Friday, 30 July 2021

Here Are the 11 New Books You Should Read in August

A crop of fresh books arriving in August offers something for every reader, from tennis legend Billie Jean King’s autobiography to Helen Hoang’s latest swoony love story. August welcomes the return of veterans like Deborah Levy and Hilma Wolitzer and ushers in fiction debuts from Anthony Veasna So and poet HonorĂ©e Fanonne Jeffers. There’s an innovative thriller, heartbreaking short story collections, a comprehensive account of the history of white feminism and more. Here, the 11 new books to read this month.

Radiant Fugitives, Nawaaz Ahmed (August 3)

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Three generations’ worth of family secrets come to an astounding head in Nawaaz Ahmed’s debut novel Radiant Fugitives. Set in the early days of the Obama administration, the story centers on Seema, a Muslim Indian political activist, whose pregnancy with her first child leads her to reconnect with her estranged family amid a swiftly changing cultural landscape. In the span of just a week, Seema, her mother, and her sister confront a lifetime of tensions and unspoken desires before they welcome a new life into their brood.

Buy Now: Radiant Fugitives on Bookshop | Amazon

All’s Well, Mona Awad (August 3)

College theater director Miranda Fitch is losing her grip on just about everything in her life. She’s consumed by chronic back pain following an acting accident that ruined her marriage, her career and left her dependent on painkillers. And now her current job is on the line, and Miranda decides to stage a production of the same Shakespeare play that put her in this precarious position, All’s Well That Ends Well. The appearance of three strangers that are far too familiar with Miranda’s past—and offer her a dangerously appealing deal to secure a better future—complicate Miranda’s mission. What ensues in the latest novel from the author of Bunny is a darkly hilarious journey into the psyche of a woman approaching her breaking point.

Buy Now: All’s Well on Bookshop | Amazon

The Husbands, Chandler Baker (August 3)

Can women ever really have it all? The question propels Chandler Baker’s latest page-turner, which follows an attorney named Nora Sprangler who is struggling to balance her successful career and the needs of her growing family. Everything changes when the Spranglers move to Dynasty Ranch, an exclusive suburban enclave where ambitious women are married to men who happily share the domestic duties. There, Nora is asked to help with a neighbor’s wrongful death case, setting in motion a series of startling revelations about her new community. The Husbands, set to be adapted into a film starring Kristen Wiig, is an unsettling portrait of marriage, motherhood and love.

Buy Now: The Husbands on Bookshop | Amazon

Holdout, Jeffrey Kluger (August 3)

In TIME editor-at-large Jeffrey Kluger’s Holdout, astronaut Walli Beckwith has devoted her entire career to excelling at space travel, but she soon finds that her most pressing concern is an urgent and time-sensitive issue on earth. After a freak accident necessitates that Walli and her colleagues leave the International Space Station where they work, she sees a golden—if risky—opportunity to make a case for the kind of change she’d like to see earthside in this action-packed thriller of a novel.

Buy Now: Holdout on Bookshop | Amazon

Afterparties: Stories, Anthony Veasna So (August 3)

In his posthumous debut collection of short stories, Afterparties: Stories, Anthony Veasna So captures the challenges and triumphs of a close-knit community of Cambodian Americans living in Southern California in the shadow of genocide. Marked by sharp wit and overwhelming in the scope of emotions they portray, So’s vignettes offer a nuanced and compassionate view of the rich and complex experiences of a group of immigrants who dared to build new lives in an often unforgiving country. The collection is a true testament to So’s strength as a writer—and its publication is bittersweet in light of his untimely death last winter at the age of 28, a taste of a singular talent gone far too soon.

Buy Now: Afterparties on Bookshop | Amazon

Against White Feminism: Notes on Disruption, Rafia Zakaria (August 17)

The history of feminism has long been dominated by a white and Western narrative, presenting a liberatory movement for white women, at the expense of women around the world who are Black, Indigenous and people of color. In Against White Feminism, attorney and political philosopher Rafia Zakaria presents a clear-eyed analysis of the harrowing true impact of white feminism when it comes to upholding colonial, patriarchal, capitalist and white supremacist structures. Delving into issues that run the gamut from the often problematic nature of foreign aid to the complicated politics of sexual liberation, Zakaria offers an expansive and intersectional critique of white feminism while envisioning a more inclusive future for all.

Buy Now: Against White Feminism on Bookshop | Amazon

The Love Songs of W.E.B. Du Bois, Honorée Fanonne Jeffers (August 24)

HonorĂ©e Fanonne Jeffers, National Book Award long-listed poet, makes her fiction debut with The Love Songs of W.E.B. Du Bois, a vibrant and tender coming-of-age novel. Ailey Pearl Garfield is a young girl reckoning with what it means to be a Black woman in America as she teeters on the precipice of adulthood. While she negotiates her place in the world, Ailey travels through time and space to explore her family’s history, from their enslavement in the Georgia town of Chicasetta to their lingering generational trauma in the present day. Ailey’s time-traveling journey features complex and intimate narratives of love and heartbreak from her family’s two centuries in the American South, giving her not only insight into her family’s complicated past, but also the tools to imagine her own future.

