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Liz Moore on ‘Long Bright River’ and the Slow Burn of Success

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Liz Moore on ‘Long Bright River’ and the Slow Burn of Success

No matter how you slice it, Liz Moore has arrived.

This month, an adaptation of her blockbuster novel “Long Bright River” started streaming on Peacock. And her next book, “The God of the Woods,” now on the best-seller list for 36 weeks (and counting), will soon hit the million mark in sales — a distinction normally reserved for celebrities and novelists recognizable by last name alone.

Moore isn’t one of those authors. But, over the past two decades, she’s proved to be “a writer who can do anything,” as her editor Sarah McGrath put it.

Moore taps into an elusive sweet spot between literary and commercial fiction, populating vividly drawn settings with characters who seem to live, breathe and make terrible mistakes along with the rest of us. Her novels can be enjoyed by, say, a teenage girl and her 50-something father, defying genre and categorization to such an extent that, from one to the next, a reader might not register that they’re written by the same person.

“I get messages saying, I loved your new book. Do you have any others?” Moore, 41, said during an interview at a cafe in Philadelphia. “Or they’ll call ‘The God of the Woods’ my second book because ‘Long Bright River’ was my first that broke out.”

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In fact, “The God of the Woods,” a mystery about siblings who disappear 14 years apart, is Moore’s fifth book. She wrote her first, “The Words of Every Song,” while she was a student at Barnard College. Shortly after she graduated in 2005, she signed on with an agent who’d come to campus for a panel on the publishing industry.

“I reached out and said, ‘I have this manuscript of interconnected stories about the music industry. Would you be interested in looking at it?’ She said yes,” Moore recalled. “Only in retrospect do I realize what a lucky break that was.”

At the time, Moore was more focused on singing than she was on fiction: Her folk album, “Backyards,” came out in 2007, the same year as “The Words of Every Song.” But it was her prose that attracted attention: The rock critic Robert Christgau described Moore’s book in The New York Observer as “likable, well-rendered, sweet.” He also praised her “wholesome values.”

In her early 20s, Moore worked in the editorial department of the Morgan Library and at Matt Umanov Guitars in the West Village. Gradually, she said, “I gave myself permission to think, Maybe fiction is something I could pursue in a more serious way.”

She got an M.F.A. at Hunter College, where she studied with Nathan Englander and Colum McCann and started working on her second novel, “Heft.” Her first agent had left the industry, and a second one, with whom she worked for more than a year, ultimately declined to represent the project.

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After a dozen or so rejections, she signed on with Seth Fishman at the Gernert Company, who sold “Heft” and a third novel, “The Unseen World,” to W.W. Norton & Company. Both are tender and brainy — the literary equivalent of folk songs, with characters who hold the note.

“‘Heft’ did better than expected and ‘The Unseen World’ did more poorly than expected,” Moore said. The latter, which a Times reviewer called “fiercely intelligent,” came out in July 2016, two months after Moore’s daughter was born.

“I didn’t know how hard it would be when I agreed to go on tour with a newborn,” Moore said. “I was pumping in the bathroom. I was sleep deprived. I thought it would be possible and it was just …” She didn’t finish the sentence.

During that time Moore wasn’t sure she’d be able to complete another book, let alone sell it. But she kept writing and teaching — first at Holy Family University in Philadelphia, then at Temple University, where she now directs the graduate-level writing program.

“I was raised never to quit a day job,” Moore said. “I also love the community of teaching.”

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“Long Bright River” grew out of a photo essay Moore worked on in 2009, when she first moved to Philadelphia. Jeffrey Stockbridge, a photographer, took pictures of women in the Kensington neighborhood who were struggling with addiction, and Moore wrote their stories. After the piece was published in “The Rust Belt Rising Almanac” (2013), she kept going back to Kensington, leading free writing workshops at a women’s day shelter for two years.

A story started to take shape, about a detective searching for her sister, who’s addicted to drugs.

