Jane Hu

Contributing Editor at High Country News Magazine

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41
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Location
United States
Languages
  • English
Covering topics
  • Environment
  • Nature & Wildlife

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Recent Articles

vulture.com

Sally Rooney in the Struggle

Beautiful World, Where Are You is both her clearest attempt to wrestle with big ideas and her least readable novel.
nytimes.com

Ha Jin Considers the Cost of Freedom in ‘A Song Everlasting’

Jin’s new novel follows a Beijing opera singer who flees to the United States after he gets in trouble with the Chinese state.
newyorker.com

Dept. of Returns

Stories of life after the vaccine.
nytimes.com

That Blah Feeling, the YOLO Economy and an Ode to the Filet-O-Fish:...

Five articles from around The Times, narrated just for you.
nytimes.com

Why the Filet-O-Fish Is My Gold Standard for Fast Food

The sandwich was an attempt to market McDonald’s to as many people as possible. Growing up Chinese-Canadian, I felt as if it were made just for me.
theverge.com

The unsettling surveillance of anti-Asian racism

How we see attacks on Asian Americans.
vulture.com

The Queen’s Gambit Is the Forrest Gump of Chess

It knocks you out with its lush costume design and production, while its beautiful white heroine slips unscathed past the roiling traumas of the era.
slate.com

The Psychology of Being “Over” COVID-19

Our brains are silly things.
nytimes.com

New Story Collections Reconsider History and Upend Tradition

The authors of “The Office of Historical Corrections,” “Igifu,” “Where the Wild Ladies Are” and “A Sense of the Whole” would like to revise the record.
lareviewofbooks.org

The Patient Ambition of John Milton: A Conversation with Thom Satte...

Thom Satterlee discusses “God’s Liar,” his new novel about the life of John Milton.
newyorker.com

The New “Mulan” ’s Uncomfortable Relationship with China’s Past and...

The Disney film, which has sparked international calls for a boycott, is an Americanized celebration of Chinese nationalism.
newyorker.com

The Second Act of Social-Media Activism

Has the Internet become better at mediating change?
theringer.com

‘Clueless’ Is Still the Best Jane Austen Adaptation

Twenty-five years later, the classic Amy Heckerling teen rom-com is also the cleverest remake in a very crowded field
washingtonpost.com

We’ll have to be a lot ruder if we want to make it through covid-19...

We’ll have to be a lot ruder if we want to make it through covid-19  The Washington Post
thenation.com

How Does One Tell the Story of Asian America?

Cathy Park Hong’s Minor Feelings grapples with the contradictions of Asian American experience in order to tell a story of solidarity.
nytimes.com

The Joy of Circling the Block (Published 2020)

It’s a rediscovery of aimless ambling, but also a late-breaking innovation of movement in lives suddenly devoid of trips or errands.
nytimes.com

The Joy of Working on a Project About Joy

Things are so bad right now, what better time to read about the things that aren’t?
nytimes.com

14 Ways We’re Finding Joy (in Spite of Everything) (Published 2020)

These times are terrible. Why not read about a few things that aren’t?
nytimes.com

The Joy of Jogging Very, Very Slowly (Published 2020)

It’s a great day for the race. The human race. At an infinitesimal pace.
nytimes.com

The Joy of Consuming an Obscene Number of Calories Before Noon (Pub...

Some might call it breakfast.
nytimes.com

The Joy of a Junky Old Nintendo (Published 2020)

Why Super Mario Bros. brought me to tears.