Deep Down Things
Nicodemus, Doug Weaver
Pentecost 2012 issue.
Friday Links
with Marly Youmans, Tom Hodgkinson, Richard M Reinsch II in Law and Liberty, Lesley Clinton, Jaya Savige reviews David Mason’s Pacific Light, & Katy Carl at The Merton Center, Columbia University, NYC
Seeking the Open Place with St. Augustine
There’s a lot of talk about “thin places” where one readily senses God. The saints, though, want more.
Friday Links
with Tessa Carmen and J.C. Scharl, Susannah Black Roberts in Mere Orthodoxy, Valerie Stivers in First Things, DT & Collegium: Dying Well to Live Well, & An Interview with Mike Rowe in Plough
Motels and past roads
If, as John Cheever once noted, America’s train stations and air terminals are its true cathedrals, motels may be its shrines. If not part of America’s soul, they are certainly part of its circulatory system.
Friday Links
on the The Feast of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary with Catholic Culture Podcast and Carla Galdo, Ben Christenson, Kathleen B. Jones in LitHub, Dana Gioia on Charles Causley, Talbot Brewer in Hedgehog Review, Joan Bauer in Psaltery & Lyre
Petty quibbles
Petty quibbles with “How to” books on the craft of writing miss the point.
Friday Links
with Karen Ullo on Andrea Bocelli’s musical pilgrimage, Cornelia Powers on the The Pleasure and Communion of Austen’s Country Dance, Solo Opera presents The Three Feathers by Dana Gioia and Lori Laitman, Michael Collins reviews Ernest Hilbert’s Storm Swimmer, From the Archives: A poem from Matthew Kirby
On confessional poetry
When it comes down to it, it would seem, whether one is a confessional poet or not does not matter. It’s a false dichotomy, after all. Any poet truly interested in writing good poetry cannot completely ignore the self, and also cannot focus too narrowly on the self.
Friday Links
with DT & Collegium: Dying Well to Live Well; Fr. Michael Rennier & poet Anna Key; Joshua Hren: In Search of Ordinary Time; John-Paul Heil: The Field is the World; J.C. Scharl in Ekstasis: “Salt”; Julia Yost on Austen’s Darkness
Is it work?
“When I write, I am a woman alive. It is the most exasperating activity of my week, many layers more demanding than my hardest work day. It may go well or poorly. No matter.
It is not drudgery but sacrament, not duty but liturgy.”
Friday Links
with Eric Cyr & Joshua Hren, James K.A. Smith & Christopher Beha, John-Paul Heil on Katy Carl’s Fragile Objects, Tamara Nicholl-Smith on Dana Gioia, Patrick Kurp on Louis MacNeice
Lust - the deadly sin of lesser desire
C. S. Lewis admitted to being addicted to lust as an undergraduate yet argued that “you might as well offer a mutton chop to a man who is dying of thirst as offer sexual pleasure to the desire I am speaking of.”
Friday Links
with Natalie Morrill, Cynthia Haven, John Wilson & Prufrock, Ekstasis & Maura Harrison
The serpent’s mouth
Eve, exegesis, and the violence of drama
Friday Links
with Joan Bauer, Ploughcast E.66 with Paul Kingsnorth, Steve Donoghue, Phil Davignon, Roseanne Sullivan, & Maryann Corbett
Heaven is other people
On Sartre’s “Look,” and taking in the existence of other people.
Friday Links
with John Wilson in Comment, Micah Mattix in The Washington Examiner, E.J. Hutchinson in Ad Fontes, From the Archives: Jess Sweeney and Lee Nowell-Wilson
Looking for the Vita Nuova
Dante used the Vita Nuova to create a persona who’d reach his full potential within the allegorical journey starting in the dark woods of a depressed middle age and winding upwards from hell to purgatory to heaven. He played a literary long game, enticing the reader to roll her eyes and think, “Get a grip,” as he roiled words around his attraction to Beatrice.
Friday Links
with James Matthew Wilson, Sir James MacMillan, Benedict XVI Institute, Ryan Ruby on A.E. Stallings, Dr. Timothy McDonnell, and Mary Grace Mangano
Volunteers for Blessed Stanley
A volunteer docent describes the festivities surrounding the dedication of a magnificent shrine honoring our first American-born Catholic martyr, Fr. Stanley Francis Rother.