When she was a young girl, Sandra Day O’Connor began her education at home. Her early years of schooling on an Arizona ranch were sitting at the kitchen table with her mother, learning to read, and taking long nature walks. I read this, and this scene of serenity, this future Supreme Court Justice, beginning her education at home, formed an image in my mind of what might be possible.
“The Bee Sting” by Paul Murray — Emily Genova, Deputy Managing Editor This nearly 700-page novel follows an Irish family as they reckon with a failing family-run car business in a small, gossipy town. Told in alternating points of view, Paul Murray’s “The Bee Sting” drops the reader into the life of the Barnes family, This story Books beyond Bobst: A modern classic, a short story collection and more appeared first on Washington Square News.
In the latest episode of Rewind of the Living Dead, we’re going to carve a 666 and remember that it’s all for you Damien as we review the 2024 prequel “The First Omen”
The Jets read your emails and Tweets, listened to your phone calls,
Bernard B Jacobs Theatre, New YorkSE Hinton’s novel, which was adapted by Francis Ford Coppola for film, makes for a competent yet forgettable stage showIf Broadway must, for the same risk-averse pressures as Hollywood, keep rummaging through the library for more and more past touchstones to adapt, it could do worse than The Outsiders. SE Hinton’s seminal young adult novel has been a staple of middle and high school English classes for more than half a century for a reason. Though its once...
"Don't Tell Mom the Babysitter's Dead" review: Simone Joy Jones and June Squibb face off in this update to the 1991 cult classic. How does it compare?
Just as Joker seems to be inspired by The King of Comedy, Joker: Folie à Deux seems to be drawing parallels to Martin Scorsese’s New York, New York.
The added layer of bureaucracy comes as Navy brass prepares to testify in front of lawmakers.
Professors Ramseyer and Morgan's book demonstrates the elusiveness of truth and raises questions about protecting academic freedom in the comfort women debate.
Major report warns ‘polarisation and stifling of debate’ has not only let children down but hampered medical and scientific progress in the area