Writing

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Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 hours ago

My rookie era: After my panic attacks, woodworking became the one good thing I could count on

Woodworking provided therapeutic relief from panic attacks and trauma, requiring acceptance of challenges, mistakes, and expert guidance over idealized expectations.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 hours ago

How should a woman dress in her 50s? Gwyneth Paltrow just changed the game

Women over 50 face contradictory fashion expectations at the Oscars, with no established wardrobe rules, forcing them to navigate impossible choices between dressing age-appropriately or defying aging conventions.
Writing
fromPsychology Today
3 hours ago

Zemblanity: When Bad Luck Is Built In

Luck extends beyond random chance to include serendipity and zemblanity, where human agency shapes whether unexpected events become positive or negative outcomes.
fromwww.theguardian.com
8 hours ago

Howl by Howard Jacobson review a tragicomic portrait of a Jewish man's despair

Howard Jacobson writes characters at their wits' end; those characters are usually men, and those men are usually Jewish. Additionally, and problematically for both them and everyone around them, their collective wits are capacious: easily enlarged to allow idiosyncrasy to bloom into neurosis, preoccupation into obsession.
Writing
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
12 hours ago

I watched society burn a woman at the stake': Melissa Auf der Maur on her bandmate Courtney Love and the farce of the 90s

Melissa Auf der Maur kept her father's assisted death secret for 25 years before revealing it in her memoir about her rock music career in the 1990s.
Writing
fromIndependent
11 hours ago

Tanya Sweeney: I thought publishing my first book would be a life-defining moment - but it just made me more insecure and more jealous

Achieving a lifelong dream of publishing a book creates an anticipated moment of complete fulfillment and validation.
Writing
fromThe New Yorker
1 day ago

Han Ong on Nora Aunor and Authentication

A story about a Balenciaga dress centers on a mother-daughter relationship, exploring themes of exile, glamour, and qualified happiness through fashion and family bonds.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

The kindness of strangers: on an emptied train carriage, a man rubbed his hand on my thigh then another passenger intervened

A stranger intervened during a sexual assault on a train by pretending to know the victim, creating a distraction that allowed her to escape the attacker.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
20 hours ago

The Other Bennet Sister review the bookish Pride and Prejudice sister gets her turn in the spotlight

Mary Bennet from Pride and Prejudice has become the focus of numerous retellings and adaptations, most notably Janice Hadlow's bestseller adapted into a 10-part television series.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Prue Leith looks back: I had a great time on Bake Off, but I don't think I'll have any yearning when I see Nigella in that position'

Prue Leith built a successful restaurant and food education business through disciplined financial management and refusing to accumulate debt, earning businesswoman of the year recognition in 1990.
Writing
fromTravel + Leisure
2 days ago

Daniel Radcliffe's New One-Man Broadway Show Turns the Audience Into His Costars-and It's Unlike Anything Else on Stage

Daniel Radcliffe stars in 'Every Brilliant Thing,' a participatory one-man play about finding positivity while coping with a parent's mental health crisis, performed globally in 66 countries across 44 languages.
Writing
fromBusiness Insider
1 day ago

Addiction nearly killed me. Once I got sober, I started my own company and shared my story to help others.

Lisa Devine overcame six years of drug addiction through court intervention and personal commitment, now running a successful community-supported candle business called 2nd Chance Candles.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

The moment I knew: I was enchanted by her painting but we never spoke. I wouldn't see her again for 55 years

A man reconnects with a childhood classmate whose exceptional artistic talent impressed him decades earlier, leading to an unexpected reunion after 55 years of separation.
Writing
fromThe Walrus
2 days ago

I Wrote a Popular Book about Going Sober. Then I Relapsed | The Walrus

During summer 2020, the author engaged in heavy drinking while maintaining a public image of sobriety, consuming alcohol before and during social outings on Toronto Island.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

I could barely think because it was so bad': why Darcey Steinke wrote a book about pain

Chronic pain fundamentally transforms identity and relationships, increasing empathy and connection to reality through shared human vulnerability.
Writing
fromThe Atlantic
3 days ago

Raymond Chandler and the Case of the Split Infinitive

Raymond Chandler clashed with The Atlantic's copy editor Margaret Mutch over her correction of a split infinitive, arguing that deliberate rule-breaking in language creates authentic, living prose.
Writing
fromPoynter
3 days ago

