-
Recent Posts
- Happy birthday, Big Joe Turner, “Boss of the Blues”
- Diane Arbus at the movies
- “I should have been dead ten times over. I’ve thought about that a lot. I believe in miracles. It’s an absolute miracle that I’m still around.” — Dennis Hopper
- “My goal: never copy. Create a new style, with luminous and brilliant colors, rediscover the elegance of my models.” — Tamara de Lempicka
- Kwik Stop (2001) finally streaming
- “Manuscripts don’t burn.” — Mikhail Bulgakov
- For Joseph Cotten’s birthday: Gaslight: His Listening Is Active
- “That’s the way I work: I try to imagine what I would like to see.” — Sofia Coppola
- “I’m very concerned that we don’t make movies that are original anymore.” — Robert Zemeckis
- “Music, at its essence, is what gives us memories. And the longer a song has existed in our lives, the more memories we have of it.” — Stevie Wonder
Recent Comments
- Ryan Cox on “That’s the way I work: I try to imagine what I would like to see.” — Sofia Coppola
- sheila on Kwik Stop (2001) finally streaming
- sheila on “I’m very concerned that we don’t make movies that are original anymore.” — Robert Zemeckis
- Melissa Sutherland on Kwik Stop (2001) finally streaming
- Gemstone on “I’m very concerned that we don’t make movies that are original anymore.” — Robert Zemeckis
- sheila on “Manuscripts don’t burn.” — Mikhail Bulgakov
- sheila on Kwik Stop (2001) finally streaming
- sheila on “I’m very concerned that we don’t make movies that are original anymore.” — Robert Zemeckis
- Stevie on Kwik Stop (2001) finally streaming
- Roger T Shrubber on “I’m very concerned that we don’t make movies that are original anymore.” — Robert Zemeckis
- mutecypher on “Manuscripts don’t burn.” — Mikhail Bulgakov
- sheila on News about Iranian director Mohammad Rasoulof
- Lyrie on News about Iranian director Mohammad Rasoulof
- sheila on News about Iranian director Mohammad Rasoulof
- Scott Abraham on News about Iranian director Mohammad Rasoulof
- Johnny on Alain Delon: Eyes So Deep There’s No Bottom
- sheila on “I put my soul through the ink.” — Proof
- Jayme on “I put my soul through the ink.” — Proof
- sheila on R.I.P. Steve Albini
- sheila on R.I.P. Steve Albini
Categories
Archives
-
Tag Archives: history
It’s the birthday of “The Woman Who Wouldn’t Forget”: Iris Chang
Iris Chang’s research into the atrocities committed by the Japanese on the Chinese people – particularly Chinese women – during the “rape of Nanking” in 1937 – much of it dug out of buried archives and brought to light for … Continue reading
Posted in Books, On This Day, writers
Tagged China, history, Iris Chang, Japan, war, WWII
3 Comments
2022 Books Read
Some re-reads this year, but a lot of new-to-me authors as well. New novels written by faves. Been a year of upheaval and transitions. I’ve managed to keep up my regular reading schedule. I just don’t feel right if I’m … Continue reading
Posted in Books
Tagged A.S. Byatt, Alfred Hitchcock, Anne Fadiman, art, Australia, Biography, books read, Canada, Christopher Hitchens, culture, Edmund Burke, Elinor Lipman, England, entertainment biography, essays, Eve Babitz, fiction, friends, Germany, Greece, history, Hitler, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Janet Malcolm, Joan Didion, Joseph Cornell, Lorrie Moore, Machiavelli, Master and Margarita, Memoirs, Michael Curtiz, Mikhail Bulgakov, Mitfords, nonfiction, novel, Paul Zindel, politics, Quentin Tarantino, Robert De Niro, Russia, Ryszard Kapuściński, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Shakespeare, The Beatles, Tom Wolfe, true crime, Victor Klemperer, Victor Serge, war, William Hazlitt, William Wordsworth, WWII, YA fiction
10 Comments
The past is present
In England in 1788, an impeachment trial began against Warren Hastings, governor general of the notorious East India Company – accusing him of corruption, cruelty, crimes against humanity (in modern language), and of wielding the worst of the worst – … Continue reading
Hey, Moscow, let’s party tonight like it’s 1929!
I am currently re-reading Curzio Malaparte’s The Kremlin Ball. There is no other book like it. A gossipy telling of the “Soviet proletariat aristocracy” of the late 1920s, which Malaparte witnessed firsthand. (“Curzio Malaparte” was his pen name, chosen because … Continue reading
Stuff I’ve Been Reading
Lots of re-reads because 1. I’m in turmoil. The familiar is a comfort. 2. The majority of my books have been in storage for almost a year. We all have been reunited but they’re still in boxes stacked against the … Continue reading
Posted in Books
Tagged Evelyn Waugh, fiction, Greta Garbo, history, Kirov, Memoirs, Nancy Lemann, Robert Conquest, Stalin, stuff I've been reading
1 Comment
Commonplace Book: Continuity
“Thus Hitler establishes a firm continuity between persuasion, propaganda, intimidation and terror, between words and deeds, and this continuity is the characteristic praxis of his regime. Facing this continuity, the citizen of the Third Reich has allowed himself to be … Continue reading
Stuff I’ve Been Reading
My lifestyle has changed. It now involves shuffling children around to dentist appointments and Little League games, joining the solidarity of the parents in the bleechers. I live in a small working-class town by the beach. I’m busy with writing … Continue reading
Posted in Books
Tagged Eve Babitz, Germany, history, Memoirs, Russia, Stalin, Stefan Zweig, stuff I've been reading, Thomas Mann, Yugoslavia
6 Comments
2020 Books Read
What a year, huh. What a dumpster-fire year. I read a lot, mostly in the mornings, and it helped create rituals for the days, which often seemed endlessly the same, interchangeable. I read a lot of long and challenging books … Continue reading
Posted in Books
Tagged Austria, ballet, Ballets Russes, Belfast, Biography, books read, Croatia, culture, Czechoslovakia, Czeslaw Milosz, dance, Dubravka Ugrešić, Elinor Lipman, Elizabeth Bishop, Eminem, essays, Ezra Pound, fiction, H.D., Hannah Arendt, history, Hitler, Ireland, Jane Austen, Jean Arthur, Marcel Proust, Nick Tosches, nonfiction, Olivia Laing, poetry, Poland, politics, Rebecca West, Robert Kaplan, Robert Lowell, Roman empire, Russia, Ryszard Kapuściński, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Shirley Jackson, Stalin, true crime, Ukraine, war, WWII, Yugoslavia
38 Comments
Stuff I’ve Been Reading
2020 has been heavy, ain’t it. “This shit’s about to get heavy” (I worked so long on that Eminem piece, his lyrics are still buzzing through me). When things get heavy, escapes are great, momentary respites are important. I have … Continue reading
Posted in Books
Tagged ballet, Croatia, Dubravka Ugrešić, fiction, history, Memoirs, Nijinsky, Robert Kaplan, Russia, Ryszard Kapuściński, stuff I've been reading, Ukraine, Yugoslavia
7 Comments