Science Writing · Feature · White Paper · Grant Narrative
Complex Science.Clean Sentences.
The kind of prose where a protein-folding mechanism becomes a detective narrative and a climate dataset becomes urgent journalism — written for editors who need it published and readers who need to finish it.
As seen in
By the Numbers
Pieces Published
Across peer-reviewed journals, national magazines, and investor-grade white papers since 2014.
Average Turnaround
For a 2,000-word feature from brief to final draft — embargo lifts included.
Outlets Covered
From Nature and The Atlantic to Series B pitch decks and NIH grant narratives.
Published Work
Proof before pitch.
The protein that folds wrong — and then folds right
For three decades, the chaperone hypothesis sat at the edge of mainstream structural biology — intriguing but unproven. Then a cryo-EM dataset arrived from a lab in Lausanne that would change the textbooks.
The ice cores don't lie — but they do require translation
Buried 3,200 meters beneath the Greenland ice sheet, a 68-centimeter cylinder of compressed snow holds a record of Earth's atmosphere stretching back 800,000 years. Reading it is not a metaphor.
CRISPR's off-target problem isn't solved — it's just better hidden
The clinical trial results looked clean. Seventeen patients, no adverse events, measurable therapeutic effect. What the press release omitted was a six-page supplementary table that three independent researchers found troubling.
The battery chemistry that keeps failing — and why that's the point
Every lithium-sulfur battery in the lab eventually dies the same death: sulfur migrates, capacity collapses, cycle count flatlines. A team at Stanford thinks the failure mode is actually the product.
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