Essays Vol. 2
Jon Snow and I have one thing in common: we both know nothing. I'm trying to fix my half of the problem. To that end, the first part of this review series was published a short while ago. Now for the second part: The War on Error (from
Jon Snow and I have one thing in common: we both know nothing. I'm trying to fix my half of the problem. To that end, the first part of this review series was published a short while ago. Now for the second part: The War on Error (from
I've read novels, journals, and newsletters; fiction and non-fiction, short-form musings and long-form articles, but one thing I haven't read more of is essays. This is a three part series to mitigate just that. It is not a definitive list, this is just
This is the last edition of the beloved Art Spotting series. Earlier versions are here and here. Often it happened that what people considered notable art was not interesting to me. Naturally that frustration had me thinking that surely there must be some type of art that would appeal to
There was absolutely no way I could've fit all this in one post without crossing the 5k word limit I often joke about. I wrote 32,736 words and gave 5 stars to 33 out of 200 (16.5%) stories. Most of the stories secured a three or
How do you slay a dragon? It depends on how much firepower you have. Enough and you can confront him head-on. Not enough and you have to improvise. In my case, I didn't have enough firepower (time) so to slay the dragon (my reading goal), I had
Mark Twain once said "I never let my schooling interfere with my education". I read that quote many years ago and it has been stuck in my mind ever since. It's unrealistic to think you'd learn everything you ever wanted to learn in four
Picture this: you're visiting some art gallery in your neighborhood or some new part of the world. You like something, whip out your camera and the moment is immortalized. But it's not that easy when it comes to remembering art you viewed online. Say you choose
In a way stories are like people. You either like them immediately or not at all. Exceptions include a small minority where you're undecided at first and come to love or hate them a bit later. This month's review features some repetitions which means I'
I wrote back in Jan that I dedicated one hour a day to reading short stories and that I thought it was manageable. Not every month is a smooth sail like that. Some times I don't have the time or the inclination to read. And in those months,
We are what we read, so we must be careful about the things we want to read. — with apologies to Kurt Vonnegut. You should not take reading recommendations from some influencer's Instagram stories or #booktok. They'll have you reading Coleen Hoover's It Starts with
No preamble. 18 stories read at odd times and places throughout this month where several of them were kind of let-downs. Twice, by coincidence, I felt like two different stories (Balzac/Faulkner and Ahmad/Capote) had similar overarching themes. Let's recap: #81 La Grande Bretèche - Honoré de
In which we find out that a thing that started out as a spur-of-the-moment decision has bloomed into a project that has changed me many times over in the past few months. It was really annoying to see my anti-library and to-read list getting longer