Jacqueline Woodson is justly beloved for her many YA novels, but particularly for Brown Girl Dreaming, which—though universal in its appeal to a wide
Get Started for FREE
Sign up with Facebook Sign up with X
I don't have a Facebook or a X account
Tags |
---|
Scooped by
bobbygw
onto Writers & Books |
Jacqueline Woodson is justly beloved for her many YA novels, but particularly for Brown Girl Dreaming, which—though universal in its appeal to a wide
Your new post is loading...
Your new post is loading...
Scoop.it!
"I was always working on a theory of America." "I was always working on a theory of America."
Scoop.it!
From
fivebooks
Daniel Dennett is not only one of the most distinguished philosophers of mind working today, he also writes great books. As he publishes his memoir, I’ve Been Thinking, he talks us through some of the books that most influenced him, including two by evolutionary biologists.
Scoop.it!
From
archive
Delmore Schwartz died in the early morning of July 11, 1966, in an ambulance on the way to Roosevelt Hospital. He’d been living alone in a seedy hotel near Times Square, reading compulsively and scribbling in the many notebooks that he kept during his last, itinerant years.
Scoop.it!
An internal style memo from New York Times editors tells reporters not to use words like “genocide” or “Palestine” when covering Israel’s war on Gaza.
Scoop.it!
From
jacobin
Author Édouard Louis was asked if he thought someone lacking his experience of homophobia could stage a theater adaptation of one of his books. In his response, he argues against a restrictive idea of identity as a property some of us own.
Scoop.it!
From
lithub
Wilfred Owen first mentioned the presence of a new star on his horizon on August 15, 1917. He had been busy acting, editing the hospital magazine, arguing with his mother by letter about whether Ch…
bobbygw's insight:
The Essay was excerpted from Muse of Fire: World War I as Seen Through the Lives of the Soldier Poets by Michael Korda, 2024.
Scoop.it!
The gates to hell in Dante Alighieri’s Divine Comedy tell us to “abandon all hope, yet who enter here”. Despite its unfunny premise, ‘La Commedia’ ends well, with its protagonist Dante reaching heaven.
Scoop.it!
Writer and psychotherapist Adam Phillips is often hailed as one of the world’s great essayists. His new book – exploring the topic of giving up, among other things – is both erudite and slippery.
Scoop.it!
During a 12-year period of mental illness, Friedrich Nietzsche generated nearly 5,000 pages of fragmentary notes, explain
Scoop.it!
bobbygw's insight:
Books by Brian Stableford and complete reviews at Publishers Weekly: https://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/authorpage/brian-stableford.html |
Scoop.it!
From
fivebooks
The best books on the decline and fall of empires, societal collapse, and the end of the world—selected by Fall of Civilization's Paul Cooper
Scoop.it!
From
archive
For the past five years or so, I’ve read books on my phone. The practice started innocently enough. I write book reviews from time to time, and so publishers sometimes send me upcoming titles that fall roughly within my interests.
Scoop.it!
From
www
Following the death of American comic book retailer and historian Robert Beerbohm on March 27, 2024, we reached out to notable comics academics, writers and historians and asked them to share their memories of him.
Scoop.it!
From
pencanada
By Marcello Di Cintio For the past six months, since the most recent horrors in Gaza began, I’ve been using my Gazan friends’ Facebook activity as proof-of-life. I begin to worry when several days…
Scoop.it!
While AI tools have been used by some translators to support their work, three-quarters of those surveyed believe the emerging technology will negatively impact their future income
Scoop.it!
Letters from Byron to his best friend Elizabeth reveal the intense emotions of one of his first queer relationships.
Scoop.it!
While the author’s account of the 2022 murder attempt is a courageous defence of free speech, it is also shot through with self-regard, making it a sometimes hard book to admire
Scoop.it!
NO JUDGMENT: ESSAYS BY LAUREN OYLER. NEW YORK: HARPERONE. 288 PAGES. $29
Scoop.it!
From
archive
Lord Byron (1788-1824) was a leading figure in the Romantic movement. (Ann Ronan Pictures/Print Collector/Getty Images)
bobbygw's insight:
The two books reviewed in the essay are: Byron: A Life in Ten Letters By Andrew Stauffer, Cambridge University Press. 300 pp. $29.95; and Byron’s Travels Poems, Letters, and Journals Selected and Introduced by Fiona Stafford, Everyman’s Library. 728 pp. $35 |