“Since birth, I’ve been surrounded by family members in various states of active use or recovery,” Moore said. “I never name who they are, I don’t wish to speak for them or tell their stories, but my own story is being well versed in the language of addiction.”

Moore worked on “Long Bright River” for about four years, her average germination period. In 2018, Gernert sold the book to McGrath at Riverhead in a heated auction.

“I’m always looking for literary fiction that can reach a wide audience,” McGrath said. “I didn’t know I was looking for a police detective in Philadelphia. But Liz writes rich characters with such compassion, and she creates a real sense of place.”

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The book, which came out on Jan. 7, 2020, was an instant best seller, a ”Good Morning America” Book Club pick and one of Barack Obama’s favorite books of 2020.

“It forced open certain conversations that had been buried in my family,” Moore said. “That was cathartic for everybody.”

About two months later, when the Covid pandemic struck, she was teaching a full course load via Zoom while caring for her daughter, who was 3, and her son, then 10 months old.

Moore said, “My husband and I built an improvised playpen in the living room.” They took turns working on the upper floor of their South Philadelphia rowhouse. Eventually Moore started waking up at 5 o’clock in the morning so she could squeeze in a few hours of writing.

“‘The God of the Woods” started “as an act of desperation, of trying to find out who I was again,” she said. “I went into autopilot and thought, I just have to do this.”

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The book was “hellish” to write, Moore admitted: “It has so many characters. It has so many timelines. I never outline, so I just write and experiment and fail.”

Her approach brings a sense of immediacy to the mysteries surrounding the missing Van Laar children, who are practically royalty in the small Adirondack town where their wealthy family summers as a verb. One has the sense of the two cases being cracked in real time, even though the bulk of the action takes place in 1975.

The setting held particular meaning for Moore: Her ancestors settled in the Adirondacks, her grandmother was born nearby and her family still has a cabin in the southern part of the region. “It’s a special, almost spiritual place for us,” Moore said.

“The God of the Woods” was a Book of the Month Club pick and was voted in as the “Tonight Show” summer read for 2024. The book gained momentum from there, becoming such a stalwart on the best-seller list that the Riverhead team no longer calls Moore to announce the news. She receives a weekly email instead, and she doesn’t take it for granted.

Moore seemed pleased, if cautiously so, about the fandom she’s amassed in the past five years. “I’m incredibly pessimistic and superstitious as a rule,” she said.

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“Liz deserves everything she’s gotten. No one deserves it more,” the author Carmen Maria Machado said. Several years ago, the two started a group for women writers in Philadelphia, which includes Asali Solomon, Kiley Reid, Emma Copley Eisenberg and Sara Novic, among many others.

Machado went on: “Liz has this instinct for community. She’s incredibly generous. And she’s a deeply empathetic writer, which I think is her superpower.”

For the Peacock adaptation of “Long Bright River,” Moore brought her collaborative knack to the writers’ room. “It’s the closest experience I’ll have to being good at sports, because it is so much the product of a team,” she said.

The show was mostly filmed in New York City, but includes graffiti by Philadelphia artists and appearances by Kensington residents, including the head of the St. Francis Inn, the outreach organization where Moore used to lead writing workshops.

“I use 3 P’s as a handy teaching tool, but it’s also the way I write books,” Moore said. “Place comes first. Then people, then problems.”

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With her Temple students, Moore is sanguine about the reality of a writing career.

“I say, I still have a day job and you probably will too,” she explained. “But hopefully you can find beauty in art outside of work. If that means keeping a journal in which you write once a week, that too is meaningful. It serves as a huge comfort to me to know that even if all of this goes away I will still have that, quietly, in my life.”

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Opinion | America’s Military Needs a Culture Shift

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Opinion | America’s Military Needs a Culture Shift

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The U.S. military
is broken. Young
Americans want
to fix it.

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Bailey Baumbick traded a
career as a national security
consultant to build tech
solutions
for the challenges
she saw at the Pentagon.

