Friday, May 15, 2026

Happy Birthday Gabbie

 "Wishing you all the happiness your heart can hold. 

Happy Birthday!

May this next trip around the sun be your best one yet 🩵

Another year older, wiser, and greener. You're living the dream and winning

Happy Birthday Gabriella


Missing you today (and every day) but sending you all the love, Birthday Princess chi chi Bella

🎂🎈🎊🎉

Native flora from the land of the Eora and Kulin Nations


Physicists find evidence that the universe isn’t perfectly uniform — potentially unraveling a 100-year-old model of cosmology Live Science


Well, best opening, anyway. Maybe Lauren Groff? - The Atlantic

An author I will read anything by: There are many, but one is Lauren Groff. While on a hike with two Atlantic colleagues this spring, I made them listen to me recount in detail the entire plot of “Between the Shadow and the Soul”—one of the stories in Groff’s new collection, Brawler. I feel bad because now they can never come to the story fresh, and because I went on for a really long time and they were trapped on a nature trail and couldn’t escape. So I’ll be briefer here: Groff commands the passage of time brilliantly, your understanding of the characters’ relationship changes right up until the very end, and the story is so sad. Groff has also written one of my favorite openings in all of recent literature, for her novel Matrix: “She rides out of the forest alone. Seventeen years old, in the cold March drizzle, Marie who comes from France.” I mean.


Artists In The Age Of AI: Let’s Explore The Labor-Intensive Art Of The Renaissance

Artists have been raiding the toolkits of the Old Masters with new urgency of late, borrowing and reworking Renaissance and Baroque compositional drama, symbolism, and increasingly, their labor-intensive methods. - Artnet

May 15, 2026

Articles of Note

Nicholas Christakis was at the center of Yale's Halloween controversy. He wants to move on. The culture war has other ideas... more »


New Books

Living in Berlin during World War II was like dancing on a volcano — full of raucous parties between the bombing raids... more »


Essays & Opinions

Liberal democracy and liberal education fell together. To save the first, we must resurrect the second... more »


May 14, 2026

Articles of Note

“If you’re in a household where the currency is stories, it’s an environment which is conducive to learning those tricks”... more »


New Books

It’s been over a decade, and scholars of the new history of capitalism have no more sense of a system now than when they began. What went wrong?... more »


Essays & Opinions

The weirdness of quantum matter. A seemingly simple question — what is the world made of? — might have a surprising answer... more »


May 13, 2026

Articles of Note

The caricature of Camus as an absurdist and existentialist is a convenient fiction. But fiction nonetheless... more »


New Books

"Cultural Marxism" means whatever you need it to mean. Which is why it never goes away. ... more »


Essays & Opinions

The problem with a literary culture of images is that images have an exceptionally short shelf life. People soon grow bored with them... more »


May 12, 2026

Articles of Note

Narrative history moves us., which is exactly the problem. We mistake emotion for understanding... more »


New Books

Zoom out and it becomes clear that the defenders of humanistic liberalism have been decisively losing the battle over ideals... more »


Essays & Opinions

He warned against idleness, then stopped doing anything at all. The compelling contradictions of Samuel Johnson... more »


May 8, 2026

Articles of Note

David Chalmers was wrong. There is no “hard problem” of consciousness, and the supposed “explanatory gap” is nonsensical... more »


New Books

James Schuyler, the most neglected poet of the New York school, may now be its most necessary... more »


Essays & Opinions

"In the current climate where poet is activist (or vice versa), the poems also start to look a lot like cant"... more »


May 7, 2026

Articles of Note

Jonathan Swift’s last joke. His epitaph is, it turns out, an elaborate way of haunting an enemy from the grave... more »


New Books

Ibram X. Kendi’s “Great Replacement” theory encompasses so many disparate examples that it loses its explanatory power... more »


Essays & Opinions

Despite his reputation as a conservative ogre, Harvey Mansfield’s latest book is immensely clever, subtle, and thought-provoking... more »