Posts

Book Review: “Fangirls” — In Praise of Fanatics

November 10, 2020
Posted in , , , ,

Fangirls is a funny and poignant survey of an essential coming-of-age experience.

Pop Review: Gorillaz’s Exhilarating “Song Machine”

November 10, 2020
Posted in , , , ,

Song Machine rejuvenates the band’s core identity; it is the best music Gorillaz has made in a decade.

Rock Feature: Despite the Pandemic, Goose Is Flying High

November 10, 2020
Posted in , , , ,

“It was a little frustrating at first, but we’re figuring out how to give music to the people that need it right now.”

Television Review: “Paranormal” — Egyptian Ghost-busting

November 9, 2020
Posted in , ,

The spooky adventures in this Netflix/Egyptian produced series are entertaining enough to deserve a second season.

Film Review: Freud Never Asked What Men Want, “The Climb” Tells Us

November 8, 2020
Posted in , ,

The terrific The Climb looks at bro-bonding in a way you’ve never quite seen.

Book Review: “The Silence” — Brusque Prophecy

November 7, 2020
Posted in , ,

Many Don DeLillo fans will overlook this novella’s somewhat stilted dialogue and perfunctory erotic scenes for the sake of another taste of his dark and knowing world.

Poetry Review: “Any Song Will Do” — A Very Worthwhile Discovery

November 6, 2020
Posted in , ,

Donald Levering’s poems exhort us to be less left-brained, to side more often with intuition, creativity, flights of fancy.

Book Review: A Brilliant “Homeland Elegies” — Indispensable Witness

November 5, 2020
Posted in , ,

What Ayad Akhtar reveals, with stunning detail and a passion and an urgency rarely seen in American fiction, is that his is a story marked by a loneliness similar to that found in Melville, Dreiser, and T.S. Eliot, among others, and that puts him squarely in their company.

Opera Review: Paisiello’s “Le gare generose” — Italians, Quakers, and Slavery in 18th-century Boston

November 5, 2020
Posted in , ,

The lively world-premiere recording of Giovanni Paisiello’s Le gare generose proves why the composer was in demand all across Europe.

Book Review: Black Food Matters — “The Rise: Black Cooks and the Soul of American Food”

November 4, 2020
Posted in , , ,

The Rise is the rare cookbook that does more than offer a culinary and educational journey. It inspires.

Recent Posts

Popular Posts

Categories

Archives