Buy Now: The Love Songs of W.E.B. Du Bois on Bookshop | Amazon

All In: An Autobiography, Billie Jean King (August 17)

Tennis champion Billie Jean King reflects on her life and trailblazing career in her new autobiography. All In traces everything from King’s experiences with sexism in sports to her work in the LGBTQ rights movement to her iconic win in the 1973 “Battle of the Sexes” match against Bobby Riggs. Throughout, King describes the challenges she faced and the issues she continues to fight for in urgent and vivid terms, coalescing into a powerful self-portrait of an inspiring athlete and activist.

Buy Now: All In on Bookshop | Amazon

Real Estate: A Living Autobiography, Deborah Levy (August 24)

The spaces we occupy can speak volumes about the lives we seek to live and the people we are—and hope to become. At least, that’s the case that Deborah Levy makes in Real Estate, the third and final installation in her lauded Living Autobiography memoir series. In Levy’s trademark incisive prose, she meditates on both the literal and conceptual facets of home, property and living. Sparkling with humor and Levy’s zest for life, it’s a read for everyone who understands that home, though always familiar, can be found in the most unexpected of places.

Buy Now: Real Estate on Bookshop | Amazon

The Heart Principle, Helen Hoang (August 31)

Anna Sun is a burnt-out violinist who falls for the most unexpected suitor in Helen Hoang’s dazzling new romance. After Anna’s longterm boyfriend suggests they open their relationship, she decides to pursue a one-night stand with a motorcycle-riding man who couldn’t be less her type. But the heroine’s determination to keep it casual begins to dissolve as their fling turns into something much more. Sensitive and sweet, The Heart Principle—a worthy follow-up to Hoang’s 2019 novel The Bride Test—explores a burgeoning romance built on undeniable chemistry.

Buy Now: The Heart Principle on Bookshop | Amazon

Today a Woman Went Mad in the Supermarket: Stories, Hilma Wolitzer (August 31)

In her latest collection of short stories, Hilma Wolitzer, the 91-year-old fiction writer and mother of novelist Meg Wolitzer, explores the quiet and sometimes devastating moments that accompany marriage. Today a Woman Went Mad in the Supermarket, which includes many stories that were first published in the 1960s and 70s, features narratives like the evolving relationship between Paulie and Howard as they navigate parenthood, growing up and growing old. The result is a timeless examination of the bonds that connect us and the staying power of love.

Buy Now: Today a Woman Went Mad in the Supermarket on Bookshop | Amazon



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Israeli authorities inspect NSO Group offices after Pegasus revelations - The Guardian

  1. Israeli authorities inspect NSO Group offices after Pegasus revelations  The Guardian
  2. Spyware revelations are a crucial moment for Indian democracy  Financial Times
  3. Israel Spyware Firm NSO's Owner To Be Liquidated. Pegasus Scandal Fallout?  NDTV
  4. Perspective | Mexico's shockingly broad use of spyware is a revelation. Nothing will change.  The Washington Post
  5. Israeli defence minister to share findings on NSO with France  Al Jazeera English
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'I'm a little bit lost for words still': Matt Coward-Holley wins bronze for GB in Olympics men's trap - The Telegraph

  1. 'I'm a little bit lost for words still': Matt Coward-Holley wins bronze for GB in Olympics men's trap  The Telegraph
  2. Australia’s Fox takes canoe slalom gold with silver for Team GB’s Franklin  The Guardian
  3. Mallory Franklin wins silver | CANOE SLALOM Women's final - Highlights | Olympic Games - Tokyo 2020  Eurosport
  4. Team GB add slalom silver and shooting bronze – British medallists in Tokyo  The Independent
  5. Tokyo 2020 Olympics: Mallory Franklin wins canoe slalom silver medal for Team GB  Sky Sports
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'Trying to survive': Wells dry up amid Oregon water woes



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Federal Election Commission fines Sen. Rand Paul's presidential PAC over contributions



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Holocaust memorial in Westminster is given go-ahead after inquiry - The Guardian

  1. Holocaust memorial in Westminster is given go-ahead after inquiry  The Guardian
  2. Holocaust memorial outside Parliament to go ahead  BBC News
  3. Campaigners lose fight against Holocaust memorial in Westminster  The Times
  4. National Holocaust memorial can be built next to Westminster, minister rules  ITV News
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LA's Venice Beach a flashpoint in city's homeless crisis