What my golf coach taught me about writing - Poynter

Meaningful professional friendships develop through proximity and shared experiences, offering valuable lessons about work, craft, and life that extend far beyond the immediate relationship.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

Light and Thread by Han Kang review a tantalising book of reflections

Han Kang's Nobel Prize-winning work explores historical trauma and human fragility through poetic prose that balances outward examination of events like the Gwangju massacre with inward psychological portrayal, leaving interpretive gaps for readers.
Writing
fromHarvard Gazette
2 days ago

You know the author. Meet the typist. - Harvard Gazette

Women typists played essential but often uncredited roles in producing major literary and academic works, from typing manuscripts to transcribing interviews for famous authors and scholars.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

Experience: I suffered terrible burns as a child then became a firefighter

A severe burn accident at age six caused third- and fourth-degree burns on 73% of the body, requiring a year of hospitalization and long-term recovery, fundamentally shaping life trajectory and resilience.
Writing
fromThe Walrus
2 days ago

Iranians, Home and Abroad, Want Change. But Are Divided on the War | The Walrus

A family learns their grandmother survived Iran's 2025 bombing campaign through fragmented communication while separated by continents during the Twelve-Day War.
fromVulture
4 days ago

In Anna Ziegler's Antigone, the Heroine Meets Her Reader

From our millennia-later perspective, it's also remarkable that a culture that didn't count women as citizens - or even, truly, as full people; Aeschylus's Oresteia turns on the divine judgment that a mother isn't really a parent to her child but simply a vessel for the male's seed - created such staggering expressions of female wrath and righteousness on its stages.
Writing
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

I challenged ChatGPT to a writing competition. Could it actually replace me?

A writer tests ChatGPT's creative abilities against their own using writing prompts, finding the AI produces competent but ultimately inferior work compared to human creativity.
fromThe Atlantic
4 days ago

The Worst Writing Advice of All Time

That type of copying is pretty normal, and they teach it in school. It's how you learn (and how you become depressed). But in the age of generative AI, there are many new kinds of copying. For instance, Wired reported last week on a tool offered by Grammarly, which briefly offered users the opportunity to put their writing through something called "Expert Review."
Writing
fromAnOther
5 days ago

Sound of Falling: An Eerily Beautiful Portrait of Rural Women's Lives

It brought me back to this feeling I had from childhood. I remember I would ask myself who was playing here before, who was sitting exactly where I'm sitting now, all the thoughts they had on this spot and how they're in me now.
Writing
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

A Woman of Substance review a lavishly absurd, cliche-packed tribute to simpler times

Barbara Taylor Bradford's 'A Woman of Substance' follows Emma Harte's rise from poverty to becoming the world's richest woman, now adapted into an eight-part miniseries starring Brenda Blethyn.
Writing
fromBig Think
6 days ago

"If it sounds literary, it isn't": The deceptively simple rules behind good writing

Neal Allen and Anne Lamott co-authored Good Writing by combining Allen's 36 writing rules with Lamott's annotations, creating a collaborative guide where Allen explains rules and Lamott provides practical examples and alternative perspectives.
Writing
fromElite Traveler
6 days ago

Life Lessons With Author David Coggins

Living an interesting life requires embracing improbable efforts, starting from the ground floor in unfamiliar pursuits, prioritizing face-to-face conversation, and developing deep attachment to specific places.
Writing
fromwww.nytimes.com
1 week ago

Who's a Better Writer: A.I. or Humans? Take Our Quiz.

Artificial intelligence generates writing that readers often prefer to human-authored works in blind tests, challenging assumptions about AI's creative limitations.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Love Magic Power Danger Bliss by Paul Morley review reappraising Yoko Ono

Yoko Ono was a pioneering avant-garde artist in 1960s downtown New York, creating experimental music and conceptual art before meeting John Lennon, challenging conventional definitions of artistic merit.
fromInsideHook
1 week ago

There Is No "Right" Way to Write a Song

Now it's become very popular in the Taylor Swift way of pop singers writing about all of their publicly aired break-ups, which I don't find interesting at all. I think it's a little bit boring for me to write about myself. Even if I've had a really interesting day, I feel like I've already lived that, I don't need to go through it every time I sing this song.
Writing
fromThe New Yorker
1 week ago

