Kerri Miller Feature

The modern science of love
What do your brainwaves look like when you're in love? What's the science behind hooking up? Anthropologist Helen Fisher discusses love in the modern age.
Dog-gone good reads: 10 books for dog lovers
These books about loyal canines and loveable pups will charm, delight and have you reaching for the tissues.
On 'a terrorist, a president and the rise of the drone'
Scott Shane's book "Objective Troy" provides an in-depth biography of Anwar al-Awlaki, the American citizen and al-Qaida propagandist who was killed in a drone strike in 2011.
Trump, Sanders win New Hampshire primaries
Republican Donald Trump and Democrat Bernie Sanders added crucial credibility to their upstart candidacies and underscored voters' insistence on shaking up American politics.
Opinion: Cancel Olympics due to Zika outbreak
Bioethicist Arthur Caplan, of New York University, says it would be irresponsible to hold the Olympic Games in Rio due to the Zika virus outbreak.
What a 'critically wounded' Voting Rights Act means in 2016
Ari Berman's book, "Give Us the Ballot," tracks the history of the struggle for voting rights, from 1965 through to modern debates on voter ID laws.
How The New York Times picks the best books of the year
Pamela Paul, editor for The New York Times Book Review, offers an inside look at how the list comes together. Listen to a selection of interviews with authors who made the 2015 cut.
Highlighting the women in Shakespeare's plays
Less than one in five of Shakespeare's characters are women. Three artistic directors share their views on how modern productions of his plays can highlight women.
Where are the diverse children's books?
A new survey commissioned by Lee & Low Books shows that the publishing industry is 79 percent white. That trend carries through to the books that are published.