Laura Shapiro’s “What She Ate” and What it Means that Hitler was a Vegetarian
After trawling the library offerings for the works of Barbara Pym, I came across a wonderful book of food history: Laura Shapiro’s […]
Living the examined life
Living the examined life
After trawling the library offerings for the works of Barbara Pym, I came across a wonderful book of food history: Laura Shapiro’s […]
As “classical education” becomes more of a buzzword, there is yet more discussion of “the good, the true, and the beautiful.” As […]
The presupposition of much of our public discourse is that radical and absolute equality between the sexes is not only possible but, […]
We tend to think of reading to children in utilitarian terms: better SAT scores and verbal skills, improved abstract thinking and reading […]
But to try to make others comfortable is the only way to get right comfortable ourselves, and that comes partly of not […]
Earlier this month, I had the great pleasure of conversing of an hour with the sharp-as-a-tack Fr. McTeigue of the Society of […]
Most people hold an oddly mechanistic view of our emotions and the biological chemicals at play when we experience them. A new […]
Writing at the Federalist recently, I offered some thoughts on a study from earlier this year on the rise of mental disorders […]
What you read as a child (whether read aloud to you or read to yourself) says a lot about who you are. […]
When was the last time you heard about someone putting something on layaway? It used to be that stores advertised the option […]