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Tag: Books

  • Good God, What Happened to the Heartland?: Laughing and Lamenting with Lyz Lenz

    1 August 2019

    Lyz Lenz is so funny sometimes that you can forget that she has written a hard book. As, for instance, when she’s surveying the physical layout of cookie-cutter megachurches and says that “the decor looks like a Hobby Lobby vomited all over the place.” (115) That’s the vibrant Lyz that you want giving you the →

  • Stirring, Terrifying, Inspiring, Troubling—Yeah, That’s America

    19 July 2019

    The first thing I note about Jill Lepore’s new one-volume history of the United States is how out of style it is. In an age of disintegrating consensus and competing truths, who would dare to attempt a comprehensive narrative of our national story? Fortunately, Jill Lepore would and the result is a book you’ll surely →

  • Say Goodbye to the Mind-Numbing Meeting

    18 July 2019

    We’ve all been there. The meeting that begins with the same agenda as every past meeting to time immemorial. The gathering that gets hijacked by one overbearing guest. The party that peters out like air going out of a balloon. And yet we’ve also been there when it’s gone, remarkably, right. When some purpose sparks →

  • There is Still a ‘There’ There: The Atopian Dreams of Suzannah Lessard

    9 July 2019

    This review by Heartlands editor Alex Joyner originally appeared in the Eastertide 2019 print edition of the Englewood Review of Books  (now available) and is republished with permission. It’s quaint to live in a place like Parksley. Though the name refers to the original owner from whom the land for the town was bought, one Benjamin Parks, it →

  • A New Style Guide for Word Lovers: Dreyer’s Droll Diversion

    8 July 2019

    It sounds like faint praise to say that a book is diverting. We want our books to be gripping, engrossing, un-put-down-able. Or, if the tome in question is a reference book, we’d prefer that it be reliable, comprehensive, and comprehensible. Sorry. Dreyer’s English: An Utterly Correct Guide to Clarity and Style meets none of those →

  • The Strangeness of Being Here at All: Franz Wright’s Redemption Story

    5 July 2019

    There are days I wake up in sluggish wonder, newly aware, as a last dream image drifts away, of the marvel of my beloved still beside me in the bed, the fan beating time through the air, and the persistence of this body and mind. Or as the poet Franz Wright would put it in →

  • So You Want to Write Poetry…

    2 July 2019

    Come for the instruction in how to write poems. Stay for the poetry that flows from Mary Oliver like an undiminished spring. “Poetry is a life-cherishing force. And it requires a vision—a faith, to use an old-fashioned term. Yes, indeed. For poems are not words, after all, but fires for the cold, ropes let down →

  • Getting Beyond ‘Should’ to What ‘Is’: The Virginia Reeves Interview Concludes

    28 June 2019

    My interview with Virginia Reeves, author of The Behavior of Love, concludes with some thoughts on ‘should’ and the struggles of human beings in love to connect. (The interview begins here.) One of the other big words in this book for me is the word ‘should.’ In fact, you title a whole section ‘Should.’ I →

  • “Behavior is a Fraction of Who We Are”: Virginia Reeves Interview (2 of 3)

    27 June 2019

    In the previous segment of our interview with Virginia Reeves, we talked about the origins of her new book, The Behavior of Love, and the inspiration for one of its main characters, Ed, a behaviorist working within a Montana institution. In the second part of the interview we discuss behavior, identity, and the windows of →

  • Not Fixated on the Future: Finding Presence with Virginia Reeves (1 of 3)

    26 June 2019

    Virginia Reeves is a confounding author. How does someone who can capture the beauty of landscape and human relationships with such rich writing also manage to resist the expectations of what books about such things must be like? Just when you think you know how her stories will go, when you’ve seen the end of →

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