In the summer of 1776, Abigail Adams faced a hard tough decision for herself and her children. Years earlier, she’d watched her husband John make the same decision, and she had struggled with worry. Now it her turn, and the turn of her children. Her husband was in Philadelphia at the meeting that would lead to the Declaration of Independence. She finally made the decision for herself and the family – and got inoculated for smallpox.
Some 37 letters written by the poet John Keats to his great love Fanny Brawne were owned by John Hay Whitney, a former U.S. ambassador to Britain. They were stolen in the 1980s. They had been in the possession of Brawne’s children after her death in 1865, and then they’d been sold at auction in 1885. At some point Whitney had purchased them. After the theft, they had disappeared for 40 years, until an unnamed individual tried to sell some rare books inherited from his grandfather. Included with the books were the Keats letters. And now they’re back with the family they were stolen from.
My wife and I have a significant difference over reading William Faulkner. She had to read “The Bear” and “Barn Burning” in required English classes in college (I took English literature, so I missed Faulkner’s stories). She was not a fan. I came to Faulkner years later, via the authors of the Latin American Boom, like Gabriel Garcia Marquez and Mario Vargas Llosa. They’d been heavily influenced by Faulkner, so I decided to read The Sound and the Fury. I was hooked, even with Faulkner’s tendency to often forget about punctuation. But One thing I never considered – some people find reading the author to be therapeutic.
More Good Reads
America 250
How Jefferson Crafted a Case Against Slavery – Cara Rogers Stevens at The Coolidge Review.
Paul Revere’s midnight ride unfolds in broad daylight – with a police escort – Michael Casey at Associated Press.
The French Connection – Jonathan Horn at The Free Press.
The Declaration of Independence, Thomas Jefferson and the Battle for New York City – Keli Holt at Just Enough History.
The Capital has fallen! The Philadelphia Campaign from Brandywine to Valley Forge – Boom Goes the History via Spotify.
10 Books That Reframe the American Revolution – Sophia Hollander at History.
Faith
Why Did (almost) All of Christian Music Become Worship Music? – Andrew Osenga.
Why Religious Freedom Matters – Allen Hertzke at Mere Orthodoxy.
The Puritan Theology That Built America & the Church Abandoned – Virgil Walker at the Institute for Faith, Work & Economics.
Once and Future Saints – Paul Kingsnorth at The Abbey of Misrule.
Life and Culture
The timeless specter of Western decline – Victor Davis Hanson at The New Criterion.
Poetry
Hatley St. George, a poem for St. George’s Day – Malcolm Guite.
“Here,” poem by Rhina Espaillat – Joseph Bottum at Poems Ancient and Modern.
Writing and Literature
Why Read Shakespeare? – Joel Miller at Miller’s Book Review.
He Arose – Tommee Profit and Phil Wickham
Painting: Woman Reading Newspaper, oil on canvas by William Merritt Chase (1849-1916).






