Book review: “God’s Trombones: Seven Negro Sermons in Verse” by James Weldon Johnson
At the start of the Great Flood: And a little black spot begun to spread, Like a bottle of ink spilling over the sky; And the thunder rolled like a [...]
At the start of the Great Flood: And a little black spot begun to spread, Like a bottle of ink spilling over the sky; And the thunder rolled like a [...]
Kate Cooper’s Queens of a Fallen World is one of those wonderful books of detective work that tell the history of people forgotten by history. It’s a truism that, for [...]
William Blake (1757-1827), little known in his lifetime, is now considered one of the leading lights of Romantic Age painting, art and poetry. He was also a visionary. And, by [...]
The narrator of Leo Tolstoy’s Hadji Murat tells in the book’s opening pages of finding a “Tartar” thistle in a recently mown field — terribly tough, coarse and gaudily red [...]
At the end of 2023, Jonathan Eig’s King: A Life was prominent on many best-of-the-year lists, but not on mine. This may be evidence of my wrong-headedness. Still, I can’t [...]
(1) Twice in his preface to How Fiction Works, James Wood quotes the novelist Ford Madox Ford. In the first instance, Wood, citing Virginia Woolf, notes that the creation of [...]
More than 1,600 years ago, Augustine, Bishop of Hippo, wrote his Confessions, and it’s been a book with staying power. Indeed, as measured by its friends and enemies, the book [...]
Augustine of Hippo, the hugely influential philosopher and theologian of the late 400s and early 500s, was, according to Garry Wills, “a tireless seeker, never satisfied.” In Saint Augustine, his [...]
There are several running gags that Elmore Leonard has woven through his 2004 novel Mr. Paradise, one of them having to do with the dismemberment of the body of one [...]
You’ve heard it, probably as often as I have: Christmas is for kids. The idea is that Christmas is a time when the eyes of children grow large with wonder [...]