Confusion with “Sycamores”

If you look for “how to identify a sycamore tree” on wikiHow you’ll come across one of those innumerable American English / British English differences constantly under our noses and yet so rarely noticed. To identify a sycamore we are told, we should first check for “small woody balls,” like so and then, as ifContinue reading “Confusion with “Sycamores””

What’s up with this beech tree?

This time of year beech trees really stick out because for whatever reason, though their leaves die and turn a beautiful translucent brown, many of them remain on the tree, creating a sort of ghostly afterimage of the full grown summer plant. Like this: When I took a closer look at some beech trees onContinue reading “What’s up with this beech tree?”

A First Glance at: “First Person” Putin’s Self-Portrait

So far (I’m about half-way in) “Volodya” as he is mostly called, seems to be a fairly typical product of his environment. As he himself says, “I was a pure and utterly successful product of Soviet patriotic education,” an interesting remark because it implies that he at least partially sees through that patriotic brainwashing, andContinue reading “A First Glance at: “First Person” Putin’s Self-Portrait”

Reading Ta-Nehisi Coates: An update on “The Black Family in the Age of Mass Incarceration”

Ta-Nehisi Coates first published “The Black Family in the Age of Mass Incarceration” in October of 2015. Four and a half years and an important prison reform law (the First Step Act) have passed, how much has changed? There seems to have been some improvement. Not only has the total incarceration rate dropped, but theContinue reading “Reading Ta-Nehisi Coates: An update on “The Black Family in the Age of Mass Incarceration””

Speak, Memory: Worth Reading, but not a Must Read

Nabokov’s “Speak, Memory” has been called “The finest autobiography written in our time.” This is certainly an exaggeration. As with Pale Fire, Nabokov is pleasant reading (given a free afternoon in the middle of winter, plenty of strong black tea, nothing else to do, and ideally a warm, crackling fire). He is a writer ofContinue reading “Speak, Memory: Worth Reading, but not a Must Read”

Art According to Ta-Nehisi Coates

Reading through Ta-Nehisi Coates’ “We Were Eight Years in Power,” I came across an incredible paragraph in which he describes the aesthetic he absorbed from Nas’s “One Love.” “Art was not an after-school special. Art was not motivational speaking. Art was not sentimental. It had no responsibility to be hopeful or optimistic or make anyoneContinue reading “Art According to Ta-Nehisi Coates”

Tolstoy’s Absolutism: Strength or Weakness?

Part I. One of the most distinctive characteristics of Tolstoy, both in his actual life and in his literary fictions, was his absolutism. As we know from his wife’s diaries, whenever Tolstoy embraced a passion, whether it was beekeeping, war, agriculture, philosophy, politics, or writing, he embraced it totally; and when he grew disinterested inContinue reading “Tolstoy’s Absolutism: Strength or Weakness?”

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started