The Great Fire had claimed many things from London: entire parishes, ancient churches, and ten thousand homes. Still, it failed to purge the city’s capacity for human misery. In the charred skeleton of what had once been Newgate gaol, masons worked through the bitter December cold, their breath forming clouds as they raised new walls … Read more
Archive: Month: <span>May 2025</span>
We are just a symbiotic collaborating bacteria: Why You Are a Bacterial Supergroup in a Tracksuit
If you’ve ever fancied yourself as a lone individual, an autonomous unit of decision-making brilliance, don’t. You may not realise it, but you are not a singular being. You’re a walking parliament of cellular delegates, a confederacy of semi-autonomous microbial citizens with different accents and job descriptions, duct-taped together by evolution and trying their best … Read more
Tales from a Korean Wedding
Or: How to Get Married in 3 Hours and Feed 200 Strangers at Once Seoul is a city built on contradictions and careful choreography. It’s a place where forty-storey glass towers cast shadows on two-storey barbecue joints. Where tree-lined alleyways snake between apartment blocks like the city is still trying to remember its village roots. … Read more
Who was Eve Leary?
Who was Eve Leary? The name haunts modern Georgetown, attached to police headquarters and military barracks, yet its origins dissolve into the humid mists of colonial memory. In truth, Eve Leary was less a person than a palimpsest—the name given to a Demerara plantation that bore witness to the extraordinary life of Sara Thibou (1711-1780s), … Read more