Notes from first night at DNC

I have covered Republican and Democratic national conventions from New York to Kansas City, but I’ve never seen a first night as electric as that which I viewed on television last evening.  I did not take notes, so the following are the impressions that “have legs.”   Especially moving were the personal accounts of men …

Continue reading Notes from first night at DNC

Getting to first for a brave female sports writer

Locker Room Talk: One Woman’s Struggle to Get Inside by Melissa Ludtke is a sports writer’s impressive account of her 1978 lawsuit against Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn, who had banned female reporters from interviewing baseball players in the locker room before and after major league games. An art history major in college, athletic Ludtke was …

Continue reading Getting to first for a brave female sports writer

Did Red Sox go too easy on Duran?

I thought the Boston Red Sox were well past their sordid corporate history of bigotry and ugly fans' and players' misbehavior. New ownership since 2002 has largely been a breath of fresh air. Gone are the overt racist ways of owner Tom Yawkey, who notably turned down opportunities to hire Jackie Robinson, Willie Mays and …

Continue reading Did Red Sox go too easy on Duran?

Kamala Harris scores with VP pick

I was happier than I thought I'd be yesterday morning when Kamala Harris announced her selection of Tim Walz as her running mate. That quiet sense of elation rose to celebration last evening with their first joint appearance at an exuberant rally in Philadelphia. Several weeks of compare and contrast, sorting out the pros and …

Continue reading Kamala Harris scores with VP pick

Still more summer fiction

The Paris Novel by Ruth Reichl is a confection, set in the 1980’s in Paris.  Stella, a 20-something copy editor in New York, leads a highly routinized life, the regularity of which is comforting to her.  She is estranged from her mother, Celia, who has never expressed love of her. Nor has Celia ever told …

Continue reading Still more summer fiction

Fanatics and vigilantes: two books with red flags

American Mother by Collum McCann is an as-told-to account by Diane Foley of the 2014 death of her son, freelance American journalist James W. Foley. McCann, the author of Apeirogon and Let the Great World Spin, is a master storyteller, tells the first and last chapters of this riveting book in the third person, but …

Continue reading Fanatics and vigilantes: two books with red flags

Biden stands tall in standing down

Our phone has been ringing off the hook; our electronic mailboxes flooded. Friends, even staunch supporters of Joe Biden, have come to accept the idea that he is not well enough to serve another term. Worse, that he didn't have the stamina even to win a second term. The stakes could not be higher. Now, …

Continue reading Biden stands tall in standing down

Should the Democrats give up? Absolutely not!

Four days in the halcyon setting of the Tanglewood Music Center in Lenox were not enough to insulate us from the political sturm und drang that erupted this past weekend. I joined others in shock and horror at the shooting of Donald Trump, saddened that the violence following upon incendiary political rhetoric may have contributed …

Continue reading Should the Democrats give up? Absolutely not!

Two Creative Approaches to Fiction Writing

James by Percival Everett tells the story of Huckleberry Finn’s escape from his drunken abusive father with slave Jim in pre-Civil War Missouri. As a child, I read Huckleberry Finn as a simple adventure tale; as a college student, I came to understand it as telling account of mid- 19th century American life and culture. …

Continue reading Two Creative Approaches to Fiction Writing

Remind me, why did we fight our Revolution?

Remember when we scoffed at  Richard Nixon telling David Frost that the President couldn’t be prosecuted for Watergate because “when the President does it, that means it’s not illegal.”  We thought that our Constitution established “a government of laws, and not of men”  and that no person, even the President of United States, was above …

Continue reading Remind me, why did we fight our Revolution?