In “ Keats at Twenty-four , ” your story in this week’s issue of The New Yorker , a nameless middle-aged writer seems to have come to something of a halt. Let’s start with the title. You quote a line ...
12.04.2023 Newyorker.comAudio available Listen to this story Caleb Crain reads. By spring, he had got to the point of thinking that virtue was a matter of not saying things, which was a little problematic for him, as a write...
12.04.2023 Newyorker.comRobert Lowell Beauregard died on Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 23, from a severe blood infection with resulting sepsis complications. All who knew him can attest to the remarkable man he was. He was born in ...
12.04.2023 Tbrnewsmedia.comSir Walter Scott’s poem ‘Patriotism’ passionately underscores the profound importance of love for one’s native land. It questions the existence of individuals devoid of such sentiment, warning that th...
12.05.2023 Poemanalysis.comPhoto by Alice Helen Methfessel, courtesy of Frank Bidart The interview took place at Lewis Wharf, Boston, on the afternoon of June 28, 1978, three days before Miss Bishop and two friends were to leave for North Haven, a Maine island in Penobscot Bay where she summered. Her living room, on the fourth floor of Lewis Wharf, had a spectacular view of Boston Harbor; when I arrived, she immediately took me out on the balcony to point out such Boston landmarks as Old North Church in the distance, ment...
12.05.2023 Theparisreview.org