Boston Review Books are accessible, short books that take ideas seriously. They are animated by hope, committed to equality, and elude political categories. Full Article at Boston Review
Boston Review Books are accessible, short books that take ideas seriously. They are animated by hope, committed to equality, and elude political categories. Full Article at Boston Review
COUNTY JAIL DOCKET (The following people were booked into the Volusia County Branch Jail on felony charges yet to be proven in court.): Krystyn Kelly Prewitt, 20, Deltona, violation of probation; Colleen Frances Clarke, 26, Daytona Beach, violation of... Full Article at Daytona Beach News-Journal
. . . an old half-witted sheep, Which bleats articulate monotony, And indicates that two and one are three, That grass is green, lakes damp, and mountains steep: And, Wordsworth, b... Full Article at Huffington Post
by Catherine Prendergast A review by Ange Mlinko courses entitled "English for Mechanical Engineers" and "English for Au Pairs" took their place next to generic business English courses, promising a quick path to the jobs as auto engineers and... Full Article at Powell's Books
There is something tiresome about Senator Sanders and his ceaseless lectures. They are, finally, boring. They lack wit and they do not bother to make even the most elementary distinctions. Full Article at Vermont Tiger
This weekend I realized how much my reading habits have come to resemble my Internet-surfing. I skip from book to book, dipping in, skimming and grazing, as if each book were an article I was reading online. Full Article at ArtsJournal
In a trick of reverse alchemy, Dave Eggers’s latest novel transmutes pure gold into base metal. Full Article at Times Online
IF THE OPPOSITE of love is indifference, the opposite of friendship is betrayal. Full Article at Irish Times
By Josiah Bunting IIISixteen million young men served in the U.S. armed forces between 1941 and 1945, many millions of them volunteers who had no intention of "staying in" after World War II was over. Full Article at Wall Street Journal