Elias Rosenfeld left a job
in social
impact consulting
to start a career aimed
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at revitalizing America’s
industrial base.

Lee Kantowski spent
eight years in the
Army before
switching to defense tech,
where
he hopes to fix the
military’s outdated tools.

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a New

Definition of

Service

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Bailey Baumbick knew she wanted to serve her country when she graduated from Notre Dame in 2021. Ms. Baumbick, a 26-year-old from Novi, Mich., didn’t enlist in the military, however. She enrolled in business school at the University of California, Berkeley.

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Ms. Baumbick is part of a growing community in the Bay Area that aims to bring high-tech dynamism to the lumbering world of the military. After social media companies and countless lifestyle start-ups lost their luster in recent years, entrepreneurs are being drawn to defense tech by a mix of motivations: an influx of venture capital, a coolness factor and the start-up ethos, which Ms. Baumbick describes as “the relentless pursuit of building things.”

There’s also something deeper: old-fashioned patriotism, matched with a career that serves a greater purpose.

In college Ms. Baumbick watched her father, a Ford Motor Company executive, lead the company’s sprint to produce Covid-19 ventilators and personal protective equipment for front-line health care workers. “I’ve never been more inspired by how private sector industry can have so much impact for public sector good,” she said.

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Ford’s interventions during the Covid-19 pandemic hark back to a time when public-private partnerships were commonplace. During World War II, leaders of America’s biggest companies, including Ford, halted business as usual to manufacture weapons for the war effort.

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The Covid-19 pandemic drove public-private partnerships, such as Ford’s decision to produce ventilators needed by patients and hospitals.

For much of the 20th century, the private and public sectors were tightly woven together. In 1980, nearly one in five Americans were veterans. By 2022, that figure had shrunk to one in 16. Through the 1980s, about 70 percent of the companies doing business with the Pentagon were also leaders in the broader U.S. economy. That’s down to less than 10 percent today. The shift away from widespread American participation in national security has left the Department of Defense isolated from two of the country’s great assets: its entrepreneurial spirit and technological expertise.

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Recent changes in Silicon Valley are bringing down those walls. Venture capital is pouring money into defense tech; annual investment is up from $7 billion in 2015 to some $80 billion in 2025. The Pentagon needs to seize this opportunity, and find ways to accelerate its work with start-ups and skilled workers from the private sector. It should expand the definition of what it means to serve and provide more flexible options to those willing to step in.

The military will always need physically fit service members. But we are headed toward a future where software will play a bigger role in armed conflict than hardware, from unmanned drones and A.I.-driven targeting to highly engineered cyber weapons and space-based systems. These missions will be carried out by service members in temperature-controlled rooms rather than well armed troops braving the physical challenges of the front line.

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For all the latent opportunity in Silicon Valley and beyond, the Trump administration has been uneven in embracing the moment. Stephen Feinberg, the deputy secretary of defense, is a Wall Street billionaire who is expanding the Pentagon’s ties with businesses. Pete Hegseth, the secretary of defense, his “warrior ethos” and exclusionary recruitment have set back the effort to build a military for the future of war.

America has the chance to reshape our armed forces for the conflicts ahead, and we have the rare good fortune of being able to do that in peacetime.

Elias Rosenfeld had been at Stanford for only a month and a half, but he already looked right at home at a recent job fair for students interested in pursuing defense tech, standing in a relaxed posture, wearing beaded bracelets and a sweater adorned with a single sunflower. Rather than use his time in Stanford’s prestigious business school to build a fintech app or wellness brand, Mr. Rosenfeld has set his sights on helping to rebuild the industrial base on which America’s military relies.

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It’s a crucial mission for a country that is getting outbuilt by China, and Mr. Rosenfeld brings a unique commitment to it. Born in Venezuela, he came to the United States at age 6 and draws his patriotism from that country’s experience with tyranny and his Jewish heritage. “Without a strong, resilient America, I might not be here today,” Mr. Rosenfeld says. Working on industrial renewal, he says, is a way to “start delivering as a country so folks feel more inclined and passionate to be more patriotic.”

