We’ve
been watching via Netflix the mini-series Band of Brothers, which
originally aired on HBO in 2001. The quality is what you’d expect from the
executive production of Tom Hanks and
Steven Spielberg and the late historian Stephen Ambrose. Watching a series like
this raises a contemporary question: Did you notice all of the U.S. observances
for the 70th anniversary of the end of the end of World War II?
Except for the recreation of the famous kiss in Times Square, I didn’t either,
although I did see a number of stories about the atomic bomb and Hiroshima.
Britain,
however, was another matter, and even St. Paul’s Cathedral honored an American
who died in the Battle of Britain (see below). Queen Elizabeth led the
observance at St. Martin-in-the-Fields Church in London.
Why
do we turn a blind eye to a war that, like the Civil War did in the 19th
century, defined America in its own century?
Speaking
of turning a blind eye, welcome to 21st century America. The seventh
Planned Parenthood video was released by the Center for Medical Progress. While
the expected chorus of “deceptive video,” “agenda-driven extremists,” and “we
have broken no laws” continues, and as the outraged business that buys fetal
parts from Planned Parenthood (“pays for transportation costs”) sues to stop
the videos' release, we have this new horror, so awful I can’t even find words
to describe it. The Gospel Coalition continues to post each video as it’s
released.
Yet even with this atrocity, there is still great beauty happening all around us. And I have to keep reminding myself of that.
Yet even with this atrocity, there is still great beauty happening all around us. And I have to keep reminding myself of that.
For
map lovers: A curator of maps at the Los Angeles County Library was called to
home one day, and asked if the library would be interested in a collection of
maps. Expecting to find a box or two, the curator found an entire house filled
with maps. And the Los Angeles Review of Books filmed the result (Hat tip: American Digest; the full video
is below).
Lots
of good poetry this week. And articles on writing (as Marilyn Gardner says in
the link noted below, it’s not just the story you tell – but how you tell it.)
Poetry
Broken – Loren
Paulsson at World Narratives.
Poetry as
Enchantment
– Dana Gioia at The Dark Horse (Hat tip: Ann Kroeker).
Haiku (after
Hiroshima)
– Maureen Doallas at Writing Without Paper.
Beggar – Chris Yokel.
Izaak Walton – D.S. Martin
at Kingdom Poets.
What I Would Do
Again
– Troy Cady at T(r)oy Marbles.
A Grief
Conserved
– John Blase at The Beautiful Due.
The Man Behind
London’s Only Poetry Book Shop – Kyra Hanson at Londonist (Hat tip:
Maureen Doallas).
Handful of
Cockle Shells
– Heather Eure at The Consolation of Mirth.
Art and Photography
Top of the
Mornin' to Y'all
– Tim Good at Photography by Tiwago.
Women of
Bellefontaine Cemetery – Chris Naffziger at St. Louis Patina.
The Italian
Girl: An Old Tale
– Trevor Logan at Curator Magazine.
Faith and Culture
The Coddling of
the American Mind
– Greg Lukianoff and Jonathan Haidt at The Atlantic.
Ben Carson is a
messenger the GOP needs to hear – editorial in the New York Post.
An American
soldier who died that England might live – St. Paul’s Cathedral.
7 Signs You Were
Raised as an Evangelical in the Last 25 Years – Joshua Rogers at Boundless
(Hat tip: Tim Challies)
Planned Parenthood
PlannedParenthood’s Custom Abortions for Superior Product – The Gospel Coalition.
The post include four fact sheets.
Writing
Writers’ Apps – Maureen
Doallas at Writing Without Paper.
Good Old Words – Winn Collier.
Does Christian
Fiction Have a Race Problem? – Mike Duran at deCompose.
7 Questions to
Ask Before You Post on Social Media – Ron Edmondson.
The Stories of
Others
– Marilyn Gardner at Communicating Across Boundaries.
Are Curators the
New Experts?
– Heidi Oran at @ThinDifference.
Maps
Photograph: A veteran of the Battle of the Bulge by William Morris, via Public Domain Pictures. Used with permission.
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