Saturday, April 11, 2026

Saturday Good Reads - April 11, 2026


I’d read Charles Dickens in high school (David CopperfieldGreat ExpectationsA Tale of Two Cities), but it was only when I was working as a speechwriter for a CEO that it became serious. He read Dickens, a lot of Dickens, and I was expected to read what he read. And to quote Dickens. So, I did. And I discovered how much I enjoyed his works. I’ve visited the Dickens Museum in London five times and joined the Dickens Fellowship. I read Pickwick Papers back in the 1990s, bit I was reminded of it this week when I saw Joseph Bottum at Poems Ancient and Modern post and discuss a poem Dickens included in that work – “Ode to an Expiring Frog.” 

It was called a miracle, and it may have saved the American Revolution. The British had occupied Boston, and in very short order, cannons were transported in almost impossible conditions from Fort Ticonderoga on the New York-Vermont border to the hills overlooking Boston. The ensuing bombardment forced the British to their ships in Boston Harbor. In nearby Quincy, Abigal Adams watched the bombardment and sent her observations to her husband John. The transfer of the cannons was a hugely successful operation, and it even had some involvement by none other than Benedict Arnold.

 

As many times as we’ve visited London, I can remember using the iconic red telephone box only once. It was 1983, my wife was recovering from a prescription reaction at our hotel, and I called her at 3 p.m. as the bells of St. Paul’s rang out the hour. More than 40 years later, phone boxes are generally used for one reason – for tourists to take photographs. (There’s one near Parliament Square that always has a long line of people wanted to snap a photo of a phone box with Big Ben and the houses of Parliament in the background.) Spitalfields life posted some pictures of phone boxes this week, and yes, they’re still there.

 

More Good Reads

 

America 250

 

Major General Richard Montgomery: The Making of an American Hero – review by Sam Short at Journal of the American Revolution.

 

A Fleet Against One: The Continental Navy’s Embarrassing Clash Off Block Island, April 6, 1776 – Bjorn Bruckshaw at Emerging Revolutionary War Era. 

 

The Spirited Revolutionary Who Led the Fight for Independence in Corsica Also Inspired America’s Colonial Rabble-Rousers – Anna Richards at Smithsonian Magazine.

 

Colonel William Hill: Hero or Disgrace? – Robert Ford at Journal of the American Revolution. 

 

Faith

 

Christian astronaut pilots first moon mission in 53 years – Bobby Ross Jr. at The Christian Chronicle.

 

Art

 

The Silent Traveler – Spitalfields Life.

 

Poetry

 

Old Fred’s Night Music – Steve Knepper at Front Porch Republic.

 

The Point of Poetry? Slow Down – Joel Miller at Miller’s Book Review.

 

“Knowledge,” poem by Louise Bogan – Sally Thomas at Poems Ancient and Modern.

 

Accidentally – Sonja Benskin Mesher.

 

British Stuff

 

King Charles Is Failing to Defend the Faith – Garrett Exner at Providence Magazine.

 

Man on the Marquee – Andrew Duhon



Painting: Reading Woman, oil on canvas (ca. 1900) by Jacques-Emile Blanche (1861-1942), Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest.

Friday, April 10, 2026

He is there


After James 1:12-18
 

In all the trials

of our life, he is

there. In all

the temptations

of our life, he is

there. In all

the evil we

encounter and

the sin we 

commit, he is

there. If we 

remain steadfast,

he is there. If

we fail, he is

there. He is

immutable; he

doesn’t change. 

 

Photograph by Greg Rakozy via Unsplash. Used with permission.


Some Friday Readings

 

“Crown Him with Many Crowns,” hymn by Matthew Bridges – D.S. Martin at Kingdom Poets.

 

My God, In Whom I Trust – Sarah Ivill at Alliance for Confessing Evangelicals.

 

“The Strife is O’er,” Latin hymn, 1695 – Anthony Esolen at Word & Song.

 

The Genius of Dirt – Seth Lewis.

 

The Voice of ‘A Great Awakening’ – Greg Morse at Desiring God.

