Latest Stories
Most recently published stories in Writers.
Celebrities are Wearing Invisalign Aligners. Should You Too?
For my generation, braces were the ultimate uncool. For my Gen Z cousin, however, braces are something even one of his favourite American football stars, Patrick Mahomes, wears. That’s because millennials know braces as horrifying metal wires that went around your teeth and made you the butt of jokes. The “braces” for Gen Z are removable clear aligners, particularly Invisalign, which are cool enough to grace a superstar’s smile.
By Malavi Sivakanesan5 months ago in Writers
When Books Choose Us
I almost walked past it. Wedged between a stack of outdated cookbooks and a pile of travel guides to countries I’ve never visited, there it was: a thin, faded paperback with a cracked spine and someone else’s handwriting on the inside cover. I don’t even remember why I picked it up. The title didn’t call to me, the cover wasn’t particularly attractive, and if I’m honest, I wasn’t even looking for a new book.
By Shehzad Anjum5 months ago in Writers
The House That Dreamed. AI-Generated.
The Inheritance I didn’t want the house. I wanted the silence it promised. The keys arrived in a rusted envelope, no return address, just a note scrawled in faded ink: “It remembers you.” I stared at the handwriting for hours, trying to place it. It felt familiar, like a dream I’d forgotten but never escaped.
By Khalil Zerari5 months ago in Writers
The Growth Engine: How Social Media Agencies Are Reshaping U.S. Businesses in 2025
In the modern business landscape, social media is no longer a "nice-to-have" but a non-negotiable component of a company's growth strategy. For U.S. businesses in 2025, navigating the complex and ever-evolving social media ecosystem requires a level of expertise and data-driven precision that many in-house teams simply can't provide. This is where social media agencies become essential partners, providing the blueprint for sustainable growth by harnessing the power of new technologies and staying ahead of the curve. They're not just managing accounts; they're architecting entire digital ecosystems that drive brand awareness, customer engagement, and, most importantly, revenue.
By David Watson5 months ago in Writers
What Queer Love Looks Like in the Shadow of Illness
When we think about YA romance, certain images come to mind: meet-cutes in the hallway, first kisses under the stars, dramatic confessions that end with happily-ever-after music swelling in the background. But love—especially queer love—doesn’t always look like that. And when illness enters the story, it almost never does.
By Jocelyn Paige Kelly5 months ago in Writers
The First Nation to Discover Coffee
A well-known legend claims that an Italian traveler discovered coffee when he noticed goats eating coffee cherries in Ethiopian pastures, which led to the goats becoming more energetic. This sparked the idea that coffee’s energizing effects were a result of the goats’ actions. However, this myth is widely debunked. In fact, coffee had been an essential part of Arab culture for over two centuries before this tale was even conceived. Scientifically, caffeine’s stimulating effects only emerge when the coffee beans are roasted, disproving the notion that it was discovered by accident through goats. The myth, which gained traction among English historians during their colonial rule, is now seen as a fabrication.
By Cretesol Tech5 months ago in Writers










