From some forgotten archives, circa 1969. First, a classic VW, location unknown, probably somewhere in Los Angeles or Long Beach. Then a view of Los Angeles from the hills, perhaps anticipating climate change:
Day: August 11, 2018
The Taste of Flesh
Just wanted to alert readers that brother Dennis has just released a new book of poetry. Here’s a link to BookShout for more info. (Is this nepotistic?)
And to quote BookShout:
These poems by award-winning author Dennis Hathaway are meditations on life and death through a variety of perspectives. In the title poem, a man reading about shipwrecked sailors driven to cannabilism is led to reflect on a particularly intense time of his youth. In The Promised Land, the boundless optimism of youth is captured in the observations of a young man escaping the Midwest for California, while Southern California (Revised) paints a disturbing picture of that iconic place’s future. In Documents of War and The Harrying of the North, official documents and a famous tapestry are used to illustrate the distance most of us maintain from the grim realities of war. The spectacles of natural worlds both large and small are lyrically evoked in River of Wind and Fauna, while the abiding love between a man and his wife is the subject of The Path, The Philosophy of Love and several other poems that combine sharp observation of the everyday details of life with flights of imagination. But despite the seriousness of subject matter, many of the 25 poems in this collection have an ample seasoning of humor, from the overt in Money and Queen of Spades” to the more subtle in Memory and Santa Inez.
rDay Twelve-Hundred-Thirty-Four
For Jamesa and a handful of other VW aficionados in my orbit …
Then we walk home down South Second Avenue, again in the suffocating heat.
Are Humans A Post-Truth Species?
About a year ago, I reported on my readings of work by Yuval Noah Harari (thanks to a SIL C.S. recommend). His Sapiens dealt with the past, his Homo Deus with the future, and a new book, 21 Lessons for the 21st Century, takes on the present. Here you can find excerpts as published this week by The Guardian.