Thursday, May 11, 2017
New York's Angels and Gargoyles
A recent article in the New York Times covers an obscure but fascinating element of the city's history, one that my family has been closely involved with, as the story elucidates. Those ancient, stony faces looking down on the city in judgment were, without a doubt, rumbling in my subconscious as I imagined the tone of the future New York for Those That Wake and What We Become. Give the story a read right here.
Labels:
Art,
Articles,
Culture,
Those That Wake,
What We Become
Thursday, April 27, 2017
Checking In
While it probably doesn't pay to become obsessed by it, it's nice to
check back in with the Internet every once in a while on the subject of
books you've written. This last time around, I found two interesting
sites relating to Those That Wake. The first, All the Tropes, is similar to another site I posted about a while back, in that it applies classic themes and concepts of storytelling to the book and offers the connections in a list that captures ideas about Those That Wake in a fun and interesting way. The other one, Prezi, is a website on presentations that offers a review of Those That Wake in the form of an unusual and kind of spooky slideshow. Monday, March 20, 2017
NSA Today
For their honors project, four students at LREI produced two interlocking webcomics. One puts into comic form excerpts from actual National Security Agency documents, the other tells a story based on those excerpts. Both feature sharp scripts and striking art, all supported by a polished and professional looking website (completely coded by one of the students). Hopefully, the project will continue as an independent endeavor, but you can see the beginning of it at nsa-today.com. Congratulations to Erika, Harry, Luke and Nicole on a superlative job.
Thursday, February 9, 2017
March
A slightly belated congratulations to March: Book Three, the final book in Senator John Lewis's autobiographical March trilogy. In addition to the Coretta Scott King Award, March: Book Three also won the Printz Award, continuing the graphic novel format's strong history with this award (last year, This One Summer by Mariko and Jillian Tamaki took a Printz Honor and American Born Chinese by Gene Yang won the award in 2007).
This is on the heels of being the first graphic novel to win the National Book Award. It maybe worth thinking about why a book with this particular political outlook should be accruing so much acclaim during this period of the country's political life.
This is on the heels of being the first graphic novel to win the National Book Award. It maybe worth thinking about why a book with this particular political outlook should be accruing so much acclaim during this period of the country's political life.
Friday, January 20, 2017
Why and How
Along the road that led to this Inauguration Day, 2017, I recently reread two books that feel so impossibly relevant to current politics, it's difficult to believe they were both written more than a half a century ago: William Golding's Lord of the Flies and George Orwell's other fictional dystopian rumination, Animal Farm.
Whether today feels like a celebration to you or a tragedy, I recommend both of these books as a way to understand more deeply why and how this country has arrived where it is.
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