Book review: “Cities and Civilizations” by Christopher Hibbert
Christopher Hibbert writes in a note at the start of his 1986 book Cities and Civilizations that, in contrast to more scholarly and comprehensive works, he aims simply “to give [...]
Christopher Hibbert writes in a note at the start of his 1986 book Cities and Civilizations that, in contrast to more scholarly and comprehensive works, he aims simply “to give [...]
When Lee Bey writes about Pride Cleaners, he expresses a palpably warm affection for the other worldly structure which has stood on the northwest corner of 79th Street and [...]
A hallmark of the black nationalism movement in the 1960s was the idea of African-Americans patronizing African-American businesses. This approach with its pull-ourselves-up-by-the-bootstraps subtext has been a prominent tenet [...]
Reader: This review is going to deal with Mark Twain’s 1885 novel The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, and, because of that, it will include a particular term that, today, is [...]
Many Annunciations By Patrick T. Reardon The first was a girl who dodged. The second girl wanted to think about it. The third fainted. The fourth [...]
When 27-year-old Juliette Kinzie settled with her husband John, the local Indian agent, in the tiny hamlet of Chicago in 1833, it was the home of only about 300 people, [...]
I’ve lived my whole life, I guess, with dangerous women. I just thought they were interesting. I’ve discussed with Sarah, my daughter, the pros and cons of Christopher Hibbert’s [...]
Throughout the 20th century, postcards were an easy, cheap way to keep in touch. Often, they were sent home by tourists, but postcards were also sent to memorialize or comment [...]
I like it when a Scripture story about Jesus reminds me of my granddaughter Emma. In this weekend’s Gospel, Jesus, just over a month old, is taken to be presented [...]
The Pueblo boy with “thick hair…the color of a night river” is called Wolf. He appears several times in the first half of Renny Golden’s The Music of Her [...]