Love in the Time of A.I. Companions

When I came home, my son, who was about four or five at the time, walked up to me and said, 'What happened to your stomach? Where's the baby?' I had nothing to show for it. I felt like I was just living it over and over.
Writing
fromVulture
1 week ago

The Pitt Wins Big at the 2026 WGA Awards

I was supposed to host the awards this Saturday, a day of celebrating the hard work of artists in one of the strongest unions in the U.S. But could we really celebrate while the staff, who help support the union are asking to be heard of their needs? I'm honored to stand with them.
Writing
Writing
fromTheregister
1 week ago

LibreOffice learns to speak Markdown in version 26.2

LibreOffice 26.2 now natively supports Markdown import and export, potentially expanding Markdown's accessibility to mainstream users through a familiar desktop application.
Writing
fromThe New Yorker
1 week ago

Addie Citchens on Judging Women and the Spirit Life of New Orleans

A woman in her forties encounters a man in New Orleans she believes is a miscarried child, prompting reflection on terminated pregnancies and failed relationships with inadequate partners.
fromIrish Independent
1 week ago

Jessie Buckley reveals battle with eating disorder and depression

I had an eating disorder, and it took time, and it took a lot of help, and also it was depression... I didn't know how to be alive the way I wanted to be, and it was difficult, but I do not for a second regret it, and I think I've been able to transform it and recognise our vulnerabilities as humans in the world.
Writing
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

The kindness of strangers: on the plane I was overwhelmed with grief, then a passenger let me rest my head on his shoulder

A compassionate stranger's quiet support during a vulnerable moment on a long flight restored faith in human kindness and empathy.
fromOregon ArtsWatch * Arts & Culture News
1 week ago

April Aasheim: telling stories on pages and stages * Oregon ArtsWatch

I didn't know who I was as a writer. I didn't know my voice or style. I was trying to be whatever writer I loved at the moment. You have to find authenticity, find your own voice. Marie's class gave me the ability to be a storyteller.
Writing
Writing
fromThe Nation
1 week ago

The Greatest Love Is Grieving

Women in mourning transform grief into militant purpose, rejecting societal expectations to perform peace while enduring demonstrable suffering.
Writing
fromBusiness Insider
1 week ago

I'm an 85-year-old ghostwriter who's never been more in demand. I charge high prices, embrace my wrinkles, and live full out.

Judy Katz, 85, operates a successful ghostwriting business from Manhattan, having written 60 memoirs and books while actively rejecting retirement and combating ageism.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

The play that changed my life: There were cheers, screams and gasps at our story we couldn't believe it!'

It follows a young Syrian boy, Ahmet, who arrives in the UK without his parents. He joins a school and befriends a group of kids who hear that the government is going to close the gates. They don't fully understand what it means other than that Ahmet's parents, who must be looking for him, won't be able to get into the country. So they decide, in a beautifully innocent way, to go to the most powerful person they can think of—the queen!—and ask for help to find Ahmet's parents and keep the gates open.
Writing
Writing
fromConde Nast Traveler
1 week ago

Louise Erdrich on a Scorching Summer in Naples Spent Reading Ferrante

A mother and daughter spent July in Naples reading Elena Ferrante's novels together, exploring the city's streets, museums, and culinary traditions before their lives changed with the arrival of a grandchild.
Writing
fromPoynter
1 week ago

A college admissions essay reveals the power of storytelling - Poynter

External assignments and deadlines often drive creative work more than inspiration, as demonstrated by a publisher's phone call leading to a college admissions essay writing guide.
Writing
fromThe Atlantic
1 week ago

Don't Call It 'Intelligence'

AI threatens authentic voice development by offering effortless alternatives to the struggle that builds genuine writerly expression.
Writing
fromwww.mercurynews.com
1 week ago

Miss Manners: A fellow diner wouldn't let me take the chair her purse was on

Refusing to share an available chair for a purse while someone stands is rude; politely requesting a needed seat is appropriate social behavior.
Writing
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

How to Get What You Want

Historical examples of powerful women demonstrate that independent thinking and strategic action enable individuals to achieve their goals despite systemic constraints.
fromwww.npr.org
2 weeks ago

Katie da Cunha Lewin's 'The Writer's Room' examines the spaces where authors work