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A Chinese billionaire who dared to speak out against the government has been sentenced to 18 years in prison for 'provoking trouble'



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Trump threatened Republicans in order to block Biden’s infrastructure plan – but they ignored him - The Independent

  1. Trump threatened Republicans in order to block Biden’s infrastructure plan – but they ignored him  The Independent
  2. US Senate votes to advance infrastructure deal after bipartisan breakthrough  The Guardian
  3. Democratic Sen. Kyrsten Sinema comes out against $3.5T reconciliation bill with Senate split  Daily Mail
  4. Senate infrastructure deal is a win for bipartisanship, thanks to Sen. Sinema  NBC News
  5. Breakthrough on Joe Biden's multitrillion-dollar infrastructure plan  The Times
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The Ascent Review - IGN

The Ascent Review  IGNView Full coverage on Google News

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Huawei’s P50 announced with Snapdragon 888 and HarmonyOS - The Verge

  1. Huawei’s P50 announced with Snapdragon 888 and HarmonyOS  The Verge
  2. Watch the Huawei P50 series announcement live - GSMArena.com news  GSMArena.com
  3. Huawei P50 release date, price, what you need to know and how the P50 Pro differs  TechRadar
  4. HUAWEI P50 Series - All-New Dual-Matrix Camera Design  Huawei Mobile
  5. Huawei launches the Huawei P50 and P50 Pro, equipped with a 4G-only Snapdragon 888 and some superb camera hardware  Notebookcheck.net
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Inmarsat to launch small satellite network - BBC News

Inmarsat to launch small satellite network  BBC NewsView Full coverage on Google News

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Thursday, 29 July 2021

Former eBay supervisor jailed for cyber-stalking critics

A former police captain turned eBay employee harassed critics of the online-auction company.

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How a Sports Illustrated model quieted bullies who called her 'Godzilla' and 'Yao Ming'



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Republicans are accusing Democrats of dodging a key Jan. 6 question. Congress already held hearings to answer it.



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Retired US general says the Trump White House 'was complicit in the planning' of the January 6 insurrection



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Alzheimer's breakthrough as major finding makes it possible to calculate risk - Express

Alzheimer's breakthrough as major finding makes it possible to calculate risk  Express

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Astronomers see back of a black hole for first time, proving Albert Einstein was right



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Ofcom appoints online safety head to take on big tech

Anna-Sophie Harling will have responsibility over how big technology companies regulate harmful speech.

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I’m a Pandemic Dad Who’s Been Covering COVID-19. I Don’t Know How to Think About the Risk Anymore

I’ll say this for the pre-vaccine days: it was far easier to think about risk when the only sensible option—for those lucky enough for it to even be an option—was to hunker down, avoid as much contact with other people as possible, and wait out the storm.

But a year of self-imposed isolation, fueled partially by fear and partially by a moral imperative to not infect others, has a way of scrambling your brain in a way that makes it hard to figure out what’s “safe” now that we’ve entered this strange, half-vaccinated liminal phase. After getting my shots this past spring, it took me weeks to feel anything resembling normal while spending time with family and friends indoors again. Now, with the Delta variant fueling a potential fourth wave while only half the country is vaccinated and many people are acting as if the pandemic is over, it’s harder than ever to gauge the risk to myself and, more importantly, my nearly two-year-old son.
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It would help if you and I could think this through together. I, a 32-year-old vaccinated man with no relevant pre-existing conditions, am very safe from developing severe COVID-19. Yes, breakthrough cases happen—they were always going to happen; the vaccines were judged on their ability to prevent serious disease, not infection—but they are rare, and serious cases among the inoculated are rarer still. The result: this has become, as U.S. President Joe Biden recently put it, a “pandemic of the unvaccinated;” nearly all the latest deaths are among those who didn’t get their shots.

The logical side of my brain knows all this, but the anxiety-driven corners of it also know that breakthrough cases still happen, and there’s a non-zero chance I could be one of those cases, and wind up very sick, or die, or end up with inexplicable Long COVID symptoms that plague me for months, years, or the rest of my life, making it harder to be the father I want to be. My answer to all this is to keep avoiding large indoor crowds, to steer clear of anyone I know to be unvaccinated, and to start wearing my mask at the grocery store again, CDC guidance otherwise be damned. I’ve gotten used to the hermit life—a little too used to it, probably—and another few months of laying low won’t kill me.

