Deep Down Things
Nicodemus, Doug Weaver
Pentecost 2012 issue.
Friday Links
with Mark Dooley on Building, Beauty, and Belonging; James Matthew Wilson on Joseph Bottum; Jimmy Lai; The Merry Beggars; The Secular Priest for a Secular Age
Every good gift
Jamey Toner on the “ancient unity” of giver and gift.
Friday Links
Keturah Hickman in Plough; Danielle Heckenkamp on Karen Ullo’s “To Crown with Liberty”; Joan Bauer; NVR, Carter Davis Johnson, & Robinson Jeffers; A Conversation with Ben Palpate & James Matthew Wilson
Five books on the craft of writing
Oso Guardiola recommends craft writing books the way he recommends recipes
Friday Links
Christian Wiman on HEaney’s letters; Sir James MacMillan Discusses Tradition and Creativity in Music; Waxing Poetic with A. M. Juster; William Fear on Wodehouse; Lucas Smith on Christopher Koch; Dr. Daniel McInerny Popular Entertainment and the Good Life
The economy of beauty
Michael Yost’s commentary on Shakespeare’s Sonnet IV
Friday Links
Invincible Communion: A Toast
Adriana Watkins toasts all the things we’ve lost, and all the things that through the communion of saints will be found again.
Friday Links
Marly Youmans on the Poet’s Eye View; “The Path” from Alfred Nicol, Lucas Nissan reviews Ethan Mannon’s Georgic Mode; Joseph M. Hassett: Imperishable Song; The Rose Fire from Paul Pastor; New Verse Review Is Open For Submissions
What humans are
Jacob Riyeff on how we can help ourselves and others in the “AI Moment”
Friday Links
Changes at DT; Ryan Wilson Steps Down from Literary Matters; J. C. Scharl on Dorothy Sayers; Cups on a String by Emily Leithauser; Fitzcarraldo Editions Makes Challenging Literature Chic
“With a mingling of gratitude, grief, and joy”: Dappled Things Announces Editorial Change
Following my nose
Jeffrey Essmann follows the scent of his memory and ends up at the divine.
Friday Links
with Dana Gioia on opera & bonus podcast; Haley Stewart on fairy tales; Joshua Hren with a double review of 2 books on Joyce; TIB on lockdown nostalgia; Brian Kaller on life in rural Ireland
The Word Made Fresh
Abram Van Engen’s new book invites everyone to read poetry for spiritual benefit.
An answer to Lovecraft
H.P. Lovecraft began his seminal 1927 essay, “Supernatural Horror in Literature,” with these words: “The oldest and strongest emotion of mankind is fear, and the oldest and strongest kind of fear is fear of the unknown.” I disagree, and here’s why.
Friday Links
with Micah Mattix on books to navigate the swells of verse; Steven Knepper on Les Murray; Elijah Blumov hosts George David Clark, Ryan Wilson, and Matthew Buckley Smith; Joshua Hren on The genius of James Joyce; The odd couple: Evelyn Waugh and Graham Greene; ESU Formal Verse Contest
The Hollow Inch
Keep your psychics and sages, your self-help gurus and psychologists. Set the well-meaning priests, rabbis and imams on the side. Thank your best friend and your sweetheart for their kind words. But the bottom line is that the best advice you can or ever will receive is from your mother.
Friday Links
Annual Summer Literary Series at UST; Rhonda Ortiz interviews Fiorella De Maria; Endangered Mexican Salamander Being Captive Bred By Nuns; Matthew Milliner interviews Amanda Iglesias; Tom Hiddleston Recites “When You Are Old” by W. B. Yeats
Forsaken silence, sacred song
Finding God in the melody of Godland