
Anna Lena Phillips
Anna Lena Phillips, a contributing editor of American Scientist, is editor of Ecotone and a lecturer in the creative writing department at the University of North Carolina Wilmington. Her travel-sized guide to poetic forms, A Pocket Book of Forms, is forthcoming in 2013; her writing appears in Open Letters Monthly, International Poetry Review, BlazeVOX and the Anthology of Appalachian Writers, among other journals. She formerly served as senior editor and book review editor at American Scientist. More about her work can be found at todointhenewyear.net.
Content By Author
Article
- Falling Through the Screen
- An Ecology of Happiness
- Modern-day Botanicals
- Serious Nonsense
- Beautiful Corn
- Sex, Genes and Arms Control
- Book Reviewing in the Sciences: A Conversation
- Classic Book Reviews: The Early Years
- A Limited-Edition Report from the Field
- A Useful Pageant
- Science and Poetry
- Sneaky Silk Moths
- Relative Risk, One Result at a Time
- Crowdsourcing Gender Equity
- A Walk in the Woods
- Making Better Maps of Food Deserts
- The Algorists
- Golden State Ecology
- The Shallows
- Epic Science
- Getting a Fix on Pollen Folding
- Crow Planet
- Heading South
- Sunburned Ferns?
- Early Spring
- Don't Fence Me Out
- Shorter takes on four books
- For Every Bird a Nest
- Savory Individuals
- Science Art Found
- Short takes on three books
- Tracking the Invaders
- What's Wrong with this Picture?
- Move Over, Flintstones
- One Tree at a Time
- Of Sunflowers and Citizens
- Short takes on three books
- Sites for Change
- Ars Scientifica
- Picking Up Stitches
- Bioplastics Boom
- Short takes on three books
- Nanoviews
- Beetle Bonanza
- Junk Food
- Short takes on three books
- The Flowering of a Naturalist