
Deep Down Things
Nicodemus, Doug Weaver
Pentecost 2012 issue.

Friday Links
with Hannah Long in Plough, Mary Grace Mangano on Helen Pinkerton, Zina Hitz in Commonweal, Jane Greer on Josephine Jacobsen

The muse is not a trophy wife
Poets, professors, and philosophers should be part mad scientist, experimenting with the physical world, and part child gazing long at the unexplainable beauty around them, overjoyed that they have been invited to come out and play in it.

Tom Wolfe, American Social Critic?—and Me
When I met Tom Wolfe at a writers' conference at University of Grand Forks, North Dakota in 1977, I told him I was a great admirer of the kind of writing that he practiced and perhaps invented, which he called New Journalism.
Wolfe and I had a brief quiet conversation in the dining room. Wolfe was wearing one of the counter-cultural-straight-man painstakingly tailored pastel suits he always wore, even in the midst of the 70s, even when he was researching The Electric Kool Aid Acid Test with the tie-dyed, fringed, long-haired bell-bottom-jeans-wearing freaks on that psychedelic bus.
The night I met him, I was surprised that the wide-lapeled suit he wore was pale yellow. I fingered his lapel thoughtfully, to check the quality of the fabric, since I read where he’d written about how much he was into well-tailored fine fabrics, decided the material was linen, noticed his pocket handkerchief was made of silk, and then I told him I wanted to be a famous writer. And he said without a pause, You will be. For no apparent reason at all.

Friday Links
with The CUA Chamber Choir; James Matthew Wilson in Law & Liberty; Cynthia Lewis in The Hudson Review; Timothy Nerozzi in The Lamp, Aidan Hart and the Scala Foundation

Europe in these Times – Things Unfinished
Kevin Duffy contemplates Antonio Gaudí’s masterpiece and the nature of what it means to be a work in progress.

Friday Links
Check out our Friday Links with Eliot reading “Ash-Wednesday,” Three Mo’ Tenors singing “Were You There?” and more

Art is the best interpreter of art
Steven Knepper on the value of ekphrastic poetry

The Ways of Holiness

The Ways of Holiness
Friday Links
Gregory Luce, Sarah DeCorla-SouzaPaul Kingsnorth, First Things, Bernardo Aparicio García, Mary Ann Miller, Greg Wolfe, Jess Sweeney, Shemaiah Gonzales, Notre Dame Folk Choir, Christian Wiman, Harper’s

Let us reverently marvel
The Marvelous Works of Brian Doyle

Sacred Art’s Mysterious Call to the Heart
Beauty creates a longing for transcendent realities. As poet Dana Gioia wrote in the essay quoted in this post of mine at Dappled Things Deep Down things blog, "art is mysterious. It reaches us in ways we don’t fully understand.”
This ability of sacred art to call our hearts and prepare our minds to receive truth is something we need to bring into the discussion as the Church ponders how to help the appallingly large number of Catholics who either were never taught or never believed or lost belief—for whatever reason—in the presence of Christ in the Eucharist.
A step forward for Deep Down Things
We’re pleased to announce that we are now able to compensate contributors to the Deep Down Things blog.

Friday Links
Friday Links with Seth Wieck on Dana Gioia’s new collection of poetry; Ted Gioia on The State of the Culture (2023); Anthony Esolen on Marty; and Sally Read on God and the Poet

Slouching toward Calvary
Dwight Lindley on the crucible of a Sunday afternoon walk with one’s children.

Friday Links
Check out our Friday Links with Sally Read, Ryan Wilson, Sally Thomas, Tessa Carman, Jason Baxter, and Norm Grondin

The year of Craigslist jobs
“Finding jobs on Craigslist felt a bit like online dating, which I’d never done. But I imagined it would be sort of disembodied and rootless , text alienated from context. And for these reasons, it leaves an impression on you, stirs up some nameless emptiness in your heart, like that of ghosts mingling in a graveyard.”

Friday Links
Al Sauls in Black Catholic Messenger: “How Sister Thea Bowman inspired me to Make Black Catholic art” and more in our Friday Links!

The dear tokens of His Passion
Anna Hultin gets honest about the birth stories of her children and the beauty and pain of motherhood when the delivery falls far short of the ideal.

Infinity Within
Sarah Freymuth with a beautiful meditation on the relation of the infinite to the finite.