Saturday, July 25, 2020

Saturday Good Reads


Last year, I wrote about Walter Duranty, the reporter for The New York Times who won a Pulitzer Prize for his reporting from the Ukraine in Russia, saying there was no famine and things were just fine. To be blunt, he lied for Stalin. It’s estimated that 11 million people died from the famine. In the 1990s, there were calls for his Pulitzer Prize to be revoked, but the Pulitzer board said no. As Francis Maier notes at First Things Magazine, there’s a new movie about what happened, entitled “Mr. Jones” and starring Benedict Cumberbatch. I wonder if The New York Times will review it. 

The ghost of Walter Duranty may still walk the halls of The New York Times. Mollie Hemingway at The Federalist has the story -- the reporting that won a Pulitzer Prize for The New York Times (and shared with the Washington Post) in 2017 turns out to be a fabrication

I’ve seen the story in the Wall Street Journal but nowhere else. There is a rash of vandalism and arson attempts going on, directed at churches (especially Roman Catholic) in the U.S. and Canada. One particularly bad one was an arson attempt at a church in Florida, where the arsonist set the fire with people inside preparing for mass. Clemente Lisi at Get religion asks, where’s the national news coverage?

Speaking of news media, The Responsible Puppet has compiled a list of everything that the media say will come to an end because of the coronavirus. The list includes automobiles, globalization, auctions, tourism, college, bullfighting, luxury retail, your marriage, the open plan office, business travel, and useless meetings. That last item tells you how uninformed reporters can be – American corporations could not survive without useless meetings. 

More Good Reads

Faith

How to More Wisely Consume News – Brian Weynand at The Gospel Coalition.

Storm be still – Hyatt Moore.

Going Over Jordan: Images of Baptism in “1917” – Basil Burroughs at The Imaginative Conservative.


British Stuff


BP Portrait Awards 2020 Virtual Exhibition – National Portrait Gallery, London. The prizewinners can be found here.

Where are the bones of Hans Holbein? – Jonathan Jones at The Guardian.

Thomas Cromwell’s Reputation – Michael Coren at The Critic.

Lionel de Rothschild’s Azaleas at Exbury – Judith Taylor at English Historical Fiction Authors.

American Stuff



Poetry

The wit and poetry of Billy Collins – Mary Harwell Sayler at The Poetry Editor.

Friday Harbor – Martha Hollander at Literary Matters.

Michael – Sonja Benskin Mesher.

Mary Magdalene: A Sonnet – Malcolm Guite.

Poetry’s Revival and Mr. Wilson – David Paul Deavel at Catholic World Report.

Life and Culture

The Left is Now the Right – Matt Taibbi.


Writing and Literature

Are You a Reader? – Rachelle Gardner, Literary Agent.

A Love Letter to Developmental Editors – R.L. Maizes at Literary Hub.


What We Relate To When We Read Books – Josh Malerman at CrimeReads. 

Edith Wharton: The Best Seller Who Hated Best Sellers – Sheila Liming at Lapham’s Quarterly.

Bless the Broken Road – Piano Solo by The Piano Guys



Painting: Woman Reading by Candlelight, oil on canvas (1907) by Peter Ilsted (1861-1933)

1 comment:

Mary Sayler said...

Thanks, Glynn, for including my article on Billy Collins. His poetry is a fun read - humorous and, at times, wistful - but always fresh and unexpected.