Month: August 2015

Theater Feature: John Douglas Thompson on “Red Velvet” — Race and Shakespeare in the Nineteenth Century

August 8, 2015
Posted in , ,

Few people are familiar with the achievement of nineteenth century African-American Shakespearean actor Ira Aldridge.

Read More

Book Review: Literary Critic James Wood and the Art of ‘Deep Noticing’

August 7, 2015
Posted in , ,

We will always need critics to show us how literature works by revering it rather than interrogating it as if it had committed a crime.

Read More

Rock Interview: Talking to a Post-Punk Legend — Bush Tetras’s Lead Singer Cynthia Sley

August 6, 2015
Posted in , , ,

The Bush Tetras — who’ve been on-off reunited since 1995, but haven’t hit Boston in nearly two decades — headline at the Sinclair this Saturday.

Read More

Concert Review: The Borromeo String Quartet @ 25 — Sublime

August 6, 2015
Posted in , , ,

No other concerts I’ve heard this summer can come close to the thrill I experienced hearing the Borromeo Quartet.

Read More

Film Review: Woody Allen’s “Irrational Man” — Some Existential Pleasures

August 6, 2015
Posted in , ,

This Rhode Island-shot Woody Allen film has its pleasures: interesting actors, philosophical chitchat, an appealing academic setting.

Read More

Theater Review: “Unknown Soldier” — A Musical About the Power of Memory

August 5, 2015
Posted in , ,

One of Unknown Soldier’s powerful choices is that its central characters are not your standard young lovers.

Read More

Book Review: “Counternarratives” — Stories About History’s Metamorphosis

August 5, 2015
Posted in , ,

What John Keene has given us in Counternarratives is fearless fiction.

Read More

Concert Review: Monadnock Music String Quartet (in Trio Form)

August 5, 2015
Posted in , , ,

The trio’s musical offerings were substantial and not the easiest things for an occasional group to pull together.

Read More

Poetry Review: James Tate’s Last Poems — Dense, Daffy, and Original

August 4, 2015
Posted in , ,

James Tate remains true to himself. These prose-poems are often stellar, harrowingly distinctive, and worthy of repeat visits.

Read More

Visual Arts Review: Arlene Shechet — Restoring the Wonder of Fine Ceramics

August 4, 2015
Posted in , ,

In Arlene Shechet’s mischievous hands, the medium’s power as a shape shifter runs wild.

Read More

Recent Posts