
Deep Down Things
Nicodemus, Doug Weaver
Pentecost 2012 issue.
Friday Links
with Micah Mattix on books to navigate the swells of verse; Steven Knepper on Les Murray; Elijah Blumov hosts George David Clark, Ryan Wilson, and Matthew Buckley Smith; Joshua Hren on The genius of James Joyce; The odd couple: Evelyn Waugh and Graham Greene; ESU Formal Verse Contest
Friday Links
Annual Summer Literary Series at UST; Rhonda Ortiz interviews Fiorella De Maria; Endangered Mexican Salamander Being Captive Bred By Nuns; Matthew Milliner interviews Amanda Iglesias; Tom Hiddleston Recites “When You Are Old” by W. B. Yeats
Friday Links
Friday Links
with Eric Cyr; Christian Wiman at The Trinity Forum; The Jeweler’s Shop presented by ArtHouse2B; Valuing the Craft of Beautiful Homemaking; Sarah Spivey wins the Frost Farm Prize; B. D. McClay on Persuasion
Friday Links
Friday Links
with A. M. Juster reviews Peter Vertacnik’s new book; Fr. Damian Ference on Wildcat; Cynthia Haven on Rembrandt; In Loving Memory of Kaye Park Hinckley; Kristin Prugh’s Dairy of a Thinking Mother; Wiseblood Books: Open Submission period for fiction
Friday Links
Dorian Speed reviews Wildcat; The smell of old books; Mike Mastromatteo on James Matthew Wilson’s Saint Thomas and the Forbidden Birds ; Michael Ford on Gerard Garrigan; Jennifer Newsome Martin on The Monster and the Monstrance
Friday Links
with A. M. Juster; Benjamin P. Myers on B. H. Fairchild’s An Ordinary Life; Johann Christoph Arnold on forgiveness; Mark Hemingway on Ryan Adams; D. C. Schindler on Retrieving Freedom; Collegium Seminar on Flannery O’Connor’s Why Do the Heathens Rage?
Friday Links
with the Poor Clares of Arundal; Poems Ancient and Modern on South Dakota public radio; Mark Bauerlein on the Carthusians of Vermont; Seth Wieck on how books find us; LuElla D’Amico reviews Fragile Objects by Katy Carl
Friday Links
with David Mason reviews two new books on Lord Byron; Kat Rosenfeld on reading; Joshua Hren on Eugene Vodolazkin; Well Read Mom: Changing women’s lives through great books; Valerie reviews Bitter Water Opera by Nicolette Polek, Cyril O’Regan on BXVI
Friday Links
Pray the Regina Caeli during Eastertide; Cyril O’Regan in Church Life Journal; Mary Oliver; Eve Tushnet on Mariette in Ecstasy; Conor Sweetman on how The Church Loses When Our Arts Communities Die
Friday Links
with Byun-Chul Han; Melina Moe on Toni Morrison’s Rejection Letters; William Tate reviews Jane Greer’s poetry; Carina Hodder in The Lamp
Friday Links
Friday Links
Ivana Greco reviews Tim Carney’s new book; Patrick Tomassi on Brideshead Revisited During Lent; After Lord Byron: Poetic advice for the modern poet; R. J. Snell on Thomism at 750; Steven Greydanus on ‘Dune: Part Two’
Friday Links
with a St. Patrick’s Day poem from Poems Ancient and Modern; a Mary Lou Williams Lecture and Gala Performance at the Hank Center; Sally Thomas on Jessica Wooten Wilson’s, Why Do the Heathen Rage?; James Matthew Wilson on the “somewhat exaggerated death of poetry”; & David Schaengold on ugly, poorly built buildings
Friday Links
The New Criterion: The Critic’s Notebook, An Exquisite Charity by Denise Trull, Josey Parker on Cicero, Stone, Clay & Wood from Ewan Craig, Art & Truth: Exploring the Responsibility of the Artist
Friday Links
Tara Isabella Burton: On Good Parties, Dan Hitchens on Samuel Johnson Among the Modernists, The Sacred and Profane Love Podcast is back with Patrick Deneen on DeLillo’s White Noise, Anecdotal Evidence on Henri Coulette, Poetica: “Dear March - Come in” by Emily Dickinson
Friday Links
The Tin Can Residency, Frank Guan On Don DeLillo, Art as Obedience by Madison Morris, Lenten Realism from Glenn Arber, Adam Fleming Petty on Ben Lerner
Friday Links
with Ian McGilchrist in First Things, Catholics Need Poetry, Luke Coppen & Bishop Varden, Nayeli Riano on T.S. Eliot, Ryan Wilson & Catholic Literary Arts, & Raffaella: A New Fairytale Ballet
Friday Links
Poems Ancient and Modern , Risking Enchantment talks about Poetic Vision: The Catholic Case for Everyday Poetry, Trinitarian Genealogies: Father, Son, and the Spirit of Modernity, The Roots of Knowing: A Dive into Nobel Laureate Jon Fosse's Novellas, Hunger by Narine Abgaryan