A priest is driving along a country road when a policeman pulls him over. He immediately smells alcohol on the priest’s breath and notices an empty wine bottle in the car.
He says: “Have you been drinking?”
“Just water,” says the priest.
The cop replies: “Then why do I smell wine?”
The priest looks at the bottle and says: “Good Lord! He’s done it again!”
How the rich stole Christmas Red Flag
Change is inevitable, except from a vending machine.
Regular contacts between world’s richest man and America’s chief antagonist raise security concerns; topics include geopolitics, business and personal matters
At The Guardian Amanda Craig profiles ‘One of the most beloved writers of all time’: the genius of Joan Aiken at 100 -- though with a focus on her works for younger readers.
Five Decades of Stagnant Wages Dollars & Sense
THE WHOLE EQUATION: CAN “NEOLIBERALISM” EXPLAIN EVERYTHING? LPE Project
The Year in Pictures – The New York Times
“This year was made up of such extraordinary moments. And Times photographers captured them in extraordinary images. “The Year in Pictures” brings you the most powerful, evocative and history-making of those images — and allows you to see the biggest stories of 2024 through our photographers’ eyes.”
Hidden above the stone vaults of Notre-Dame de Paris, the 13th-century timber structure that once supported the cathedral’s steep lead roof was so extensive it was known as “the forest”. When the cathedral caught fire in 2019, the flames spread quickly through the lattice of oak beams, each one hewn from an individual tree by medieval carpenters. Around two-thirds of the roof was destroyed in the blaze.
By March 2024, the entire roof frame—la charpente in French—had been identically reconstructed by a small army of 21st-century carpenters trained in the traditional technique of working freshly harvested “green wood” by hand with an axe. (This time, however, the frame is protected against fire risks by an automatic misting system, thicker roof battens and fire-resistant trusses separating the spire from the nave and choir on either side of it.)
After generations of mechanisation, this ancient skill had almost disappeared in France when an association called Charpentiers Sans Frontières (Carpenters Without Borders) began promoting its revival in 1992. The movement’s workshops now attract volunteers from around the world. Among their members are father and son Rémy and Loïc Desmonts, whose specialist family business in Normandy shared the winning bid to restore Notre-Dame’s charpente with Ateliers Perrault, a large carpentry company near Angers with a track record of restoring historic monuments.
Here is more from Hannah McGivern at The Art Newspaper.
Werner Sollors
TNR's 2024 books
Alan Hollinghurst
Invisibility crisis
Mirage of painting
At the Waldhotel
Cormac McCarthy scoop
Appeal of ignorance
Tenure fraud
Philip K. Dick's utopia
Sandra M. Gilbert, R.I.P.
Disney exiles
Francesca Gino
Isabel Allende
Literary grim reaper
Zbigniew Herbert
Vanessa Bell
Doritos moonshine
American studies
Rest is history
Staring into the abyss
On substack
Writing advice
François Laruelle
Stanford creative writing
Board games
On cancelling
Gary Indiana, R.I.P.
Robert Fulford, RIP
Future of nationalism
Can journalism survive?
BookTok
TNR's fall books
14,000 mile walk
Living room MFA
17th-century cocaine
Lore Segal, R.I.P.
Nazis and beetles
Paint vs. poster
Travel writing
Soviet teeth
Fall books preview
Brontë sisters
Zadie Smith’s bookshelves
Rene Girard
Arendt, poet
Dinner with Nozick
Sotheby's drama
High mountains
Fall books
Writing renaissance
Oldest cookbook
Deculturation
HBS drama
The Raphael of Cats
Thom Gunn
Remembering Y2K
James C. Scott
Invention of childhood
Elephant names