Saturday, December 17, 2022

Vaclav Havel - Part Dragon

Nobel laureate in literatureEugene O’Neill said  “Man is born broken. He lives by mending. The grace of God is glue.”





Václav Havel Street inauguration in Luxembourg marks symbolic end to Czech EU presidency



In his 30s, A.N. Wilson gossiped, slept around, and drank with other literary journalists “on a positively Slavic scale” Slavic Scale  »


This a real tree



Beware “storification” — our overreliance on storytelling conventions to understand the world around us - storytelling  »


My dad always said, “never sell the land, Son. God isn’t making any more of it.”





Articles of Note

The culture war comes for libraries. Say goodbye to the reference desk, and hello to circulation-desk sermonizing  libraries »



New Books

James Gillray, the “Prince of Caricatura,” spent long hours ridiculing the sexual and gastronomic excesses of the British  Royal family  »



Essays & Opinions

Auden's influence pinballs throughout postwar literature. Is he the great 20th-century language poet »



Swear sounds


Literary rejections


Bigots v. literature


Joy of reading slowly


Christmas perfect gift


Weak novels


Proust and food


Dylan v. Tarantino


Power of reading diaries


Art of bow tie


Becoming Amartya Sen


Why can't you write normal?


How to listen to music


Conning catchy phrases


Ned Rorem, R.I.P.


TikTok vocabulary


Dog power


The 'Jena set'


Petrol on a Picasso?


University presses and literature


Most banned books


Secret life of hotels


Freakish gallery


Re-reading John le Carré


Icebergs and art


Every story is a science story


"I voted"


Kids and dogs


Multiple multiples


All possible plots


Not necessarily the end


In defence of booze


New Hegel


Didion's estate sale


A literary cold case


Warhol's Prince


The 1776 Curriculum


Literary coffee


Newsroom Confidential


America's oldest book


Meme wars


SCOTUS and art

What counts as a bestseller?


Men are falling behind


In search of lost toast


Hotels for bookworms


Against algebra