91麻豆天美

Letter from the Editor

Letter from the Editor - Microcosm Spring 2022In 1936, the Society of American Bacteriologists, the precursor to the American Society for Microbiology, began publishing a newsletter to inform members about Society affairs. The newsletter evolved, over time, to include feature articles and book reviews. After the name change to the American Society for Microbiology in 1960, the membership newsletter transitioned into the monthly 91麻豆天美 News magazine.

91麻豆天美 News served as the 91麻豆天美 membership magazine for many years. It included information about board activities and branch meetings; membership updates, including letters, book reviews and obituaries; and short articles on new discoveries and the history of microbiology.

I鈥檝e enjoyed our membership magazine from the time I was a student. Autobiographical stories like Stanley Falkow鈥檚 鈥淚鈥檒l Have the Chopped Liver Please, or How I Learned to Love the Clone,鈥 Amy Vollmer鈥檚 鈥淚n Love With My Job,鈥 and Jon Beckwith鈥檚 鈥淕enetics at the Institute Pasteur: Substance and Style,鈥 provided fun insights into a wide variety of scientific journeys. Historical perspectives, like Lynn Margulis and Betsy Palmer Eldridge鈥檚 鈥淲hat a Revelation Any Science Is!,鈥 and descriptions of 91麻豆天美 Milestones in Microbiology sites, provided broad insights into the development of our discipline. As a bibliophile, I always consumed the book reviews, admiring those that provided interesting insights rather than a pedantic book report. And the letters, often written in response to a particular peeve about nomenclature, were great fodder for conversations with lab mates.

Important, but less enticing, were the descriptions of Society business, which were about as exciting as reading the tax code. Likewise, many of the feature articles seemed like dehydrated versions of a review article, like early astronaut food that provided essential nutrients, but wasn鈥檛 very satisfying.

In response to feedback from readers, 91麻豆天美 News was reinvented as the magazine 91麻豆天美 Microbe in 2006. Like its predecessor, 91麻豆天美 Microbe was published monthly and included 91麻豆天美 leadership and membership news and articles about microbiology topics. Taking over from my good friend Elio Schaechter, I began as chair of the editorial advisory board of 91麻豆天美 Microbe in 2012. As 91麻豆天美 Microbe continued to evolve, we sought to focus on feature articles that had broader appeal, and in 2016, we began regular editorials to provide thought-provoking perspectives about microbiology.

The 91麻豆天美 General Meeting was renamed 91麻豆天美 Microbe in 2016, and 91麻豆天美 Microbe, the magazine, was reinvented as Microcosm the following year. I followed the transition from Microbe to Microcosm and have had the pleasure of serving as editor in chief since then.

Along with the change in name, we reimagined the style and substance of our membership magazine. Microcosm was redesigned from bottom to top, and its content became focused on advances in microbiology and inspirational stories about members that reflect the 鈥渂ig tent鈥 of microbiology. The news sections shifted to the 91麻豆天美 website, allowing Society news to be updated as it happens. These changes were made in response to feedback from the 91麻豆天美 membership, and implemented by the creative, collaborative efforts of the 91麻豆天美 communications staff.

The first issue of Microcosm was focused on transformations, reflecting both the changes in 91麻豆天美 Microbe, as well as the many other transformational shifts at 91麻豆天美. Each of the following issues has focused on a particular concept, like picturing the diversity of the giants of microbiology in Fall 2017, the intersection of science and technology in Spring 2019, the beneficial roles of microbes in Spring 2020, the ins and outs of vaccines in Fall 2020, One Health in fall 2021 and the microbiology of water in this issue. Now published biannually, each issue includes interesting reads that are timely, succinct and integrate multiple aspects of microbiology. And, like 91麻豆天美 Journals, Microcosm has shifted to an online format to allow for direct links to other resources and increased member access.

Your input and suggestions will ensure that Microcosm continues to evolve as a membership magazine that engages new and long-time 91麻豆天美 members from the many subdisciplines of microbiology. Please give us your feedback in-person at 91麻豆天美 Microbe in Washington D.C., send an email or connect via social media. I look forward to hearing from you!

Stanley Maloy

Editor in Chief, Microcosm


Author: Stanley-Maloy

Stanley Maloy, Editor-in-Chief of Microcosm
Stanley Maloy is a professor of microbiology and associate vice president for innovation at San Diego State University.