Judging the risk to my son, unfortunately, is far harder. Like all Americans under 12, he remains unvaccinated, though I would bring him in for the shot in a heartbeat given the chance. Children mostly do not get seriously sick from COVID-19; only about 350 have died of the virus in the U.S. so far, per the American Academy of Pediatrics, a vanishingly small case fatality rate of 0.01%. But, again, it does happen, and every headline I see about an eight-, six-, or three-year-old who died from a serious case makes me want to take my son, climb into a doomsday bunker and return only when it’s time for his bar mitzvah. That childhood COVID-19 fatalities are skyrocketing in Indonesia is a particularly harrowing data point, though many children there, and in other low-income parts of the world, are likely at higher risk because, tragically, they suffer from poor access to health care, malnutrition, and other factors that make them more vulnerable to disease in general.

In talking with other parents with kids around my son’s age, it’s become clear that to become a first-time parent in the pandemic is a unique experience, and one that warps how you think about parenting and risk tolerance, possibly forever. My purely anecdotal findings suggest that parents of slightly older kids—kids who became actualized human beings with likes, dislikes and aptitudes well before COVID-19 sent everything sideways—are generally a little more willing to accept the (again, very low) risk the virus poses to their children; they have already learned the inevitable lesson that you can’t protect your kids from everything scary forever. My fellow pandemic first-time parents, meanwhile, are—again, speaking generally—freaked right the hell out.

I suspect that becoming a parent always changes how you think about risk, both regarding yourself and the tiny blob you’ve suddenly been tasked with caring for—regardless of the historical and geographical context. But there is probably something unique about entering parenthood at a moment when “risk tolerance” became the defining question of human existence.

My wife and I have, for now, only slightly recalibrated how we think about the risk our son now faces. Earlier this summer, when cases were low and Delta wasn’t a concern in the U.S., we took him to the zoo; we probably wouldn’t do that now. He’s still in day care, something I wrestle with every day. He clearly loves “school,” as we call it, and he’s bringing home new skills (he recently started, out of nowhere, walking backwards) and words almost every day, marking significant milestones in his physical and mental development. But exposure to COVID-19 in that environment seems inevitable, despite the efforts his day care center is making to keep the kids safe, and it tears me up inside that there’s a potential future in which he gets very sick because mom and dad needed to work in order to feed, clothe, and shelter him—and, ironically enough, pay for daycare.

I have more or less accepted that the draw-dropping transmissibility of the Delta variant means that I, my son and my wife will all probably be exposed at some point or another, no matter the effort we make to avoid it. When and if that happens, I have to trust that the vaccines will protect my wife and I, while my son will fend it off by virtue of his age. I’m not throwing caution totally to the wind—we’re not taking him to crowded indoor spaces like museums, and I’m avoiding such spaces myself. But small visits with vaccinated family members are very much on the table—indeed, I’m currently writing this from my in-laws’ basement; my son is upstairs with Nana and Opa.

Our thinking may change if the situation gets dramatically worse, or if new data suggest a greater risk to kids (hopefully, the CDC’s revised masking guidance will make life safer for unvaccinated children). But this virus has already taken too much from him, and it wouldn’t be fair to once again totally isolate him from his loved ones, no matter how badly I just want to protect him at all costs. We are, after all, doing other ostensibly dangerous stuff with him, like driving, an activity that in 2018 resulted in the deaths of 636 children in the U.S., per the CDC, about double the number known to have died of COVID-19 so far. I just hope that’s the right decision.



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Republicans lash out against revised CDC mask guidance – live updates - The Guardian

  1. Republicans lash out against revised CDC mask guidance – live updates  The Guardian
  2. Covid-19: CDC brings back indoor mask guidance for virus hot spots  BBC News
  3. 'We won't go back!' Trump lashes out at CDC for reimplementing mask orders for vaccinated people  Daily Mail
  4. New US mask guidance prompted by evidence vaccinated can spread Delta  The Guardian
  5. CDC says fully vaccinated people spread the Delta variant and should wear masks: 'This new science is worrisome'  Yahoo News UK
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Airlines jump as UK reopens to double-jabbed Americans and Europeans - live updates - Telegraph.co.uk

Airlines jump as UK reopens to double-jabbed Americans and Europeans - live updates  Telegraph.co.ukView Full coverage on Google News

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Team USA Wins First-Ever Women’s 3×3 Basketball Olympic Gold

The Team USA 3×3 basketball squad—featuring WNBA players Stephanie Dolson of the Chicago Sky, Kelsey Plum and Jackie Young of the Las Vegas Aces and Allisha Gray of the Dallas Wings—won the first-ever women’s gold medal in Olympic 3×3 basketball on Wednesday Night at the Aomi Urban Sports Park in Tokyo, getting by the Russian Olympic Committee (ROC), 18-15. China squeezed by France, 16-14, for the bronze.

