Remember writing your first college term paper? Depending on when you were in school, you browsed the library shelves or Googled the Internet. Your title was something profound, like “Avian Images in Poe’s The Raven,” and, to your surprise, you were not the first to think of such a theme. In fact, after dutifully scribbling […]
Corrine Frisch
Home for the holidays
Most of us have at least one book lover on our holiday shopping lists. This year, get creative and think beyond bestsellers. The following titles were chosen because of their local ties — the ties that bind us to home, the place everyone wants to be for the holidays. Native Trees for North American Landscapes: […]
Winged messenger: Going postal with Terry Pratchett
Please allow me to introduce Mr. Moist von Lipwig, hero of Going Postal, Terry Pratchett’s latest novel in his Discworld series. But before we go any further, a confession: I am a Pratchett latecomer. More people read him than voted for George W. Bush (this may be a stretch, but it’s my review). More than […]
The first George W.
First initial, last name. More than six feet tall. In his early 20s he made a name for himself in battle, but accounts of his heroism would later be questioned. Well-born, he nevertheless increased his fortune mightily by marrying an extremely wealthy widow. If we were doing a crossword puzzle, you might be counting on […]
Unwrapping herself and finding the heart within
The last poem in Springfield poet Siobhan Pitchford’s new book, Through the Longing Daze, employs a pun in its title: “At Daze End.” The poems preceding it are much concerned with the comings and goings of her days; the maze she carves out of them is one worth walking through. In fact, the poet seems […]
An eye for detail brings old Decatur to life
One hundred years ago, you could get more than a drink of water on Decatur’s Water Street. As Dan Guillory notes in Decatur, a photographic history of Springfield’s neighbor to the east, the thoroughfare afforded rye whiskey for the thirsty, new soles for those who were down at the heels, and a little extra cash […]
Before and after the fall
“Consider Icarus, pasting those sticky wings on, testing that strange little tug at his shoulder blade, and think of that first flawless moment over the lawn of the labyrinth. Think of the difference it made!” — Anne Sexton, To a Friend Whose Work Has Come to Triumph How much did Howard Dean’s supporters love him? […]
Rally round the books, boys
“‘Arbolist’ … Look up the word. I don’t know, maybe I made it up. Anyway, it’s an arbo-tree-ist, somebody who knows about trees.” — President George W. Bush, USA Today, Aug. 21, 2001 Little did George W. Bush realize, when talking to reporters in defense of his initiative to allow logging in national forests, that […]
Paging Elvis and other rock & roll fantasies
Did King James I commission Shakespeare to translate the Psalms for the now-famous version of the Bible? A case is made for that transaction in R. Gary Patterson’s new book about rock & roll. If you’re wondering what Shakespeare has to do with rock & roll — or, for that matter, where Faust, Shelley, Hawthorne, […]
The politics of war
Political potboilers have always scored high on summer-reading lists, and Bush’s War for Reelection: Iraq, the White House, and the People seems to qualify. Written by investigative reporter James Moore, the book seems to possess the ingredients necessary for inclusion in the genre. The difference, of course, is that this study of the White House […]
Summer books
Looking for a good book to tote to the beach this summer or to pack as part of your picnic? Staff members at Lincoln Library, Springfield’s public library, were happy to share their suggestions. The Bridge by Solomon Jones (St. Martin’s Minotaur, hardcover, 320 pages, 2003) This dark, realistic mystery, set in the housing projects […]
On the road with Stein and on the Web
Poet laureate Kevin Stein is giving Illinois its words’ worth. When appointed to the four-year post three months ago, Stein promised to give four public readings per year. His appearance last week at the University of Illinois at Springfield was his 16th. Stein’s self-deprecating banter with the audience set the stage for his accomplishing one […]
