Bad Directions Issue #4 Published

The fourth issue of Bad Directions, my monthly newsletter on writing and travel, is published! Subscribers get to read about my favorite restaurants from my recent trip to Washington, DC, and some of my favorite novels that do a great job of evoking a sense of place.

Subscribers also have access to all previously published editions, which so far include stories from Oaxaca (Issue #1), Paris and Budapest (Issue #2), and Baja (Issue #3). As a bonus, readers can ask me anything about writing or travel and I’ll do my best to respond.

You can sign up for Bad Directions here. The link to the archives (password required) is here.

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Bad Directions Issue #3 Published

The third issue of Bad Directions, my monthly newsletter on writing and travel, is published! Subscribers get to read about La Ventana, Mexico; how I turned a real-life setting into fiction; and my favorite TV spy series. Subscribers also have access to all previously published editions, which so far have included stories from Oaxaca (Issue #1) as well as Paris and Budapest (Issue #2). As a bonus, readers can ask me anything about writing or travel and I’ll do my best to respond.

You can sign up for Bad Directions here. The link to the archives (password required) is here.

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The Writers’ Carnival Comes to Town

The interior of the newly remodeled Seattle Convention Center.

The AWP Conference and Bookfair descends on Seattle in a few weeks. Ten thousand writers are expected to attend in the city’s sparkling, newly remodeled convention center. If you think that sounds overwhelming, you’re not alone: Several fully legit writer friends have told me they don’t attend because they feel like it’s not “for them” or because it would make them anxious.

But for some – especially anyone who’s done an MFA or taught at a university – it’s the reunion of the year, an opportunity to do the things people do at conferences for bankers and marketers and software vendors: network, stay up late, break a few New Year’s resolutions. Writer Carolyn Kellogg called it a “roving literary carnival.” This year’s is bound to be the biggest AWP since the pandemic began. With hundreds of panels and God knows how many offsite events, the FOMO alone could knock you out.

I’m not a regular AWP attendee, but this year it’s in my city so I’ll make the rounds as best I can. My writing group is using it as an excuse to get our two out-of-towners into the city for lunch. I know writers returning from Belize and Korea to attend. We’re hosting a charming visitor from Florida in the guest bedroom. And Min Jin Lee is the keynote speaker, hurrah!

Heading in. Wish me luck.

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REVISITING LAB LEAKS

Plum Island, home of the Plum Island Animal Disease Center, from the air.

Before Covid-19, and the current effort to figure out its origins, I began work on my story Hot Zone in the Heartland, co-published by The New Yorker and the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. It’s about the risks posed by high-containment laboratories — those rated BSL-3 or BSL-4 — where scientists handle the most lethal and contagious diseases.

My story explored why the US government is putting such a lab smack in the middle of Kansas, where a leak could destroy the beef industry, as well as why it is allowing them to be built at an exponential rate despite the risks.

The piece was published a year ago this week, just as the world was locking down to contain a rampant pandemic and spiking death rate. When someone asked me in an interview about the origins of the virus, I said it came from bats. Which it originally did.

What we still don’t know is the trajectory Covid-19 took from bats to humans, and whether the virus happened to pass through, or change within, any high-containment labs. (More…)

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