From the outset, Team USA controlled the game; and showed off the balance of its attack. On the first U.S. possession, Gray took it hard to the basket to draw a foul. Plum hit lefty scoop shot; her favorite trick. The 6’5″ Dolson—who goes by the Instagram handle is “bigmamastef”—used her size to grab an offensive rebound and score. She finished with nine rebounds, each one seemingly more crucial than the last. The U.S. rushed out to a 12-5 lead, but Russia fought back, to put it to 15-12 with 1:30 left. After Plum missed a three-pointer with 1:16 left, Dolson positioned herself to grab another offensive rebound. She got fouled and hit two free throws to gave Team USA a 17-12 lead with 1:16 to go. In 3×3, a five-point advantage at that point in the game is enormous, as two-point shots are worth one-point and three-pointers worth two. After Russia cut it to 3, 17-14, with 44 seconds left, Dolson, of course, had another rebound and putback that essentially sealed the game.
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The Americans were more aggressive; they went to the foul line 11 times, converting eight free throws. Russia did not go the foul line once. The U.S. out-rebounded Russia 21-11.

After the game, a relaxed, smiling Dolson, towel hanging over her left shoulder, waved and smiled to the Team USA support staff. For the Russians, it was too much Big Mama Stef.

3x3 Basketball - Olympics: Day 5
Christian Petersen—Getty ImagesStefanie Dolson, Jacquelyn Young, Kelsey Plum and Allisha Gray of Team USA celebrate victory and winning the gold medal in the 3×3 Basketball competition at the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games at Aomi Urban Sports Park on July 28, 2021 in Tokyo, Japan.

Two of Russia’s players, Evgina and Olga Frolkina, are twins. Tonight was their 24th birthday. Afterwards, a small group in the crowd sang to them. They’ll celebrate with silver.

Three-on-three—officially 3×3, with the “x,” in the Olympic lexicon—debuted as a quirky Olympic curiosity in Tokyo. Goofy music blared during games: few expect to hear Pat Benatar’s “I Love Rock and Roll” during Olympic action. The public address announcer also offered commentary. “Niiiice pass,” he said during the women’s final. Games are 10 minutes long: the team that grabs a rebound dribbles or passes out to the three-point line, then goes on the offensive attack. With the 12-second shot clock, no team can milk a time; a comeback always felt possible. The games were fast, furious, and fun, giving the Games a little playground vibe.

The games hinge on player movement and reward crisp passing and unselfish play. Clever screens lead to layups. The refs let a lot more bumping go. With fewer defenders clogging the middle, the flow is freer.

3×3 basketball proved it belonged at the Olympics. And the U.S. women took advantage. As of Tokyo’s Tuesday night, the sport gave the United States an 11th gold medal; the Americans trails only Japan (13) and China (12) in the race for most gold at the Games.

Read more about the Tokyo Olympics:



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This Is Who Will Replace Simone Biles in the Olympic Gymnastics All-Around Final

When Simone Biles withdrew from the gymnastics team event at the Tokyo Summer Olympic Games on July 27, her teammates and coaches scrambled to fill in for her on the spot, since Biles made the sudden decision after the competition had started. Sunisa Lee and Jordan Chiles stepped in and both pulled off impressive routines with little notice — and no warm up time — to help the US women earn silver.

Biles announced a day later that she is also withdrawing from the all-around event, the marquee competition for women’s gymnastics. Biles is the reigning Olympic all-around champion, but won’t be defending her title after admitting to struggling mentally with the pressures of competing in Tokyo.
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Who will replace her? It’s not just a matter of swapping in a teammate. Biles was the top qualifier, and only the gymnasts with the top 24 scores from the qualifying round are eligible for the all-around. In addition, in order to give as many countries as possible a chance to participate, only two gymnasts per country can compete. For the U.S., that meant Biles and Sunisa Lee, who qualified with the third highest score.

Jade Carey, one of the additional members of the U.S. squad who was not part of the four-woman team, qualified ninth, which means she will replace Biles in the all-around.

Read more: Meet the U.S. Women’s Olympic Gymnastics Team for Tokyo

Carey took advantage of a new Olympic qualifying system in which she participated in the Apparatus World Cup Series over the last three years, and her scores assured her of an individual invitation to the Olympic squad; with that individual spot, however, she could not compete in the team event. Strong on vault and floor, Carey, an Arizona native who trains with her father Brian, is a consistent competitor.

Biles also qualified for all four event finals, and said she will take each day at a time before deciding whether she will compete in those events. Only the top eight qualifiers compete in each event final, with a maximum of two per country. If she does decide to withdraw from those as well, here’s who will replace her on each apparatus.

Vault

MyKayla Skinner, like Carey, is an individual member of the women’s gymnastics squad, and could not compete in the team event. She did compete on all apparatus for the all-around, however, which determines in which event finals she can participate. A strong vaulter, her scores unfortunately did not qualify her for any of the event finals because two other teammates had higher scores. If Biles does not compete on vault, however, Skinner will step in since she finished seventh in the qualification round, and the top eight gymnasts are eligible.

