Road Scholarship: Literary Travel in the Age of Coronavirus
By Jeffrey Herlihy-Mera Perhaps home is not a place but an irrevocable condition. -James Baldwin, Giovanni’s Room. Twenty-one years ago, I moved from Massachusetts to…
By Jeffrey Herlihy-Mera Perhaps home is not a place but an irrevocable condition. -James Baldwin, Giovanni’s Room. Twenty-one years ago, I moved from Massachusetts to…
By James Michael Dorsey It was 1973 when I unexpectedly landed a job as a letter carrier in the idyllic seaside community of Pacific Palisades,…
By Stephen Margrett With an appreciative nod to Wilkie Collins and others who blazed the trail, it really started with Sherlock Holmes. In his first…
By Suzanne Adam The death of Gabriel García Márquez prompted me to reread his Nobel-winning One Hundred Years of Solitude,“Cien Años de Soledad” in Spanish—the…
By Jaclyn Tilks We all know in our hearts that if we are at home social distancing, we are the lucky ones. If we aren’t…
By Hannah White As a dedicated movie-goer, one thing I have really been missing since March is that excited feeling you get when you walk…
Cross Creek belongs to the wind and the rain, to the sun and the seasons, to the cosmic secrecy of seed, and beyond all, to…
By Hannah White Bookstores and libraries are places often associated with solitude. And while it’s true that not much is better than curling up in…
By Adam Freedman Now that virtually every inch of the planet has been charted and tamed, some part of our collective psyche has become bored.…
by Sushama Austin Nella Larsen was a Harlem Renaissance novelist, a triumph in a day and age that neither supported her gender nor humanized her…
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