Poetry Fix: W.H. Auden

I teach this poem every spring. I love how clearly Auden sees the loneliness that’s inherent in human suffering: so much of the world’s pain takes place “in a corner, some untidy spot,” while the rest of humanity is too busy to take notice. “Musée des Beaux Arts” About suffering they were never wrong, The […]

Steampunk

This week, Tachyon Publications released Ann and Jeff VanderMeer’s great new anthology of all things steampunk, which has a wealth of Victorian gadgets and devices, as well as fine stories by Jay Lake, Paul Filippo, and Ian R. MacLeod. The editors’ introductions are relatively concise, obviously meant to be descriptive rather than scholarly. For the […]

Poetry Fix: Yehuda Amichai

This is the opening stanza of “Try to Remember Some Details.” I love the way Amichai gives great meaning to ordinary things. Try to remember some details. Remember the clothing of the one you love so that on the day of loss you’ll be able to say: last seen wearing such-and-such, brown jacket, white hat. […]

Moomin: The Complete Tove Jansson Comic Strip

Uplifting and yet tinged with a faint melancholy, Tove Jansson’s lovely comic books about the free-spirited Moomintrolls make me very happy. Drawn and Quarterly (D & Q) released The Complete Tove Jansson Comic Strip in gorgeous oversized hardcovers last fall, and reading them is sheer delight. There are times when you really need Jansson’s family […]

Poetry Fix: Linda Gregg

Loss is balanced with possibility in this elegiac poem by Linda Gregg. Adult I’ve come back to the country where I was happy changed. Passion puts no terrible strain on me now. I wonder what will take the place of desire. I could be the ghost of my old life returning to the places I […]

The Rabbi’s Cat 2

At last I have the sequel to Joann Sfar’s graphic novel, The Rabbi’s Cat. In his sequel, Sfar once again places his readers and his talking cat in the heart of the Jewish community in 1930’s Algeria. The cast of characters includes the rabbi, his footloose and mystical cousin Malka of the Lions, a suspected […]

Minnesota Bluegrass

Named for the late bluegrass legend Bill Monroe, the Minnesota-based quintet Monroe Crossing performs some of the most joyful music I’ve ever heard. They played two vibrant sets this evening, combining woeful lyrics with a banjo sound so bouncy, I couldn’t stop smiling. I will confess right now that several songs about heartbreak, abandonment, loneliness, […]