Floor

One of Biles’ teammates cannot replace her on floor, since none placed higher than the reserve athlete, Jennifer Gadirova of Great Britain who will have a chance to compete on floor if Biles withdraws.

Uneven bars

Same goes for this event; the reserve athlete is Melanie de Jesus dos Santos of France, because the US athlete with the next highest score after Biles and Lee is Jade Carey, but she finished 10th.

Beam

Japan’s Urara Ashikawa would step in on this event as the reserve athlete, also because no US athlete finished higher than Ashikawa. Skinner, the next highest scoring US gymnast, finished 27th.

Read more about the Tokyo Olympics:



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Red Bull: New evidence will put Silverstone F1 crash in ‘slightly different light’ - Autosport

  1. Red Bull: New evidence will put Silverstone F1 crash in ‘slightly different light’  Autosport
  2. Red Bull launch challenge against Lewis Hamilton's penalty in Max Verstappen British GP crash  Sky Sports
  3. Plooij on Silverstone: "That hurt the Verstappens too much"  GPblog.com
  4. Max Verstappen not interested in 'media hype' over crash | PlanetF1  PlanetF1
  5. Mercedes: 'Different beast' Hungaroring will better suit Red Bull  F1i.com
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As PS5 hits 10m sold, Sony says "improving inventory levels remains a top priority" - Eurogamer.net

  1. As PS5 hits 10m sold, Sony says "improving inventory levels remains a top priority"  Eurogamer.net
  2. Sony Issues Sales Updates for Major PS5 Games, Most Exceed One Million  Push Square
  3. PS5 has now sold more than 10 million units  VG247
  4. Summer Sale: the TT community top picks!  TrueTrophies
  5. PS5 Hits 10 Million Sales, Is the Fastest-Selling PlayStation Console Ever  Push Square
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Body of missing woman discovered wrapped in plastic in basement, Oklahoma cops say



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Channel crossings: RNLI chief hits out over migrant rescue abuse - BBC News

  1. Channel crossings: RNLI chief hits out over migrant rescue abuse  BBC News
  2. Lifeboat crews' role in migrant rescues is humanitarian work, says RNLI boss  The Independent
  3. RNLI hits out at ‘migrant taxi service’ accusations  The Guardian
  4. RNLI release dramatic bodycam footage of migrant Channel rescue for first time - as boss defends crew who faced abuse  Sky News
  5. Clacton lifeboat crews rescue endangered swimmer  Clacton and Frinton Gazette
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Trump's rough day hints at limits of his power over GOP



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Back 4 Blood - Official Open Beta Trailer - IGN

Back 4 Blood - Official Open Beta Trailer  IGNView Full coverage on Google News

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23 Home Decor Items We’re Shopping at the Nordstrom Anniversary Sale



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Cop facing felony charges after video of violent arrest released



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The invasive spotted lanternfly is spreading across the eastern US – here's what you need to know about this voracious pest



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Charles attends Staffordshire police memorial dedication - BBC News

  1. Charles attends Staffordshire police memorial dedication  BBC News
  2. Charles to attend Staffordshire police memorial dedication  BBC News
  3. Memorial to fallen police officers to be unveiled by Prince Charles  Sky News
  4. Boris Johnson struggles with his umbrella AGAIN at police memorial with Prince Charles  Daily Mail
  5. Tributes to fallen Greater Manchester Police officers and staff at dedication of new national memorial  Manchester Evening News
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Millions of renters face eviction and homelessness: 3 essential reads about the CDC's expiring moratorium



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Wednesday, 28 July 2021

AP-NORC poll: Many Republicans uneasy about party's future



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Cheney says 'every minute' of Trump's actions on Jan. 6 will be investigated



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Atlanta Spa Shooter Signs Plea Deal, Pleads Guilty to 4 Killings

(CANTON, Ga.) — A Georgia man accused of killing eight people at three Atlanta-area massage businesses was pleading guilty in Cherokee County on Tuesday, hoping for a sentence of life without parole to the first four of the shooting deaths.

Robert Aaron Long still faces the death penalty if convicted in four more shooting deaths in Atlanta, where he faces charges of domestic terrorism with a hate crime enhancement in addition to murder. Long is white and six of the victims were women of Asian descent.

Long walked through the massage business in Woodstock “shooting anyone and everyone he saw,” District Attorney Shannon Wallace said.
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Read more: The Atlanta Shootings Fit Into a Long Legacy of Anti-Asian Violence in America

Massage Business Shootings
Crisp County Sheriff’s Office—APRobert Aaron Long in a March 16 booking photo.

