Harp
I'll Lock Up
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^^^Atonement made its way to film; and, like Moneyball, I haven't seen it.
Just finished Hamnet by Maggie O'Farrell. An interesting look back at the early days and life of Will Shakespeare, Agnes* (Anne) Hathaway, and family, loosely centred around the circumstances of the death of the son, Hamnet.
*Known to history as Anne, she was named Agnes in her father's will, so the author goes with that.
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As an Atlantic subscriber for over thirty years I've always been more inclined to describe them as a rather squishily centrist publication. Anybody who gives page space to to the egregious Christina Hoff Summers is a long way from lefty for my money. (But then again I'm also a proud "Jacobin" subscriber.)
"Jacobin" tends to be a bit right-revisionist sometimes, but I guess it'll have to do till "New Masses" comes back. (Several copies of the latter from 1936-37 on my coffee table even as we speak, with a hard-hitting analysis of the Spanish situation.)
"(Several copies of the latter from 1936-37 on my coffee table even as we speak, with a hard-hitting analysis of the Spanish situation.)
I have. Professional anti-Communist, much like Louis Budenz, but somewhat less obnoxious about it. It's an interesting book to read in conjunction with John Gates' "The Life of An American Communist."
But I'll grant that Mr. Chambers was, aside from politics, a very fine literary critic, whose reviews I often find that I agree with.