Thursday, April 9, 2026

Poets and Poems: Nikki Grimes and “Twice Blessed”


Welcome to Miss Vy’s Twice Blessed Secondhand Store, with both its in-store merchandise and its hosted yard sales. You will find clothes, Turkish rugs, clay pots, musical instruments, jars of old buttons, jewelry, baby furniture, coins, figurines, cups and saucers, and just about everything else you would expect to find.

You will also find stories, stories about the original owners and stories about people who purchased them from Miss Vy. And the stories are told in poetry.

 

Twice Blessed: Yard Sale Stories by writer and poet Nikki Grimes is one of the most fascinating, entertaining, and thoughtful uses of poetry I’ve read. 

To continue reading, please see my post today at Tweetspeak Poetry.

Some Thursday Readings

 

Guzzle – poem by Alex Mouw at Rabbit Room Poetry.

 

Art Talk – poem by Maureen Doallas.

 

“April,” poem by Sara Teasdale – Sally Thomas at Poems Ancient and Modern.

 

Black crown bird – poem by Sonja Benskin Mesher.

 

Poet Laura: Not the Cruelest Month – Donna Hilbert at Tweetspeak Poetry.

Wednesday, April 8, 2026

“The Jewish Policeman” by Jonathan Dunsky


Before Adam Lapid had been a private detective living in early 1950s Tel Aviv, he’d been a police detective in Budapest, Hungary. Then the Germans came in 1944; Adolph Eichmann himself supervised the deportation of 440,000 people directly to Auschwitz. Among them were Adam, his wife, his two young daughters, and his mother. Adam was the only survivor. 

After the defeat of the Nazis, Adam made his way to Munich. He’s living in a Jewish displacement camp, self-governing but overseen by the American Army (Munich was in the American zone after the war). Adam is not simply existing; he’s looking for former Nazis who think they’ve escaped justice. And he finds one, who soon finds himself strangled in the cellar of a ruined building.

 

Adam also unexpectedly finds himself employed. The camp director asks Adam to investigate a murder, not to take over the police function, but to look into a single death. A resident had been stabbed to death in the camp’s radio room. Because only camp residents had access to the camp, that the killer would be Jewish. And that made it worse; too many Jews had already died during the war, and it seemed an obscenity that another Jew would die at the hands of one of his own.

 

Adam investigates; virtually no clues exist. He travels down blind alleys, spends countless hours investigating, and keeps dodging the man who was appointed the official policeman who resents what Adam has been asked to do. 

 

Jonathan Dunsky

The Jewish Policeman
 is the ninth Adam Lapid mystery by Jonathan Dunsky. All of these mysteries are thought-provoking; this one is even more than its predecessors. Dunsky more than  touches upon the unsettling idea that people who experience horrific persecution and murder can sometimes become like their persecutors and murderers. 

 

Dunsky is best known for his Adam Lapid mystery stories, with nine published: Ten Years Gone, The Dead Sister, The Auschwitz ViolinistA Debt of Death, A Deadly Act, The Auschwitz DetectiveA Death in Jerusalem, In That Sleep of Death, and now The Jewish Policeman. He’s also published The Favor: A Tale of Friendship and MurderFamily TiesTommy’s Touch: A Fantasy Love Story; the short story “The Unlucky Woman,” and other works. He was born in Israel, served four years in the Israeli Army, lived in Europe for several years, and currently lives in Israel with his family. He has worked in various high-tech firms and operated his own search optimization business.

 

The Jewish Policeman is every bit as good as the earlier Adam Lapid mysteries. Dunsky captures the chaos and desperation of post-war Germany (Hershey Bars and American cigarettes are like currency), and he tells a good story of conflicted motives, illegal justice, and settling old scores.

 

Related:

My review of Ten Years Gone by Jonathan Dunsky.

My review of The Unlucky Woman by Jonathan Dunsky.

My review of The Dead Sister by Jonathan Dunsky.

My review of The Auschwitz Violinist by Jonathan Dunsky.

My review of A Debt of Death by Jonathan Dunsky.

My review of A Deadly Act by Jonathan Dunsky.

My review of Grandma Rachel’s Ghosts by Jonathan Dunsky.

My review of The Auschwitz Detective by Jonathan Dunsky.

My review of A Death in Jerusalem by Jonathan Dunsky.