A judge was hearing a prosecutor describe details of his crimes. The prosecutor said the 22-year-old defendant has signed a plea deal admitting to all of the charges in Cherokee County, where he was accused of malice murder, felony murder, attempt to commit murder and aggravated assault.

Police have said the attacks began when Long shot and killed four people, three of them women and two of Asian descent, at Youngs Asian Massage just before 5 p.m. on March 16, 2020. He also shot and wounded a fifth person, they say. Long then drove south to Atlanta, where he shot and killed three women at Gold Spa before going across the the street to Aromatherapy Spa and fatally shooting another woman, police have said. All of the Atlanta victims were women of Asian descent.

Those killed at the Cherokee County spa were: Xiaojie “Emily” Tan, 49; Daoyou Feng, 44; Delaina Yaun, 33; and Paul Michels, 54. The Atlanta victims were: Suncha Kim, 69; Soon Chung Park, 74; Hyun Jung Grant, 51; and Yong Ae Yue, 63.

Long is scheduled to appear again next month in Fulton County, where District Attorney Fani Willis filed notice that she intends to seek a hate crime sentence enhancement along with the death penalty, based on the actual or perceived race, national origin, sex and gender of the four women killed in Atlanta.

Georgia’s new hate crimes law does not provide for a stand-alone hate crime. After a person is convicted of an underlying crime, a jury must determine whether it’s motivated by bias, which carries an additional penalty. The 19-count Fulton County indictment includes charges of murder, felony murder, aggravated assault and domestic terrorism.

Read more: The Atlanta Shooter Killed Six Women of Asian Descent. Isn’t That A Hate Crime?

Police said that after the shootings at the two Atlanta spas, Long got back into his car and headed south.

By then, Long’s parents had called authorities to help after recognizing their son in still images from security video that the Cherokee County Sheriff’s Office posted on social media. His parents were already tracking his movements through an application on his phone, the prosecutor said, and that enabled authorities to track their son down Interstate 75. State troopers and sheriff’s deputies spotted his SUV, and one of them forced Long to spin to a stop by bumping his vehicle. Long then surrendered to authorities in rural Crisp County, about 140 miles (225 kilometers) south of Atlanta.

Long told police his attack was not racially motivated, and a Cherokee sheriff’s spokesman said it did not appear to be a hate crime, prompting widespread skepticism and outrage.

“He apparently has an issue, what he considers a sex addiction, and sees these locations as something that allows him to go to these places, and it’s a temptation for him that he wanted to eliminate,” Cherokee sheriff’s Capt. Jay Baker initially told reporters.

Baker also drew criticism for saying Long had “a really bad day,” and was removed from the case.

State Rep. Bee Nguyen, the first Vietnamese American to serve in the Georgia House and a frequent advocate for women and communities of color, said the shootings appeared to be at the “intersection of gender-based violence, misogyny and xenophobia.” And Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms said that regardless of the shooter’s motivation, “it is unacceptable, it is hateful and it has to stop.”



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4-year-old dies after shooting himself in head with gun he found in couch, NC cops say



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Red Bull launch challenge against Lewis Hamilton's penalty in Max Verstappen British GP crash - Sky Sports

  1. Red Bull launch challenge against Lewis Hamilton's penalty in Max Verstappen British GP crash  Sky Sports
  2. Wolff sent mail with non-existing FIA diagram after clash at Silverstone  GPblog
  3. Leclerc ranks Silverstone podium "very high" on all-time best races  GPfans
  4. Nico Rosberg's take on Lewis Hamilton vs Max Verstappen, Formula 1's battle of the generations  Sky Sports
  5. "For Hamilton it was time to say: listen, mate, I'm not a coward"  GPblog
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Police officer who was beaten during the Capitol insurrection breaks down in tears during House hearing



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DOJ says Trump officials can testify in Jan. 6 investigations



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Mena Suvari Is Ready to Own Her Past

Many of us know Mena Suvari as the wholesome choir girl from the 1999 comedy American Pie or the teen who becomes the object of Kevin Spacey’s infatuation in the 1999 drama American Beauty. Yet after decades of portraying fictional women, Suvari, 42, is ready to open up about her own life. In her new memoir, The Great Peace, Suvari details the breakdown of her family following a childhood of material abundance, reveals that she was repeatedly sexually abused beginning at the age of 12 and shares the experience of going through multiple toxic relationships as she tried to find stability in adulthood.
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The opportunity to act and find connections through roles in film and TV, Suvari writes, helped to pull her through some of the darker moments. But her continued silence, especially around the abuse she suffered as a young woman working in Hollywood, took its toll. She recounts in the book that for years, she used drugs to numb her feelings, coping with marijuana and, for a time, meth.

