NPR staffers bring you more than 300 new book recommendations in the latest edition of Books We Love. Plus, what to expect ...
It's time to discuss one of the perennial debates of the holiday season. Are real Christmas trees or their fake counterparts ...
The six-month season saw an above-average number of storms. Scientists say climate change is leading to more powerful and ...
Indigenous advocates called the final agreement in Azerbaijan "drastically insufficient." Now they're focusing on next year's ...
Longtime state media journalist Dong Yuyu met often with journalists and diplomats. His family believes he is now being ...
At least five Democratic members of Congress from Connecticut were targeted by bomb threats on Thursday. Police who responded ...
Colder weather and rains hit Gazans living in tents and bombed-out buildings. Most families don't have homes or shelter. We hear from families on the edge of survival.
Yvonne Morley-Chisholm was on an annual retreat in England in 2014 when she had something of a eureka moment. "We were meeting in the city of Leicester, and I thought, 'Leicester, Leicester — oh, didn ...
The parliamentary election will decide the next government, and will show whether Ireland bucks the global trend of incumbents being ousted by disgruntled voters.
Scientists observed wolves in Ethiopia feeding on flower nectar. This may be the first instance of a predator serving as a pollinator.
A social media ban for children under 16 will be the first law in the world to levy fines on TikTok, Facebook, Snapchat, ...
In this week's StoryCorps, Philadelphia radio host Cherri Gregg remembers her grandmother, Maryhall Fuller Robinson Snead, who helped her find her voice.