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    June 2026June 2026
    Standards of Care
    The Sun InterviewBy Naomi PittsStandards of CareRolonda Donelson on Bias and Anti-Science Attitudes in Medicine

    The reason Black women were used to develop the field of gynecology was because they were no more than property. They weren’t seen as people; they were just seen as things. The controlling of Black women’s bodies started with chattel slavery, but it continues today.

    Milk
    Readers WriteBy Our ReadersMilk

    Pumped for an infant, spilled at the dinner table, used as a tear gas antidote

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    Submissions

    Tips, Getting Dressed, and Graffiti

    Upcoming Readers Write Deadlines

    There’s still time to submit to Readers Write on “Tips.” Be sure to get your entry to us by February 1—we’ve suggested a few potential prompts if you still need to get your creative juices flowing. And it’s never too early to start your first draft for an upcoming topic. . . .

    January 30, 2025
    Submissions

    Records, Tips, and Getting Dressed

    Upcoming Readers Write Deadlines

    There’s still time to submit to Readers Write on “Records.” Be sure to get your entry to us by January 1, 2025—we’ve suggested a few potential prompts if you still need to get your creative juices flowing. And it’s never too early to start your first draft for an upcoming topic. . . .

    December 27, 2024
    Outreach

    Staff Stories: Memorable Gifts

    The December Readers Write on “Luxuries” prompted a few of us on the Sun staff to share stories about our own surprising and memorable gifts. Unwrap those now.

    December 24, 2024
    Featured Selections

    The Great Beyond

    Selections from the Archive

    The Sun has a long history of publishing work about the mystery of what might await us after our lives on earth have ended. December’s selections from our archive—some spooky, some serious, and some on the lighter side—delve into visions of the afterlife. Whatever your personal beliefs, we hope you’ll find a piece or two to enjoy.

    December 23, 2024
    Profiles

    Giving till It Hurts

    Elizabeth Miki Brina on Money and Parents

    In her essay “The Work We Do,” which appears in our December issue, Elizabeth Miki Brina describes how her mother, an immigrant from Okinawa who came to the US at the age of twenty-six, happily paid for many of her daughter’s expenses even after Elizabeth was well into adulthood. It’s a subject sure to irk anyone who had to pay their own way from a young age. I talked to Elizabeth about money and parents and the fraught nature of writing about both.

    By Andrew Snee• December 13, 2024
    Featured Selections

    Family Inheritances

    Poetry in Our December Issue

    What we inherit from our families can take many forms—intangible, difficult, or surprising—as you’ll find in our December poems. Frederick Joseph remembers an enduring lesson learned from his grandmother, his “maker of miracles,” in “Making Luxury Out of Flat Soda.” The narrator in Mickie Kennedy’s “Guarding the Coop” battles a tendency for violence passed down from his mother. And in Joseph Bathanti’s “Right Guard,” the author conjures his father’s spirit from a can of deodorant his dad left behind.

    By Nancy Holochwost• December 11, 2024
    Submissions

    Complexion, Records, and Tips

    Upcoming Readers Write Deadlines

    There’s still time to submit to Readers Write on “Complexion”! Be sure to get your entry to us by December 1, 2024—we’ve suggested a few potential prompts if you still need to get your creative juices flowing. And it’s never too early to start your first draft for an upcoming topic. . . .

    November 29, 2024
    New Releases

    New-Release Roundup

    November 2024

    The books put out by Sun authors over the last several months include a few out-of-the ordinary offerings, such as a collection of short stories about Alaska and a literary field guide that combines poetry with scientific notes. If you’d like a preview, you can read some poems and stories that first appeared in The Sun at the links provided.

    By Nancy Holochwost• November 27, 2024
    Featured Selections

    Sun Dial: Pieces About Phones

    Selections from the Archive

    Phone evangelist, Becky Mandelbaum, describes the hours at a time—hours!—spent with her ear to the receiver, and all the pleasure she’s derived from it, in her essay in our November issue, “The Telephone Mode.” Phones have come up in The Sun about as frequently as you’d expect. Here are some selections from our archives where a phone plays a pivotal role.

    By Derek Askey• November 25, 2024
    Profiles

    In Sync

    Ismael Fernandez on the Joy and Passion of Dance and Photography

    Through his images, Brooklyn-based photographer Ismael Fernandez strives to reveal the everyday beauty that may often go unnoticed. His photo essay in The Sun’s November issue—“Blues in Black and White”—does just that. The images illuminate the soulful ambience and spirited connection at events combining dancing and live blues music in New York City. I was curious to learn more about Ismael’s passion for both photography and dance.

    By Rachel J. Elliott• November 13, 2024
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