In 2018, Suvari writes, she found an old journal and works of art she’d made as a young woman in a long-ignored storage unit. The notes, poems and drawings prompted memories of experiences that Suvari realized she needed to share in order to heal. Here, Suvari talks with TIME about releasing her first book and finally opening up. “I’ve been joking it’s like therapy with the world,” she says.

The Great Peace includes several sections where you share poetry and diary entries you wrote as a teenager. What was it like to revisit your old self?

I found this bin, which had everything, even VHS tapes and old press clippings from my whole career. When I opened my diary, I was surprised to see there was just one entry in the middle of it. Then, there was a folded yellow piece of construction paper I’d made into a card and decorated with angels on top. It was my adieu, my farewell—I’d written my suicide note. I had forgotten about that. But when I found it, I remembered that exact moment, the space I’d been in. I was saddened and shocked, and yet it was kind of funny to me because I realized my life only got worse after I wrote that. That was the beginning of the process for me.

You write about all kinds of difficult experiences—from being sexually coerced to overcoming drug addiction to feeling abandoned—that you are discussing in public for the first time. Why was right now the time to come forward with the truth?

It’s just something I felt like I needed to do. This book has been a couple years in the making. When I started, I’d gotten to that place in my life—I’d met my husband, I was ready to make personal changes. I was definitely inspired by #MeToo and this environment of sharing that felt new at the time. I realized simple things, like, we’re not alone. We have the right to talk about our experiences.

With the book, I’m also trying to address what it was like to even consider these experiences and how I can label them now. It’s about feeling like I am allowed to consider that I was abused. I was always comparing the abuse to something else I thought was worse, telling myself it wasn’t that bad and that I really had nothing to say.

mena-suvari-book
Hachette Books

From your roles in American Pie to American Beauty, you talk often about how working as an actor became a lifeline amid the chaos of your life. Was there a project in particular that inspired you as you wrote?

Art saved my life. Work has always given me the opportunity to learn more about myself and grow. The types of projects I worked on really challenged me and put me in a space of being ready to share. One is Grace and Grit, based on Treya Wilber and her battle for her life and for love. That put me in a very different space, spiritually, in touch with the magic that’s all around us.

Read More: How Celebrity Memoirs Got So Good

Something that stuck with me was how adults in your life didn’t really seem to know how to talk to you, how to ask if you were doing okay. I know you recently had a child, and am curious about how you plan to address difficult conversations with him.

It’s about trying to stay as open and as aware as possible and asking questions: How are you doing? How are you feeling? What’s going on right now? That’s what most important. That’s why I’m fine with sharing all of this—I’d like to use my life experiences to hopefully be aware and be present and maybe notice signs. But it’s not a black-and-white thing. I’m not trying to make this a blame game or live in regret. I’m just offering my perspective on what it was like to be someone at that age who needed more guidance in that moment.

Everyone deserves to be noticed.

Communication is the most important thing. That’s why we’re here: to share and learn and grow with one another. Maybe someone hears this story and they see how I became detached. No one asked me about my drug use or if I got a bladder infection at age 12 because I had sex. No one noticed, and it became harder for me to be rescued. We think we’re alone. I just felt, “I’ll suffer silently.”

You write about shaving your head for a role around the same time paparazzi hounded Britney Spears for shaving hers, and feeling like you understood her despite living in very different circumstances. What are your thoughts on how women in the spotlight are treated these days versus a couple decades ago?

It’s great we’re noticing these moments now and that we’re having these conversations. But we still have a lot of work to do. I used that example because I happened to be working on a film where a character shaves her head, and I cut my hair in real life. To everyone else, it seemed like I’d lost my mind. I’m a woman, so I must have just lost it. That was shocking to me, and I was trying to figure out what my value was in conjunction with what everyone else thought it was. In the broader conversation, we’ve got a long way to go. Let’s move forward and not forget about what we’ve learned about awareness and other people’s rights.

If you or someone you know may be contemplating suicide, call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 800-273-8255 or text HOME to 741741 to reach the Crisis Text Line. In emergencies, call 911 or seek care from a local hospital or mental-health provider.



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Placemats Make Every Day a Party



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Tokyo Olympics: Tom Dean takes gold, plus silvers for Duncan Scott and Georgia Taylor-Brown - BBC News

  1. Tokyo Olympics: Tom Dean takes gold, plus silvers for Duncan Scott and Georgia Taylor-Brown  BBC News
  2. Swimming: Tom Dean & Duncan Scott win gold and silver for Team GB in 200m freestyle| Tokyo Olympics  BBC Sport
  3. Theresa May: 'Tom Dean has done Maidenhead proud at Olympic Games'  Maidenhead Advertiser
  4. Garden party: Tom Dean's family go wild as swimmer wins Olympic gold  Guardian Sport
  5. Delight for Dean as Team GB’s success continues – British medallists in Tokyo  The Independent
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