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Monthly Archives: March 2016
Brideshead Revisited
Brideshead Revisited: The Secular and Profane Memories of Captain Charles Ryder© 1945 Evelyn Waugh350 pages My theme is memory, that winged host that soared about me one grey morning of war-time. These memories, which are my life–for we possess nothing … Continue reading
Posted in Reviews
Tagged "classic", 1920s, Catholicism, Classics and Literary, Classics Club Challenge, English Literature, Evelyn Waugh
7 Comments
When Gourmands Write Fiction
I rejoiced in the Burgundy. How can I describe it? The Pathetic Fallacy resounds in all our praise of wine. For centuries every language has been strained to define its beauty, and has produced only wild conceits or the stock … Continue reading
The First Congress
The First Congress: How James Madison, George Washington, and a Group of Extraordinary Men Invented the Government© 2016 Fergus Bordewich416 pages The first attempt at creating an American confederation resulted in a chronically bankrupt and impotent organization which no one … Continue reading
Posted in history, Politics and Civic Interest, Reviews
Tagged Early American Republic, history, law, politics, Politics-CivicInterest, US Constitution
1 Comment
The Scotch-Irish
The Scotch-Irish: A Social History© 1989 James Leyburn397 pages Though they have long ceased to be a distinct ethnic group outside of Appalachia, for years the greatest non-English minority in the United States were the Scotch-Irish. … Continue reading
Posted in history, Reviews
Tagged America, American Frontier, Britain, Colonial America, history, Ireland, religion, social history
2 Comments
The Road to Little Dribbling
The Road to Little Dribbling: Adventures of an American in Britain© 2015 Bill Bryson380 pages “When people asked me where I was bound, I could gaze toward the northern horizon with a set expression and say ‘Cape Wrath, God willing’. … Continue reading
Return to Bag End
On March 25th, by the reckoning of the Shire, the Ring of Power was cast into the Cracks of Doom and the vicious horde facing the Men of the West melted away. I would it would be appropriate, therefore, to … Continue reading
The Lincoln Lawyer
The Lincoln Lawyer© 2005 Michael Connelly404 pages Mickey Haller is a lawyer on the move, a criminal defender whose clients are so numerous and widespread that he conducts business from the backseat of his Lincoln Towncar. For him, the law … Continue reading
Posted in Reviews
Tagged law, Los Angeles, Michael Connelly, Mickey Haller series, thriller
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And now, the News
There seem to be very few reasons not to despair of the human race. If asked why it has decided to tell us all this, and is driving us more than a little made as a result, the news will … Continue reading
Pilgrim’s Progress
Pilgrim’s Progress in Today’s English © 1678 John Bunyan, retold 1971 James Thomas 285 pages Years ago I read Pilgrim’s Progress, the story of one Christian’s spiritual journey made physical. The story begins when a man named Graceless, soon to be … Continue reading
Posted in Reviews
Tagged "classic", Christian literature, Christianity, Classics and Literary, Classics Club Challenge, fantasy
1 Comment
Words worth Reading
From A Literary History of Ireland: “Of all the tribes of the Celts, and indeed of all their neighbours in the west of Europe, the children of Milesius have been at once blessed and cursed beyond their fellows, for on … Continue reading