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Tag Archives: writing
‘It’s This Old, Fatal Love for the Landscape’
The quotation in my title is from nature writer Robert Macfarlane. His book The Old Ways featured British war artist Eric Ravilious, killed in a plane crash in 1942. In the book, Macfarlane “points to the way the artist would … Continue reading
Posted in Commentary, Quotations
Tagged art, blogging, language, painting, personal, poetry, rhetoric, style, writing
9 Comments
Crisis Antidote: Neighborhood Bookshops
The small shops are sprouting where their readers are, in residential areas, keeping alive the rich literary scene that made Buenos Aires, Argentina’s capital, one of the cities with the most bookstores per capita in the world. “Argentina may always … Continue reading
A Good Outing: Roger Angell (1920-2022)
“It is foolish and childish, on the face of it, to affiliate ourselves with anything so insignificant and patently contrived and commercially exploitative as a professional sports team,” he wrote in his book “Five Seasons” (1977). “What is left out … Continue reading
How Poetry Feels About Itself
Rae Armantrout’s poem “Smidgins” fulfills an imperative of lyric, which is “Don’t be gassy.” Also another imperative, which is “Talk in riddles.” My crumpled, wrinkled / blurt / of flesh. // “Let’s face it,” / it says. * … Ravaged … Continue reading
Posted in Anthology, Commentary, Quotations
Tagged grammar, language, lexicon, personal, poetry, reading, rhetoric, style, syntax, writing
4 Comments
On ‘Love Letter to a Dead Body’
I’m intrigued by the tension in Jake Skeet’s [sic] poem: Its title juxtaposes love with death, and its rhythms press against the nettle-like images. The first stanza’s images are scarred and rough with “burr and sage,” “bottles” and the “cirrhosis … Continue reading
Posted in Anthology, Commentary, Quotations
Tagged grammar, language, personal, poetry, reading, rhetoric, style, syntax, writing
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Whomever, Whoever … Whatever
A bilateral agreement such as the one proposed between China and Solomon Islands undermines that sentiment and shows a limited appreciation for security of the region as a whole by whomever was the leaked draft’s initial author. (Mihai Sora, theguardian.com, … Continue reading
Posted in Commentary
Tagged grammar, journalism, language, rhetoric, style, translation, writing
2 Comments
A Modest Proposal Regarding Neutral Reference
They is owning he and she. Example: An athlete knows that they must train rigorously to qualify for the Olympics. It even happens when the antecedent is named and sexed. Example: Jacob has a Master of Fine Arts from Iowa. … Continue reading
Posted in Commentary
Tagged grammar, language, linguistics, personal, rhetoric, society, style, syntax, writing
2 Comments
Dogs or Cats?
If you could meet any writer, dead or alive, who would it be? And what would you want to know?It seems to me that the author plays a kind of secondary role in this whole business of literature. Authors are … Continue reading
Posted in Quotations
Tagged language, literature, reading, style, translation, writing
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‘Except for Perhaps Poetry…’
In 1970, David Godine started a small publishing company in an abandoned cow barn in Brookline, Massachusetts. After a distinguished history of publishing select titles in well crafted editions, he has sold the company. I enjoyed reading what he did … Continue reading
Posted in Commentary, Quotations
Tagged culture, language, personal, poetry, writing
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Is There an Exception Rule for ‘a Anti-abortion’?
The pro-life movement is inevitably bound to some kind of conservatism, insofar as a anti-abortion ethic is hard to separate from a conservative ethic around sex, monogamy and marriage. [The bolding is mine. —JMN] (Ross Douthat, “The End of Roe … Continue reading →