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Unsplintering

Seeking to corral some of the scattered parts of myself, I’ve decided to consolidate various locations for my writing and bring everything together here at my personal website under the News & Views section. (If you want to receive new posts as email, you are able to do that from […]

Commonalities

Though best known as a novelist, Virginia Woolf wrote more words of nonfiction than fiction. Her nonfiction oeuvre spans six dense volumes of collected essays, six volumes of collected letters, five volumes of collected diaries, plus the book-length essays A Room of One’s Own and Three Guineas and the biography Roger Fry. […]

Woolf’s Offenses

In June 2019, I traveled to Cincinnati, Ohio for the International Virginia Woolf Conference, which that year had a theme of Woolf and social justice. I delivered a paper titled, “Time Passes: What Do We Do with Woolf’s Offenses?” The paper was going to appear in an academic collection, but […]

Queerly Covered

On Facebook, the wonderful writer Marlon James made a quick post about the difference between American and British book covers, noting, “As my British publisher once said ‘over here darling we try to sell books.’” The best example was this: Let’s just say that even though I have no interest in […]

Contemplating Pride

Pride Month feels more important than ever because attacks on queer people in the United States and around the world feel more virulent than ever. The historian in me (I keep him in a chamber near my liver) has a lot of footnotes to offer to that statement, nuances and […]

Blackwood’s Greenwood: “The Man Whom the Trees Loved”

Algernon Blackwood (1869-1951) is best known today for two short stories, “The Wendigo” and “The Willows”, both considered among the best works of horror, supernatural, or weird fiction in English. Not far behind those in reputation are a couple of his stories of the occult detective John Silence (especially “Ancient Sorceries”). Beyond […]

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