Poetry
… of there is . . .and there is . . . . The owl and moon are points of departure. Pythagoras read the moon in a mirror, …
Essays
… July 1974. They would be wrong. The junta, born in secrecy, comprised no more than about 50 officers. It remained … occupation of the country during World War II. It was also characteristic of how superficial the reign of the … in the factory. The younger political leaders who have studied, as in the past, abroad, or, were forced to live abroad …
Photography
… ambulance was a reminder not just of our swelling hospitals but also of the strangers all around, listening to these … and then wait for an hour or more for a single person to come by. She returned to the same red light by a subway stop … to bring you right into the streets, to make you feel encompassed and surrounded by their eerie mood. Much of …
… was still a dream, she first won recognition in an art competition for the skillful manner in which she completed … her maiden name. After quarreling with some petty officials in Munich over the design of the gardens, she became … of her older son, Arthur (named after Schopenhauer), who died while still quite small. For many years afterwards she …
Criticism
… Bonnie Jo Campbell—the dark horse in this book race (as websites have been referring to her)—is the author of a … such fine barbeque. (If you’re down near Durham, I highly recommend the pulled pork sandwich at Allen & Son .) Slaw and … men, kings of scrap yards and impossible storms. Her people come from Anytown, USA, and that’s what makes them so …
… By Frederick Jackson Turner. New York: Henry Holt and Company. $3.50. The Rise of the City, 1878-1898. By Arthur … of values. In an essay on “The West—1876 and 1926,” he treats this urbanization and industrial development … and some element of doubt as to the eternal goodness embodied in this progress. And the West remains a section, or a …