Home / 2020 / February (page 4)

Monthly Archives: February 2020

An Adulterer, a Gang Member, a Dystopian Teacher: 3 Novels of American Womanhood

HOME MAKINGBy Lee Matalone194 pp. HarperPerennial/HarperCollins. Paper, $15.99. Image “Home making” is a phrase so fraught with political and social overtones that before opening this book I went to Google for a sterile definition: “The creation and management of a home, especially as a pleasant place in which to live.” …

Read More »

Banksy plays with violence and innocence in Valentine’s Day graffiti

A suspected new mural by artist Banksy is pictured in Marsh Lane in Bristol, Britain, February 13, 2020. REUTERS/Rebecca Naden LONDON (Reuters) – British street artist Banksy is thought to have given a Valentine’s Day gift to his home town of Bristol in western England with the appearance of a …

Read More »

Bulgaria adds charges of illegal antique possession against fugitive tycoon

SOFIA (Reuters) – Bulgarian prosecutors have pressed new charges including unlawful possession of antiques of historical value against fugitive gambling tycoon Vasil Bozhkov, one of the country’s richest men, officials said on Thursday. FILE PHOTO: A 2nd century B.C. gold-plated cup is pictured at the “Thrace and the Ancient World” …

Read More »

Luxury flat owners lose case against nosy neighbors at London’s Tate gallery

LONDON (Reuters) – Residents of a luxury London block who were trying to stop visitors to the neighboring Tate Modern art gallery from peering into their glass-walled apartments lost their case in the Court of Appeal on Wednesday. The Viewing Level at the Tate Modern gallery and a block of …

Read More »

David Hockney’s ‘The Splash’ sells for 23 million pounds in London

FILE PHOTO: An employee poses with an auction catalogue as she views ‘The Splash’ by David Hockney on display ahead of the Contemporary Art auction at Sotheby’s in London, Britain, February 7, 2020. REUTERS/Toby Melville LONDON (Reuters) – David Hockney’s Los Angeles pool painting “The Splash” fetched 23.1 million pounds …

Read More »

If Your Brother Committed a Terrorist Act, Would You Forgive Him?

EDEN MINEBy S. M. Hulse A book can be carried by a strong voice, and that’s what we get with Jo Faber. A gifted amateur artist in the town of Prospect, in rural northwestern Montana, the narrator of S. M. Hulse’s second novel, “Eden Mine,” is anchored by her brother, …

Read More »

A Rich, Old-Fashioned Spy Thriller Set in Elizabethan England

[ Read an excerpt from “The King at the Edge of the World.” ] Elizabeth I’s strategy was driven by expediency. Having been excommunicated by Pope Pius V, and out of step with Catholic Europe, she needed allies. In writing to Sultan Murad III, Elizabeth drew parallels between Protestantism and …

Read More »

Zonked on Vicodin in the Corner Office

AS NEEDED FOR PAIN A Memoir of Addiction By Dan Peres SMACKED A Story of White-Collar Ambition, Addiction, and TragedyBy Eilene Zimmerman The addiction memoir may be the most vigorous subgenre spawned by the memoir boom of the 1990s, although the progenitor of the form is Thomas De Quincey’s “Confessions …

Read More »

The Masculine Mystique: A New Kind of Trans Memoir

SOMETHING THAT MAY SHOCK AND DISCREDIT YOU By Daniel Mallory Ortberg At last, we have the work of transgender bathos we didn’t know we needed, but very much do. No, I don’t mean pathos. I mean the term coined by Alexander Pope to signify “the art of sinking in poetry,” …

Read More »

A New Book Asks: Just How Machiavellian Was Machiavelli?

The term “Orwellian” has always struck me as curiously Orwellian — a mild example of doublespeak that ties an author’s good name to the dystopia he so memorably depicted. (See also “Dickensian” and “Kafkaesque.”) Instead of referring to George Orwell’s crisp prose or moral clarity, “Orwellian” is like the doctor’s …

Read More »