist, Bobbie Johnson, Byliner, Cynthia Graber, David Dobbs, Deborah Blum, Download the Universe, Graduate Program in Science Writing, Harper's, Jessica Benko, Jim Giles, Kathi Bahr, Kickstarter, Matt Power, matter, Michael Levin, MIT, New Scientist, Oxford American, Roger Hodge, Tufts
|
Leave a comment


