The Shakespeare Requirement: A Review
If you love the life of the mind and not the modern university, this novel is for you.
Catholicism, (homo)eros, and everthing else
If you love the life of the mind and not the modern university, this novel is for you.
“The poetry scene isn’t a cemetery; it’s a crowded, noisy maternity ward.”
Kiese centers his narrative on bodies: black bodies, heavy bodies, the body of his mother, and the body of her son.
One thing I learned from Chee: no honest writer can simply write “what happened.” Especially diving into his later essays,Continue Reading
Nicole Chung’s All You Can Ever Know is perhaps the most understated memoir I’ve read thus far. But that doesn’tContinue Reading
The book is significant. But its significance comes not in what’s said, but who’s saying it.
This chapter summary is part of my reading summaries series. Click here for more information on the series. Click hereContinue Reading
This chapter summary is part of my reading summaries series. Click here for more information on the series. “Dependent RationalContinue Reading
This chapter summary is part of my reading summaries series. Click here for more information on the series. Click hereContinue Reading
This chapter summary is part of my reading summaries series. Click here for more information on the series. Click hereContinue Reading