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
- Excellent points, thanks for responding. by Ricki Lewis, PhD in DNA Science Blog
- An organic chemistry related blog post sh... by spacecadet262 in DNA Science Blog
- Dan, I'm so sorry about your children's v... by Ricki Lewis, PhD in DNA Science Blog
- naturally like your web-site but you have... by Lynelle Rather in Obesity Panacea
- Aw, this was a very nice post. In concept... by Ralph Krejsa in Tooth and Claw
- Have you ever considered creating an e-bo... by gold ira companies in Speakeasy Science
- certainly many thanks for web-site but yo... by Yon Rymer in Speakeasy Science
- [...] “Humans have been discovering... by Twitter / PLOS: How to Find a Fossil @DrShaena … « GHBrett's General Store in The Integrative Paleontologists
- Hi, i feel that i noticed you visited my ... by site in Speakeasy Science
- This site was... how do you say it? Relev... by pilates classes in Speakeasy Science
Blog Archives
SciWriteLabs 7.3: Long-form narratives, crappy first drafts, and the importance of wasting time
By Seth Mnookin
Posted: January 1, 2012
Posted: January 1, 2012
Category: Autism, Journalism, SciWriteLabs, The New York Times
|
Tagged Amherst, Anne Lamott, Anne Leigh, Barbara Graustark, Chris Jones, David Dobbs, Dean Baquet, Deborah Blum, Eve Online, Fred Conrad, Gay Talese, Glenn Kramon, Graduate Program in Science Writing, Jack Hart, Jack Robison, John Elder Robison, John McPhee, Jonah Lehrer, Josh Williams, Kanye Rogers, Kassie Bracken, Kirsten Lindsmith, Kurt Andersen, MIT, Nieman Storyboard, Philadelphia, The Huffington Post, The New Yorker, The Oregonian, The Panic Virus, The Paris Review, Wendy Mnookin
|
Leave a comment


