Search Results: BUH-BYES

Book Review: “Fallout” — Memorably Detailing the Defeat of the Hiroshima Cover-Up

September 8, 2020
Posted in , ,

I heartily recommend M.M. Blume’s excellent Fallout, which ably synthesizes large amounts of archival, historical, and biographical material from three continents.

Read More

Short Fuse: Russian Dissident Garry Kasparov — Going to Jail for Pussy Riot

August 21, 2012
Posted in ,

Unlike the rock star supporters of Pussy Riot, Garry Kasparov lives in Moscow, which means, given how the Putin regime has dealt with critics, he has a lot more to fear than, say, Madonna, who nevertheless should be applauded for speaking out at her Moscow concert.

Read More

Visual Arts Feature: Rembrandt, Rubens, the Beau Sancy, and the Jew

May 22, 2012
Posted in ,

The history of the Beau Sancy took me back to the years around 1640, when it passed into and out of the orbit of the greatest Netherlandish artists of the day, the Dutchman Rembrandt and the Brabander Rubens.

Read More

Book Review: Books about Rock n’ Roll — Some Rock, Some Don’t

January 23, 2016
Posted in , ,

The success of Patti Smith’s memoir Just Kids, has meant an uptick in the number of new rock n’ roll books hitting the racks.

Read More

Music Interview: Talking With Colin Blunstone — Post-Zombies

February 1, 2019
Posted in , , ,

“It’s a very exciting prospect that your peers think your worthy to be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.”

Read More

Book Review: The Overthrow of Pessimism — Sherman Alexie’s Song of Redemption

October 3, 2012
Posted in ,

Grappling with one’s identity — complicated by the relationships between tradition and modernism, cultural history and the process of assimilation — is central to most of Sherman Alexie’s stories, and his exploration of these complexities is compelling and illuminating.

Read More

Food Muse: Resplendent Romanesco Rhapsody

February 26, 2010
Posted in ,

It’s not every day you meet a new food, one you’ve never seen or tasted, one you can’t identify. You can never know everything about food. It’s humbling, just when you thought you were getting a handle on things. There’s always a new ingredient from somewhere on the planet. One year Szechuan pepper, another year…

Read More

Coming Attractions: September 10 through 25 — What Will Light Your Fire

September 10, 2023
Posted in , ,

Our expert critics supply a guide to film, dance, visual art, theater, author readings, and music. More offerings will be added as they come in.

Read More

Theater Review Roundup: Taking in London Stages

March 9, 2011
Posted in

Reviews of eight stage productions in London, with two terrific shows noted: American dramatist Bruce Norris’s powerful study of racial relations, Clybourne Park, and Alan Ayckbourn’s 1980 farce Season’s Greetings. Another winner on the West End, the critically acclaimed War Horse, comes to New York next week. By Joann Green Breuer Penelope by Enda Walsh…

Read More

Author Interview: Historian Maureen Ogle on the American Mystique of Meat

February 22, 2014
Posted in ,

“If, as a reader, you’re expecting the standard rap on meat, then, well, you’re in for an unexpected history.”

Read More

Recent Posts

Popular Posts

Categories

Archives