What happens when a 60-year-old writer dons helmet and pads to compete under the Texas lights? The post A New Sweet Diminishment appeared first on The American Scholar.| The American Scholar
The guest room is more than just a place where visitors can crash The post A Room of Their Own appeared first on The American Scholar.| The American Scholar
The post The Duckling appeared first on The American Scholar.| The American Scholar
The inner world of one of America’s great warrior poets The post A Stranger Everywhere appeared first on The American Scholar.| The American Scholar
When a Zen master loses his way The post The Egoist appeared first on The American Scholar.| The American Scholar
The allure of the pigment that has polarized like no other The post Paint It Black appeared first on The American Scholar.| The American Scholar
We aren’t as special as we think The post Time for a Demotion appeared first on The American Scholar.| The American Scholar
A newly opened archive reveals further contradictions about a poet steeped in paradox The post Too Alone in This World, Yet Not appeared first on The American Scholar.| The American Scholar
When a play ends with a dismemberment, the effect on the audience can be transformative The post A Visit to Epidaurus appeared first on The American Scholar.| The American Scholar
A century after Bryan took on Darrow, battles over public school curricula rage on The post God on the Syllabus appeared first on The American Scholar.| The American Scholar
Sometimes we free ourselves by embracing our darkest fears The post Expect the Worst appeared first on The American Scholar.| The American Scholar
The writer who made modernism mainstream The post Dada Mama appeared first on The American Scholar.| The American Scholar
A conflict’s conflicted history The post Divided Front appeared first on The American Scholar.| The American Scholar
At a tent encampment in Oregon, one man struggles to survive as medical volunteers try to bring a meas-ure of light to dark, uncertain days The post Helping Doug appeared first on The American Scholar.| The American Scholar
How horseshoe crabs and ecological grief connect with the wonders of the human heart| The American Scholar
How my family survived a harrowing home invasion| The American Scholar
Does cutting costs mean robbing oneself of life’s small delights?| The American Scholar
Notes from a musical tour of South Africa| The American Scholar
The school year is over, and the students who are children are off to a summer of play, the younger ones skipping away and the older ones sauntering out the door. I remember my first year at the academy, when on the last day, my class of grammar school students hugged me goodbye, the whole class, all of them at once. It was like a scene from a movie. “This is my favorite class,” I thought in gratitude, my arms around three of the girls and boys, the others jumping about like joyful puppies.| The American Scholar
My next-door neighbor dropped his voice when he answered my question about the For Sale sign at the other end of the row where we both have houses. Who was selling, I wondered, and what exactly was for sale?| The American Scholar
Reassessing a renowned painter’s troubling life| The American Scholar