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literature
A History of Loneliness
Is loneliness our modern malaise? Former U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy says the most common pathology he saw during his years of service “was not heart disease or diabetes; it was loneliness.” ...
September 4, 2021
BY
Amelia Worsley
Where the Wild Things Are: Literature, Boys, and Manhood
Mark Twain ends the “Adventures of Huckleberry Finn” with these words: “And so there ain’t nothing more to ...
August 11, 2021
BY
Jeff Minick
Teaching Literature: A Guide for Homeschoolers
Homeschooling parents may find the prospect of teaching their children to read a straightforward endeavor. When it comes ...
July 27, 2021
BY
Barbara Danza
Good, True, Beautiful: Great Literature for Middle-School Students
Some readers may be homeschooling their children this year. Others may have enrolled them in private, public, or ...
July 27, 2021
BY
Jeff Minick
The Mind of a Writer
Commentary The late Kurt Vonnegut had a simple yet profound approach to writing. “When I write,” he said, ...
July 19, 2021
BY
Newt Gingrich
Forgotten Heroines: Fictional Females From Long Ago
So I’m shambling around online, looking for some inspiration to write about literary heroines, fictional females who inspire ...
June 23, 2021
BY
Jeff Minick
Literature Versus Tyranny
The stormtroopers of modernity have trampled much underfoot on their monstrous march across the historical landscape. Having abandoned ...
March 8, 2021
BY
Joseph Pearce
Loving Fathers: A Literary Look at Dads
“I don’t get no respect.” Comedian Rodney Dangerfield made that catchphrase the heart of his act. Sometimes these ...
June 27, 2020
BY
Jeff Minick
Celebrating America: The Poetry of Rosemary and Stephen Vincent Benét
When I was around 9 or 10 years old, my family was visiting my mom’s parents, who operated ...
January 9, 2020
BY
Jeff Minick
Americans Need to Read Better Books
Commentary The benefits of literacy to an educated culture should be obvious and are so important they can’t ...
December 26, 2019
BY
Nicole Russell
Some Lessons From ‘The Columbian Orator’
Though a history major in college and a disciple of Clio (the muse of history) ever since, I was ...
December 17, 2019
BY
Jeff Minick
Stone Walls, Iron Bars, Paper and Pens: A Look at Writers and Prisons
For two years in the early 1990s, I taught adult basic education twice a week in a prison ...
November 21, 2019
BY
Jeff Minick
Are We Making Heroes of Our Villains?
"I am human, and I think nothing human is alien to me." —Terence, Roman playwright Nothing human is ...
November 19, 2019
BY
Jeff Minick
Confessions of a Late-Blooming Lover of Great Literature
Anyone, at any age, can become a lover of literature and will be a better and happier person ...
September 12, 2019
BY
Susannah Pearce
Swashbuckler: Lessons in Morality From Peter Blood, the Pirate
“Captain Blood.” For years, mention of the novel by Rafael Sabatini (1875–1950) about pirates in the Caribbean would ...
August 26, 2019
BY
Jeff Minick
One Page at a Time: Bringing Back the Old Book
In the 1945 movie “A Tree Grows in Brooklyn,” based on Betty Smith’s novel about immigrants living in ...
August 7, 2019
BY
Jeff Minick
What Makes Great Children’s Literature Great?
When it comes to reading great children’s literature, I’m making up for lost time. I was not a ...
April 22, 2019
BY
Susannah Pearce
Great Books I Wouldn’t Want to Be In (And Some I Would!)
If there’s something book lovers like almost as much as reading books, it’s talking about books. About the plot ...
March 31, 2019
BY
Susannah Pearce
Jane Austen Forever!
I’d been reading Jane Austen’s “Pride and Prejudice” to my 10-year-old daughter. I admit I was immediately motivated by my ...
March 10, 2019
BY
Susannah Pearce
Only the Heart Sees Rightly
They say a picture is worth a thousand words. Sometimes this is true. A picture comes in handy ...
March 7, 2019
BY
Susannah Pearce
Two Nobel Literature Prizes to Be Awarded This Year After Academy Cleans House
STOCKHOLM—Two Nobel prizes will be awarded for literature this year after the Swedish literary academy that chooses the ...
March 6, 2019
BY
Reuters
Lydia Chukovskaya, Editor, Writer, Heroic Friend
The Russian poet Anna Akhmatova is too tragic and striking a figure ever to be forgotten. A famous portrait depicts ...
February 21, 2019
BY
The Conversation
How PC Moralism Cuts Us Off From Our Cultural Heritage
Anyone who has read classic literature knows that there are things in old books that offend our sensibilities. ...
February 19, 2019
BY
Intellectual Takeout
The 19th-Century Book That Spawned the Opioid Crisis
In 1804, a 19-year-old Oxford University undergraduate named Thomas De Quincey swallowed a prescribed dose of opium to ...
December 17, 2018
BY
Robert Morrison
A Backward View: Older Books and the Culture of the Now
For almost 20 years, I have written book reviews for a weekly newspaper in Western North Carolina. In ...
December 17, 2018
BY
Intellectual Takeout
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn’s Advice for a World Plagued by Chaos and Victimhood
Do you ever feel overwhelmed by the chaos and the noise that seems to be a normal part ...
December 17, 2018
BY
Intellectual Takeout
The Wit of William Cowper
These days, William Cowper (1731–1800) isn’t likely to be found on anyone’s list of Top 20 English Poets. ...
November 25, 2018
BY
James A. Tweedie
TOP NEWS
Russia Struck Ukraine With an Intercontinental Ballistic Missile, Ukrainian Military Says
NEW
By
Ryan Morgan
Russia Says It Shot Down 2 UK-Supplied Storm Shadow Missiles Fired by Ukraine
1hr
By
Adam Morrow
ICC Issues Arrest Warrants for Netanyahu and Former Defense Minister
2hr
By
Chris Summers
US Optimistic as Israel Weighs Cease-Fire Proposal for Lebanon
4hr
By
Dan M. Berger
IAEA Chief Says Iran Has Taken ‘Concrete Steps’ in Right Direction on Nuclear Program
5hr
By
Chris Summers
UK’s Starmer Faces Pressure to Get Tougher on China at G20
5hr
By
Lily Zhou
Global Economic Risks Spark Calls to Tie US Dollar to Gold Again
5hr
By
Olivia Li
,
Xin Ning
and
Bin Zhao
HHS Chief Defends His Agency’s Handling of Children Who Entered US Illegally
5hr
By
Darlene McCormick Sanchez
US Regulators Seek Breakup of Google, Forced Sale of Chrome, Over Search Monopoly
6hr
By
Caden Pearson
New Zealand Health Ministry Says No Quality Evidence Backing Puberty Blocker Use
6hr
By
Crystal-Rose Jones