Category Archives: LITERATURE

LITERATURE: Confessions – Belief

Augustine tells us of the reasoning for when he (and as he suggests, others) come to dwell on the Bible and the word of God, as opposed to avoidance even when a basis for belief is acknowledged. I therefore decided … Continue reading Continue reading

Posted in LITERATURE | Tagged | 2 Comments

LITERATURE: The Master and Margarita – Humorous Irony

So far Bulgakov has killed off one of the main characters, but added two more; a weird little man and a large black cat. Mikhail Alexandrovich Berlioz has been beheaded by a train, and the poet has realized that something … Continue reading Continue reading

Posted in LITERATURE | Tagged | Comments Off on LITERATURE: The Master and Margarita – Humorous Irony

LITERATURE & REALITY?: Les Miserables and Workshops

This is just too funny: You’re Les Miserables!by Victor HugoOne of the best known people in your community, you have become something of a phenomenon. People have sung about you, danced in your honor, created all manner of art in … Continue reading Continue reading

Posted in LITERATURE, REALITY | 2 Comments

LITERATURE: The Master and Margarita – Cheat Sheet

I’ve struggled through many a book refusing to seek out reviews and opinions of others.  Looking at this as both influence and plagiarizing of ideas, I feel that it’s always best to go it first alone and then look at … Continue reading Continue reading

Posted in LITERATURE | Tagged | Comments Off on LITERATURE: The Master and Margarita – Cheat Sheet

LITERATURE: Confessions – Again, the more things change…

Laughed aloud at this one: My studies which were deemed respectable had the objective of leading me to distinction as an advocate in the lawcourts, where one’s reputation is high in proportion to one’s success in deceiving people.  The blindness … Continue reading Continue reading

Posted in LITERATURE | Tagged | Comments Off on LITERATURE: Confessions – Again, the more things change…

LITERATURE: The Master and Margarita – Chapter 2

Chapter 1 leads into Chapter 2 as the strange foreigner, a Professor who claims to be in Moscow to decipher text of black magic, starts the tale of Jesus and Pontius Pilate, which is where the Chapter begins. Names changed … Continue reading Continue reading

Posted in LITERATURE | Tagged | Comments Off on LITERATURE: The Master and Margarita – Chapter 2

LITERATURE: A Work and Its Critique

I’ve forgotten and haven’t found through backtracking where I got this link to the Museum of Bad Art, located in a basement of a theater in Dedham, Massachusetts, but with the similaries and the differences in the fields of art … Continue reading

Posted in LITERATURE | Comments Off on LITERATURE: A Work and Its Critique

LITERATURE: Confessions – The More Things Change…

…the more they stay the same.  Barbara commented on the fact that some of what Augustine is writing about in his recollections of youth, such as peer pressure, exist as problems today.  Here, in the beginning of Book III, I … Continue reading Continue reading

Posted in LITERATURE | Tagged | 2 Comments

LITERATURE:The Master and Margarita – Typical Russian Novel Opening

Yep, it brought me back many years to The Brothers Karamazov where everyone has at least a triple-name — Mikhail Alexandrovich Berlioz, and Ivan Nikolayevich Ponyryov (who writes under the pen name Bezdomny) are the two characters we meet by … Continue reading Continue reading

Posted in LITERATURE | Tagged | 2 Comments

LITERATURE: Confessions – Book II

Augustine acknowledges his sins of youth, his excesses and preoccupation with lustful sex.  He also admits to the stealing of fruit, pears that he neither needed or wanted but along with a group of friends, stole for the pure reason … Continue reading Continue reading

Posted in LITERATURE | Tagged | 2 Comments

LITERATURE: Confrontation No. 88/89 – Poetry

I did read through all the poetry in this issue, and perhaps because of recent discussion with a friend, this one stands out: Dichter by Peter Krok (p. 253) You who have not a claim Only the clamoring of a … Continue reading Continue reading

Posted in LITERATURE | Tagged | Comments Off on LITERATURE: Confrontation No. 88/89 – Poetry

LITERATURE: Next Up: The Master and Margarita

While I still haven’t gone through the poetry (I admittedly skim) of Confrontation, I found myself really anxious to start in on this one, having held it as a treat to look forward to reading. So I may not start … Continue reading

Posted in LITERATURE | Tagged | Comments Off on LITERATURE: Next Up: The Master and Margarita

LITERATURE: Confrontation No. 88/89 – The End of Fishing

This winner of the 2004 Sarah Tucker Fiction Award is well-written by Nan Frydland as to storyline, structure, plot and voice.  Some of the imagery is exceptional: Mornings I listen to the birds for a while from bed, listen to … Continue reading Continue reading

Posted in LITERATURE | Tagged | 1 Comment

LITERATURE: Confrontation No. 88/89 – The Getaway; The Acorn War

The Getaway by Martha Whitmore Hickman has a wonderful storyline, that of a woman raising a family in a small town in New Hampshire in the early part of the 20th century.  Rachel is different from most folks of her … Continue reading Continue reading

Posted in LITERATURE | Tagged | Comments Off on LITERATURE: Confrontation No. 88/89 – The Getaway; The Acorn War

LITERATURE: Confrontation No. 88/89 – Proofreading

While completely understanding deadlines, typesetting, etc., all the pressures of running a magazine, I still find it hard to accept that in a journal of this caliber I’ve already found nine typos. The worst part? Most of them appear to … Continue reading Continue reading

Posted in LITERATURE | Tagged | Comments Off on LITERATURE: Confrontation No. 88/89 – Proofreading