Claire Harbage
[Copyright 2024 NPR]
-
After the shooting at the Capital Gazette newspaper, the surviving staff resolve to rebuild their paper.
-
A region normally warm and dry has received a rare blanket of snow, bringing snowball games and otherworldly images to city streets, religious shrines and archeological sites.
-
Pro-Trump extremists halted lawmakers as they counted the Electoral College ballots for President-elect Joe Biden.
-
In a year overshadowed by COVID-19, the world saw plenty of other significant developments. Here are some glimpses of the protests, conflicts — and efforts at peace — that helped define 2020.
-
In a rural North Carolina town, photographer Madeline Gray paints an intimate portrait of a girl's basketball team.
-
Ginsburg became the first woman to lie in state at the U.S. Capitol.
-
Fukushima was forever changed by a nuclear disaster in 2011. What does recovery mean for the region? It's an answer filled with resilience, reinvention and regret.
-
A photographer has crossed the United States to explore the American dream on roads named Paradise.
-
An NPR photojournalist's grandfather's 90th birthday party, canceled due to COVID-19, inspired a poem — and his vow to stay 89.
-
Artist Amy Parrish uses modern and vintage photographs to explore the loss of her grandmother who was suffering from dementia in her series "Check the Mail for Her Letter."