Lisa Wood Shapiro is a contributing writer to The New Yorker and WIRED. She wrote The New Yorker story about Graham Platner, the Maine oyster farmer and veteran, running to unseat Susan Collins.
She’s also written for Vogue Magazine, Refinery29, and Outside Magazine. She covers tech, culture, and the future of work. She’s the author of the humorous memoir Hot Mess Mom and is currently finishing her second book.
Highlights include A Fast Walker Gets Stuck In The Slow Lane, Breathe Easy about indoor air quality and her attempts to get good air in her Brooklyn apartment, and The End of Dyslexia, all for WIRED. She also wrote about the powerful psychedelic tea Ayahuasca for the September 2017 Issue of Vogue Magazine.