Hagar’s feelings of pain and abandonment are uppermost in my mind at the moment upon learning that a friend is dying. This captures our own feelings of abandonm
Monthly Archives: June 2026
A Spirited Defense of Difficult Reading
Naomi Kanakia’s recent book, “What So Great about Great Books,” makes a compelling case for reading the classics. To which I can only say, Amen!
What to Make of the Resurgence of Macho
With Pete Hegseth’s over-the-top exhibition of macho, I look at the history of literary cuckold jokes, which reveal the anxieties of insecure men.
DJT’s Victory Claim vs. Reality
Robert Southey’s “After Blenheim” perfectly captures Trump’s claim of victory over Iran.
Man in High Castle Captures Life under DJT
Dick’s “Man in a High Castle” shows how easily Americans can adjust to autocracy—which makes it particularly relevant today.
Made Whole by Their Hospitality
As Malcolm Guite makes clear, the story of Abraham and Sarah entertaining strangers is the call for us all to do the same. Thus are the barren made fertile.
How Sports Spurred My Literary Imagination
In which I examine my longtime relationship with sports, along with some of its literary associations.
Biopunk: Essential Sci Fi If We Are To Survive
In her dissertation, Majda Nizamič makes a compelling case that biopunk is one of the most important genres being written today.