Not on Mr. Rosenfeld’s agenda: enlisting in the military. In an earlier era, he might have been tempted by a wider suite of options for service. In 1955 the U.S. government nearly doubled the maximum size of the military’s ready reserve forces, from 1.5 million to 2.9 million, in part by giving young men the chance to spend six months in active duty training. Today the U.S. ready reserve numbers just over a million.

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The Pentagon should broaden its sense of service as fewer younger Americans meet the military’s eligibility requirements.

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Other countries provide a model for strengthening the reserves. In Sweden, the military selects the top 5 percent or so of 18-year-olds eligible to serve in the active military for up to 15 months, followed by membership in the reserve for 10 years. The model is so effective that recruits compete for spots, and according to The Wall Street Journal, “former conscripts are headhunted by the civil service and prized by tech companies.”

America’s leaders have argued for a generation that the military’s volunteer model is superior to conscription in delivering a well-prepared force. The challenge is maintaining recruiting and getting the right service members for every mission. There are some examples of the Pentagon successfully luring new, tech-savvy recruits. Since last year, top college students have been training to meet the government’s growing need for skilled cybersecurity professionals. The Cyber Service Academy, a scholarship-for-service program, covers the full cost of tuition and educational expenses in exchange for a period of civilian employment within the Defense Department upon graduation. Scholars work in full-time, cyber-related positions.

The best incentive for enlisting may have nothing to do with service, but the career opportunities that are promised after.

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It was a foregone conclusion that Lee Kantowski would become an Army officer. One of his favorite high school teachers had served, and his hometown, Lawton, Okla., was a military town, a place where enlisting was commonplace. Mr. Kantowski attended West Point and, in the eight years after graduating, went on tours across the world. Now he’s getting an M.B.A. at U.C. Berkeley, co-founded a defense tech club with Ms. Baumbick there and works part-time at a start-up building guidance devices that turn dumb bombs into smart ones.

The military needs recruits like Mr. Kantowski who want to support defense in and out of uniform. Already, nearly one million people who work for the Department of Defense are civilians, supplemented by a similar number of contractors who straddle public and private sectors. Both paths could be expanded.

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A rotating-door approach carries some risk to military cohesion and readiness. The armed services are not just another job: Soldiers are asked to put themselves in danger’s way, even outside combat zones. America still needs men and women who are willing to sign up for traditional tours of duty.

The Reserve Officers’ Training Corps serves as the largest source of commissioned officers for the U.S. military. For more than five decades, R.O.T.C. has paid for students to pursue degree programs — accompanied by military drills and exercises — and then complete three to 10 years of required service after graduation. In 1960 alone, Stanford and M.I.T. each graduated about 100 R.O.T.C. members. Today, that figure is less than 20 combined. The Army has recently closed or reorganized programs at 84 campuses and may cut funding over the next decade.

This is exactly the wrong call. R.O.T.C. programs should be strengthened and expanded, not closed or merged.

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The U.S. Army is closing or reorganizing Reserve Officers’ Training Corps programs across the country.

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It remains true that the volunteer force has become a jobs program for many Americans looking for a ladder to prosperity. It’s an aspect of service often more compelling to enlistees than the desire to fight for their country. In the era of artificial intelligence and expected job displacement, enlistment could easily grow.

Most military benefits have never been more appealing, with signing and retention bonuses, tax-free housing and food allowances, subsidized mortgages, low-cost health care, universal pre-K, tuition assistance and pensions. The Department of Defense and Congress need to find ways to bolster these benefits and their delivery, where service members often find gaps.

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Standardizing post-service counseling and mentorship could help. Expanding job training programs like Skillbridge, which pairs transitioning service members with private sector internships, could also improve job prospects. JPMorgan has hired some 20,000 veterans across the country since creating an Office of Military & Veterans Affairs in 2011; it has also helped create a coalition of 300 companies dedicated to hiring vets.

