Paul Ninson had an old-school, newfangled dream: a modern library devoted to photobooks showing life on the continent. He ...
Congress has approved a short-term spending bill to fund the government until March 14. President Biden signed the ...
It was a true holiday gift this week to see an opinion piece in The New York Times by Pope Francis. In a short essay adapted ...
NPR staff recommend memoirs from our annual Books We Love list: "Bird of Four Hundred Voices," "The Backyard Bird Chronicles," "Knife," and "Here After." ...
An impasse over the budget and the threat of a government shutdown dominated political news earlier this week.
We explore the history of the bells that have become so tied with the Christmas season: jingle bells.
An impasse over the budget and the threat of a government shutdown dominated political news earlier this week.
NPR's Scott Simon talks to Rep. Dusty Johnson, R-S.D., about the House GOP caucus and the Dec. 20 stopgap funding vote.
German officials say a 50-year-old Saudi doctor who moved to Germany in 2006 deliberately drove his car into a crowded outdoor Christmas market Friday.
Hours away from a government shutdown, Congress passed a bill to fund federal operations until March 14, 2025.
The Kurdish coalition that controls a third of Syria and helped the US fight ISIS is facing a new reality after the ouster of Bashar al-Assad. NATO ally Turkey sees them as a threat and is demanding ...
About 300 Americans a year give a kidney to a complete stranger. Researchers have studied the brains of these very generous people, and say they may feel others' pain more than the average person.