Search Results: homes

Book Review: “Lessons from Sarajevo” — Talking About What War Means

October 22, 2013
Posted in , ,

In this powerful book, Jim Hicks explores a collection of narratives about the experience of war in many genres and a wide range of media that eschew the sentimental.

Read More

Film Review: “Le Pont du Nord” — An Entertaining Exercise in Playful Dis-Ease

August 8, 2013
Posted in , ,

This entertaining and provocative work, made in 1981 by the now 85-year-old director, fits into his oeuvre as a complement to his best known movie among American art-film fans, 1974’s Céline and Julie Go Boating.

Read More

Theater Review: Spelling Bee Wild

September 9, 2010
Posted in

This musical may have a small focus and a smaller message than William Finn’s other shows, but the highly likable characters produce big laughs and plenty of empathy. The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee. Music and Lyrics by William Finn. Book by Rachel Sheinkin. Conceived by Rebecca Feldman. Additional Material by Jan Reiss. Directed and…

Read More

Book Commentary: Machado De Assis — Genius at 100

September 28, 2008
Posted in ,

by Bill Marx “If Borges is the writer who made Garcia Marquez possible,” observed Salman Rushdie, “then it is no exaggeration to say that Machado de Assis is the writer who made Borges possible.” Rushdie’s piggybacked history of the hemisphere’s premier intellectual ironists is correct but, at least until the last decade or so, Machado…

Read More

Movie Nation

January 5, 2005
Posted in ,

Critic David Thomson says the movies have profoundly shaped America, and not always for the better. “The Whole Equation: A History of Hollywood” by David Thomson. (Knopf) By Tim Riley The title of David Thomson’s provocative new history of film comes from a trenchant passage in F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel “The Last Tycoon”: “You can…

Read More

Faith and Terror

June 13, 2006
Posted in

In his latest novel, John Updike explores the nature of faith through the eyes of a would-be terrorist.

Read More

Film Remembrance: Death of a Bible “Salesman”

August 26, 2020
Posted in , ,

The cinema verite masterpiece is among the first non-fiction theatrical features to chronicle “regular” people going about their everyday lives.

Read More

Book Review: “The Ministry of Truth” — Writing a Blueprint for Disaster

July 20, 2019
Posted in , ,

Words from George Orwell to live by:  “To see what is in front of one’s nose needs a constant struggle.”

Read More

Arts Remembrance: Soul Iconoclast Roy C

September 17, 2020
Posted in , ,

Roy C may not have lived to see the current regime toppled or his litigation over past royalties resolved to his satisfaction, but he died knowing that he was — without a doubt — a Black American original.

Read More

Book Review: Poet Philip Levine — The Kernel of Life

December 9, 2016
Posted in , ,

These posthumous volumes provide ample proof that poet Philip Levine was far more than a proletariat troubadour.

Read More

Recent Posts

Popular Posts

Categories

Archives