-
Recent Posts
Archives
Select by Category
Writing
- Adolph Ochs
- Amargosa Opera House
- Angle of Repose
- Araby
- autumn
- Best of Youth
- Blindness
- bookshops
- Borges
- Buddhism
- cemeteries
- Central Street Books
- Chilhowee Park
- Covid-19
- death
- Diane Bell
- Dostoevsky
- Dubliners
- Emily Dickinson
- environmentalism
- five and dimes
- German Occupation
- Gethsemani Abbey
- Giordana
- Greenwood Cemetery
- Helene Berr
- Italian film
- Jack Neely
- James Joyce
- Knoxville Mercury
- L'Air du Temps
- Lawson-McGhee Library
- Leaves of Grass
- libraries
- magnolia
- Marais
- Montaigne
- nature
- New York Times
- NPR
- nursing homes
- Obselidia
- Old Gray Cemetery
- orchids
- Paris
- perfume
- philosophy
- poetry
- sanitariums
- Saramago
- Sir Thomas Browne
- spiritual health
- Svetlana Geier
- Tennessee Williams
- Thomas Merton
- Van Gogh
- Virginia Woolf
- W.G. Sebald
- wallace stegner
- Walt Whitman
- William Rule
Archives
Meta
Monthly Archives: June 2013
Review: Obselidia
I agree with Virginia Woolf who said that nothing thicker than a knife’s blade separates happiness from melancholy. My favorite films waver between humor and sadness and take my imagination to surprising places. I recently discovered a gem of a … Continue reading
Posted in Film, Libraries, Literature, Nature
Tagged Amargosa Opera House, Borges, Diane Bell, Obselidia, Sir Thomas Browne, Virginia Woolf, W.G. Sebald
6 Comments