'Look at Me': Words Torn From the Heart- November 30, 2005 An occasional series in which The Post's book critic reconsiders notable andor neglected books from the past.http://feeds.washingtonpost.com/~r/wp-dyn/rss/linkset/2005/03/25/LI2005032502370_xml/~3/24... Southern Exposures With Little Light- November 29, 2005 WRITERS OF THE AMERICAN SOUTHhttp://feeds.washingtonpost.com/~r/wp-dyn/rss/linkset/2005/03/25/LI2005032502370_xml/~3/24... Jonathan Yardley- November 27, 2005 One of the oddities of conventional biography is that when the subject is a person of great influence and renown, his or her private life is scanted at best, ignored at worst. We know, for example, that Franklin D. Roosevelt's mother was overbearing and dominating and that he was unhappy in prep school and college, but these crucial aspects of youth usually are noted by his biographers and then passed over, so that the march of great events -- the Depression, the 1932 election, the New Deal,...http://feeds.washingtonpost.com/~r/wp-dyn/rss/linkset/2005/03/25/LI2005032502370_xml/~3/24... The Clean Pate Club- November 22, 2005 BALD!http://feeds.washingtonpost.com/~r/wp-dyn/rss/linkset/2005/03/25/LI2005032502370_xml/~3/24... Jonathan Yardley- November 20, 2005 On a gloriously sunny winter day during a visit to Spain a couple of years ago, I drove from San Sebastian to Bilbao to . . . you already know why. I wanted to have a look at the Bilbao Guggenheim, the waterfront art museum designed by Frank Gehry that has gotten as much ink and air time, not to mention extravagant praise, as any new building within recent memory. Opened in the fall of 1997, the museum drew 1.3 million visitors in its first year, and, Deyan Sudjic writes:http://feeds.washingtonpost.com/~r/wp-dyn/rss/linkset/2005/03/25/LI2005032502370_xml/~3/24... A Writer Is Born- November 15, 2005 THE COLDEST WINTERhttp://feeds.washingtonpost.com/~r/wp-dyn/rss/linkset/2005/03/25/LI2005032502370_xml/~3/24... In the Game With A Real Team Player- November 15, 2005 An occasional series in which The Post's book critic reconsiders notable andor neglected books from the past.http://feeds.washingtonpost.com/~r/wp-dyn/rss/linkset/2005/03/25/LI2005032502370_xml/~3/24... Curtain Call- November 8, 2005 NO APPLAUSE -- JUST THROW MONEYhttp://feeds.washingtonpost.com/~r/wp-dyn/rss/linkset/2005/03/25/LI2005032502370_xml/~3/24... Jonathan Yardley- November 6, 2005 Now in her early seventies, Penelope Lively is one of the most accomplished writers of fiction of our day, and one who has thought about her art with particular acuity and originality. Few people have written so perceptively as she about the connections and disconnections between fiction and fact, between artist and art. Now, in this splendid new "anti-memoir," she has this to say:http://feeds.washingtonpost.com/~r/wp-dyn/rss/linkset/2005/03/25/LI2005032502370_xml/~3/24... The Currents of History- November 1, 2005 THE HUDSONhttp://feeds.washingtonpost.com/~r/wp-dyn/rss/linkset/2005/03/25/LI2005032502370_xml/~3/24... |