Gazing at the eclipse in Walt Whitman’s perfect silence
Is it possible to love a science, or any branch of knowledge, despite one’s abysmal ignorance thereof?
Is it possible to love a science, or any branch of knowledge, despite one’s abysmal ignorance thereof?
That’s all he played, one single game, and it took him almost a century to get credit for it
Mine are for things undone, unmade, untold. They’re hardly earth-shattering, but still…
Pat Weissend’s interest in US presidents was sparked in his boyhood by little effigies his aunt gave him
Two decades after the camera tycoon entered the last darkroom, Henry Clune published a thinly veiled roman-à-clef about the morose magnate
The late novelist’s wound was more gaping than most
An act that I have perversely enjoyed for most of my life lost much of its luster a score of years ago
No filmmaker has explored the imaginative appeal of the Civil War in as much depth or from such diverse angles as Ron Maxwell
Prose may be deathless, but authors are not — and some of us honor those who compose with visits to where they decompose
On the first weekend of every August, Angelica hosts a tournament in its village park during ‘Heritage Days’
We couldn’t leave the Electric City without a drive-by of the house in which native son Joe Biden spent his first decade
I have finally encountered an umpire I would despise, disparage, spit upon, kick, and, yes, kill
It wasn’t supposed to be this way
Heaven’s Gate is a 200-minute-plus mess of beautiful incoherences and stupefying contradictions
Few in our history have ever switched teams with the dramatic flair of Karl Hess
Ketchum today does not exploit the Hemingway connection
We who refuse to spend our days caressing the wretched rectangle are fast being reduced to second-class citizenhood
From spooning to spoons
We took a side trip to Sonny Bono’s hometown en route to a birthday party in Indiana
Our every visit is scored by songs and films and words disgorged by the world’s entertainment factory