When veterans land in promising companies — or start their own — it’s not just good for them. It’s also good for America. Rylan Hamilton and Austin Gray, two Navy veterans, started Blue Water Autonomy last year with the goal of building long-range drone ships that could help the military expand its maritime presence without the costs, risks and labor demands of deploying American sailors.

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Blue Water Autonomy, founded and staffed by Navy veterans, is building fully autonomous naval vessels capable of operating at sea for months at a time.

Mr. Gray, a former naval intelligence officer who worked in a drone factory in Ukraine, said Blue Water’s vessels will one day do everything from ferrying cargo to carrying out intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance missions. This summer, the company raised $50 million to construct a fully autonomous ship stretching 150 feet long.

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Before dawn on a Wednesday morning in October, military packs filled with supplies and American flags sat piled on a dewy field near the edge of Stanford University’s campus. Some of the over 900 attendees at a conference on defense tech gathered around an active-duty soldier studying at the school. The glare of his head lamp broke through the darkness as he rallied the group of students, founders, veterans and investors for a “sweat equity” workout.

“Somewhere, a platoon worked out at 0630 to start their day,” he said. “This conference is all about supporting folks like them, so we are going to start our day the same way.” The group set off for Memorial Church at the center of campus, sharing the load of heavy packs, flags and equipment along the way.

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A group of students, founders, veterans and investors participate in a run during a defense tech conference at Stanford University.

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That attitude is a big change for the Bay Area, not just from the days of 1960s hippie sit-ins but also from the early days of the tech revolution, when Silicon Valley was seen as a bastion of government-wary coders and peaceniks. Now it’s open for business with the Defense Department. “The excitement is there, the concern is there, the passion is there and the knowledge is there,” says Ms. Baumbick.

There are some risks to tying America’s military more closely to the tech-heavy private sector. Companies don’t always act in the country’s national interest. Elon Musk infamously limited the Ukrainian military’s access to its Starlink satellites, preventing them being used to help in a battle with Russian forces in 2022. Private companies are also easier for adversaries to penetrate and influence than the government.

Yet in order to prevent wars, or win them, we must learn to manage the risks of overlap between civilian and military spheres. The private sector’s newly rekindled interest in the world of defense is a generational chance to build the military that Americans need.

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Portraits by Aleksey Kondratyev for The New York Times; Carlos Osorio/Associated Press; Mike Segar/Reuters; Maddy Pryor/Princeton University; Kevin Wicherski/Blue Water Autonomy; Aleksey Kondratyev for The New York Times (2).

The editorial board is a group of opinion journalists whose views are informed by expertise, research, debate and certain longstanding values. It is separate from the newsroom.

Published Dec. 12, 2025

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Video: One Hundred Schoolchildren Released After Abduction in Nigeria

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Video: One Hundred Schoolchildren Released After Abduction in Nigeria

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transcript

transcript

One Hundred Schoolchildren Released After Abduction in Nigeria

One hundred children who had been kidnapped from a Catholic school in northwestern Nigeria last month were released on Sunday. This is part of a larger trend of kidnappings in Nigeria, where victims are released in exchange for ransom.

“Medical checkup will be very, very critical for them. And then if anything is discovered, any laboratory investigation is conducted and something is discovered, definitely they will need health care.” My excitement is that we have these children, 100 of them, and by the grace of God, we are expecting the remaining half to be released very soon.”

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One hundred children who had been kidnapped from a Catholic school in northwestern Nigeria last month were released on Sunday. This is part of a larger trend of kidnappings in Nigeria, where victims are released in exchange for ransom.

By Jamie Leventhal

December 8, 2025

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Video: Testing Wool Coats In a Walk-in Fridge

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When style writer Nicola Fumo realized she’d need to test wool coats before it got too cold out, she accepted the challenge.

November 24, 2025

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