I did not know that Neanderthals once lived hereabouts; that farmers first settled here six thousand years ago; that nearby, down on the Campagna, the Gauls defeated the Romans in 390 B.C. before going on to take Rome itself. I knew dimly that the Allied forces had fought the Wehrmacht in these parts in 1944, but not that the day before the Americans took Marcellina, the Germans rounded up all the village men they could find and shot them in reprisal for the killing of two German grenadiers.
essays
Notes from Italy: Getting into the Mountains
by Peter Bridges
January 10th, 2008
Photographs from Havana Deco
by Martino Fagiuoli
December 18th, 2007
A photographic essay: Art Deco in Havana, Cuba.
Daniel Barenboim at La Scala
by Judith Harris
December 11th, 2007
Drama number three was the presence on the podium of Daniel Barenboim, the child prodigy born in 1942 in Argentina to Russian parents, who moved with him to Israel when he was ten. This opera performance, which furthermore inaugurates the newly restored theater, was the first by Barenboim as conductor of the orchestra that had performed under the batons of Arturo Toscanini and, more recently, the flamboyant Riccardo Muti. Although Barenboim has performed Wagner many times elsewhere, La Scala audiences have not seen a Wagnerian opera for three decades, and his making this selection can still raise a few eyebrows.
Murdering Miss Austen
by Julia Braun Kessler
December 6th, 2007
Jane Austen, whose sharp tongue barely left her cheek during her short lifetime, and, whose caustic satire survived the intervening centuries of industrialization, through revolution and war, as well as the whirligig of literary fashions (whose onslaught took down others as great) may finally be deflated or drowned in the crazy waves of idiot’s delights!
A Place for Three Seasons: Crested Butte
by Peter Bridges
December 4th, 2007
Let us be clear on one thing: physically fit people tend to get more out of this place. One can sit and admire the mountains from a bench on Elk Avenue, or from a car out on the summer roads, but to me there is nothing better in life than walking an hour or two up to Scarp Ridge or the long green alp atop Mount Axtell, to sit and see high peaks all around.
Notes From Italy: Some Old Envoys
by Peter Bridges
November 29th, 2007
Counts who stank of garlic–as did the whole country–had sponged on him for seats in his box at the opera. He was meeting diplomats who had “titles as long as a flagstaff, and heads as empty as their hearts.” These were strictly private comments, Daniel told Peticolas, and none of it should get into the papers. All of it did, in Richmond and soon in Turin. Now it was not garlic but what people called “the garlic letter” that caused a stink.
Gentlemen and Players
by Jem Bloomfeld
November 13th, 2007
Yet it is the amateur, the eccentric and the outsider who plays the hero in the whodunnit. Lord Peter, with his silly-ass-about-town front, Holmes, with his Goethe and cocaine bottle and Poirot with his obsessive neatness and ostentatiously Gallic egotism, all seem pretty unlikely champions of order and public safety.
Notes From Italy: The Oversized Embassy
by Peter Bridges
November 6th, 2007
Nor, it seems, do Americans get out of their diplomatic fortress the way they used to. Italians say they do not have the American friends and acquaintances that they used to. What do embassy officers do with their time? Like many professionals in this country, they spend hours in front of computer screens, busy with e-mail. That may be work, but it has little to do with representing the United States.
Crossing Styx
by Jascha Kessler
October 30th, 2007
What happens to children is that they usually pass from believing that everything presented by television is real to a later conviction that “nothing is real.” In other words, the world has become crowded, permeated and possessed by the fictive.
Images from How To Photograph an Atomic Bomb
by Peter Kuran
October 22nd, 2007
Between 1945 and 1962, the United States conducted over 300 atmospheric nuclear tests above the ground, in the ocean or in outer space.
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- An Interview With Fred Pearce: Paul Draper notes: Yes, referneces would be greatly appreciated. Mr. Pearce did not “just know” that 4.1 billion acre-feet… By the way DAW, Fred...
- Images from How To Photograph an Atomic Bomb: notterererer notes: I think war is poo. They should be nice to us. But since they aren’t about to start being nice to us, we are, sadly, forced...
- Images from How To Photograph an Atomic Bomb: Pete notes: Amazing pics! Does anyone have an idea when another test is being done. Hopefully never.
- Collapse: How Nations Choose to Fail or Succeed by Jared Diamond: Sam Ogbonna notes: Virtually the entire non-Western world is a genocidal time bomb.
- Images from How To Photograph an Atomic Bomb: Simon notes: I believe the photos are absolutely stunning! Perhaps it would be wise to not introduce politics into a photgraphy site?
- Christine MacDonald on the Corruption of the Environmental Movement: Jim West notes: Courageous, yes, Christine. Audubon Society has major polluters on its board of directors. Rachel’s...
- Images from How To Photograph an Atomic Bomb: Baskin & Cabins notes: Yeah, there definitely is a strange beauty to nuclear test photos. Obviously every one is aware of them and what they are...
- An Interview With James Hollis: Jean Joseph notes: For me, “The Middle Passage” has become like a Bible on my night table. I read from it when I need encouragement and am fighting...
- Images from How To Photograph an Atomic Bomb: jez notes: @andrew reed: i think you’re getting a bit hysterical about - and missing the point of - this series of photographs. “the...
- Photo Essay: North Korean Propaganda Posters: Chris bennett notes: what the heck is wrong with north korea why do they hate america i tell you why because we have the freedom and the power to do...
- Christine MacDonald on the Corruption of the Environmental Movement: Rini Sucahyo notes: I am currently the External Relations Coordinator for Conservation International - Indonesia. I don’t...
- T.H.U.G. L.I.F.E. by Sanyika Shakur : Shakier Dohou notes: Whoever wrote the article dissing the book is just a hater. We know the book is ficition with much truth injected in it. Such as the...
- Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid by Jimmy Carter: Yehuda Draiman notes: NO PALESTINIAN STATE – No land concessions R4. Imagine that the various people who settled in the United States for the past...
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- Christine MacDonald on the Corruption of the Environmental Movement: Magne Karlsen notes: I don’t know what you’ll make of my comment here. It’s just something I wrote about the...