My review of In That Sleep of Death by Jonathan Dunsky.

 

Some Wednesday Readings

 

Lucky to Be Grateful and A Passage Through the Dark– Elizabeth Lasch-Quinn and Katy Carl at Mere Orthodoxy review Marce Catlett: The Force of a Story by Wendell Berry.

 

Why Cormac McCarthy Stands Alone Among Novelists – Will Hoyt at Front Porch Republic.

 

Writing a Novel at Burger King – Lana McAra at In the Writer’s Chair (via LinkedIn). 

Tuesday, April 7, 2026

Poets and Poems: Alexander Voloshin and “Sidetracked”


Alexander Voloshin (1884-1960) was born in the Ukraine, then part of the Russian Empire. He had a career in theater, but World War I intervened and he became part of the Imperial Army. Then the Russian Revolution happened, and he found himself involved in the White-Red Civil War. When the Communists triumphed, Voloshin remained briefly in the Crimea. That was followed by a travel odyssey to Berlin, Brazil, and then Ellis Island. After a time in New York City, he made his way to Los Angeles and Hollywood, like thousands of other émigré Russians.  

In Hollywood, he worked as a waiter and as an extra in movies. He was an actor in some 12 movies, the best known of which was “The World and the Flesh” (1932), starring Miriam Hopkins. The movie, set during the Russian Revolution, is about a rather nasty Communist revolutionary (Hollywood was big on Russian Revolution movies at the time). After his last role in 1937 (“Daughter of Shanghai,” starring Anna May Wong), Voloshin tried founding a theater magazine and writing for other publications. 

 

Voloshin was also a poet. He published one work, a saga of the Russian émigré experience from the revolution to his contemporary day. The work disappeared, until poet and translator Boris Dralyuk found a copy. Dralyuk has a deep interest in the Russian émigré experience; last year, he published his own poetry collection entitled My Hollywood.

 

Dralyuk translated and published Voloshin’s poem under its original title, Sidetracked: Exile in Hollywood

To continue reading, please see my post today at Tweetspeak Poetry.

Some Tuesday Readings

 

Up on the Hill’s Back – poem by David Whyte.

 

Poetry Prompt: Meet Your Muse Euterpe – L.L. Barkat at Tweetspeak Poetry.

 

The Chronicles of Never – poem by Baruch November at Every Day Poems.

 

“The Day of Judgment,” poem by Isaac Watts – Josph Bottum at Poems Ancient and Modern.

 

A Review of Petrarch’s Canzoniere, translated by A.M. Juster – Richard Wakefield at New Verse Review.

Monday, April 6, 2026

Some Monday Readings - April 6, 2026


How ‘Tiny Shortcuts’ Are Poisoning Science – Thomas Plumper and Eric Neumayer at The MIT Press Reader. 

The Bills That Destroyed Urban America – Joseph Lawler at The New Atlantis.

 

A Truck Driver Spent 20 Years Building a Miniature Model of New York City. Then, It Went Viral – Sarah Cascone at Artnet.

 

Selma Hall, Jefferson County, Missouri – Chris Naffziger at St. Louis Patina.

 

Spies and Lies: The Rosenbergs and America’s Atomic Secrets – Jason Clark at This Is the Day.

 

Ancient Splendor: Roman Art in the Time of Trajan – St. Louis Art Museum (video).

 

Editor, Do Your Work! – Tery Whalin at The Writing Life.


Photograph: Ethel and Julius Rosenberg.

 

Sunday, April 5, 2026

The origin of good


After James 1:12-18
 

Every good gift,

every one, every

good and perfect

gift comes from

above, from the hand

of God. He doesn’t 

change; thus it has

always been and

thus it will always

be. That includes

us. Fallen as we are,

he brought us into

the world by his

own will, his own

choice. He brought

us forth in truth,

because he designed

us to be the first fruits

of his creatures.

 

Photograph by Glynn Young.


He is Risen -- Jeff Johnson



Some Sunday Readings

 

Aquinas, AI, and the Pursuit of Learning – Alex Stevens at Mere Orthodoxy.

 

Grave Robber – poem by Kelly Belmonte at Kelly’s Scribbles.

 

Guys, Try Church – Wil Rahn at The Free Press.