Kerri Miller Feature

Is baseball changing for the better?
Will changes to the sport bring in new fans? Or alienate loyal ones?
Cruz, Sanders win in Wisconsin
Cruz and anti-Trump forces hope Wisconsin signals the start of Trump's decline. For Sanders, Wisconsin was the latest in a string of victories that have given him an incentive to keep competing against Clinton.
'We want to hear new voices': Diversity in sci-fi and fantasy
"The real strongholds of fantasy and science fiction are stereotypically very white and old," said Zen Cho, author of "Sorcerer to the Crown." But the industry is changing.
The Brady Bunch set an unrealistically high bar for what can happen when two families come together. Blended families are complicated, but two experts on the matter say it can work.
How reliable is eyewitness testimony?
"People have always known that it's hard to remember the faces of strangers, and that there are problems with eyewitness memory," said Brandon Garrett, law professor at the University of Virginia.
Friday Roundtable: A young doctor confronts his own death
Paul Kalanithi was in his final year of a neurosurgery residency when he was diagnosed with stage four lung cancer. His memoir asks: What makes life worth living in the face of death?
'The Violet Hour': How famous writers confronted death
Katie Roiphe's new book explores how influential thinkers like Susan Sontag, Sigmund Freud and Maurice Sendak spent their final hours.
What should you do about a bad boss?
Job search strategist Amy Lindgren shares strategies for handling neglectful or toxic bosses.
Op-Ed: Bush would have chosen Merrick Garland
A former legal adviser to President George W. Bush says Merrick Garland would have been an excellent Supreme Court choice for a Republican president, too.