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Category Archives: Uncategorized
An interview about shyness
At Bookslut this month, I have an interview with Christopher Lane about his new book, Shyness: How Normal Behavior Became a Sickness (Yale UP, 2007). From the interview: You have a great deal of fun with the psychiatrists for their … Continue reading
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Book review: Part of the World, by Robert Lopez
Yesterday’s mail brought a welcome break from holiday catalogs: contributor’s copies of Mid-American Review. I’ve got a review of Robert Lopez’s terrific short novel, Part of the World (Calamari Press).  Here’s the opening: Part of the World is a gripping … Continue reading
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Even that giant wooden horse can’t save you from your mother
It turns out that it’s bad karma to talk smack to your mother. In the morning, when we were all going out to “shovel” the quarter-inch of snow so we could play basketball, The Little Man was slightly irritated about … Continue reading
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Book review: The Iron Whim, by Darren Wershler-Henry
At PopMatters this morning, I have a (slightly tardy) review of Darren Wershler-Henry’s recent book, The Iron Whim: A Fragmented History of Typewriting:  The Iron Whim‘s thesis is that the iconography of typewriting is almost preternaturally self-deconstructing. Typewriting produces the … Continue reading
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Dead Brits wish you happy Christmas
Via Paraphernalian, the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography advent calendar/contest.
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A note to future students: They put the dates on the readings for a reason
Attention future students in my Brit Lit II (and perhaps The Victorian Age) courses:Â When it’s time to sit the exam on the Victorian period, you can count on the following question appearing as extra credit: Â Why can’t Tennyson’s famous … Continue reading
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Prepping for the season
Hey, did you know that kids like the winter holidays? Shocking, I know, but I have proof: This is the first year he’s been interested in jumping into raked leaves. Lots of merriment. (What I particularly like about these pictures … Continue reading
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Maybe there’s something to that NEA report on reading after all . . .
On the one hand, it seems certain that the recent NEA report alleging a steep decline in reading is alarmist and overdrawn, relying on a tendentious understanding of the history of literacy and underestimating reading in new media. On the … Continue reading
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In which the boy learns that racial/ethnic classifications are imprecise
Monday at preschool, The Little Man was asked what he would be thankful for on Thursday. His answer: “The food, because if the Indians didn’t share their food with the colonists, then they would all have died.” (We like to … Continue reading
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The Grinch is real
<pouting> Special thanks to the League of American Theaters & Producers for wrecking Thanksgiving: The latest round of talks between the producers’ league and the stagehands’ union broke down last night, leaving no end in sight for the strike that … Continue reading
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