She wrote 10 books while she was here, and that includes children's books, you know, volumes of poetry. It was a busy and bustling place back then. Lucille and her husband, Fred Clifton, had six kids running around. Neighbors were in and out. Artist friends were over constantly. But Lucille Clifton managed to carve out time and space to write.
Writing
fromThe Art Newspaper - International art news and events
1 week ago

Artist creates the world's first scent-lending library

It's kind of crazy, but I just get ideas all the time. I genuinely thought: wouldn't it be cool if you could borrow scents like books? And would that work? Would people do it? Would they just think it was stupid? So far, no one seems to think it is stupid.
Writing
Writing
fromTODAY.com
1 week ago

8-Year-Old Shares His 'Greatest Accomplishment Yet' ... And It's Weirdly Impressive

An 8-year-old from Iowa became an internet sensation by using the same pencil since August and sharpening it down to a tiny stub, sparking widespread nostalgia among online users.
Writing
fromBusiness Matters
1 week ago

Mara Naaman: A Literary Voice Shaping Culture

Building a life around ideas means prioritizing process and learning over outcomes and external validation, enabling deeper intellectual and creative growth.
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

What If You're Fundamentally Not Flawed?

But we are all as an unclean thing, and all our righteousness are as filthy rags; and we all do fade as a leaf; and our iniquities, like the wind, have taken us away. It was bracing language for an 8-year-old. Not only was I unclean, but even my best attempt at goodness was filthy.
Writing
fromMedium
1 week ago

Things that don't matter when you write

To deny one's own experiences is to put a lie into the lips of one's own life. It is no less than a denial of the soul. The concept I stick to - my core principle - is simple: I write in plain English, and only when I actually have something to say.
Writing
Writing
fromKqed
1 week ago

A Glimpse of Iran Through the Eyes of its Artists and Journalists

Iranian-American artists and writers explore diaspora, identity, and historical trauma through poetry, fiction, and documentary, examining the lasting impact of political upheaval and U.S. intervention on Iranian communities.
Writing
fromVulture
1 week ago

Harry Styles Doesn't Owe Us His Grief

Harry Styles struggles to articulate his grief over Liam Payne's death, finding it difficult to express deep personal loss publicly despite public expectations for him to do so.
Writing
fromAnOther
1 week ago

Artist Rose Wylie: "You Have to Have Self-Belief if You Paint Big"

Rose Wylie, at 91, celebrates her largest retrospective at the Royal Academy, featuring 90 paintings spanning her extraordinary career as a late-blooming artist who resumed painting in her fifties after raising children.
Writing
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 week ago

Love Story': John Kennedy Jr. and Carolyn Bessette, or when headlines ruin everything that could, for once, be real

Ryan Murphy's Love Story anthology series dramatizes the relationship between JFK Jr. and Carolyn Bessette Kennedy, beginning with their fatal 1999 plane crash and then tracing their romance from its beginning.
Writing
fromItsnicethat
1 week ago

Submerge yourself in the hazy vignettes of Xueting Yang's comic collection, Teeth

An illustrator creates emotionally layered visual narratives by capturing hidden psychological depths through minimalist aesthetics inspired by Japanese and Chinese cultural traditions, using softened imagery to evoke memory and partial clarity.
fromVulture
1 week ago

Paul McCartney Still Holds a Grudge About His Belated Rock Hall Induction

I said, 'Yeah, sure.' Then I put the phone down. I thought, Well, what about me? I'm not inducted. Now John's going to go in. The thing about John Lennon and McCartney was we were always equal. But, of course, once John got murdered, he became the martyr - the Buddy Holly, the James Dean character - because of the atrocity. So a revisionism started to go on.
Writing
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Drusilla Beyfus obituary

Drusilla Beyfus became a pioneering female Fleet Street journalist at 21 in 1948, later redefining etiquette as considerate behavior rather than rigid correctness.
fromDefector
1 week ago

Yoko Tawada Is A Genius In Any Language | Defector

The best argument I can make for why I like reading fiction in translation is because it facilitates the psychedelic experience of encountering someone else's subjectivity twice over. The translator must act as a prismatic filter, faithfully attempting the impossible task of replicating someone else's experiences and ideas. To read in translation is to read two stories in harmony with each other: The one the author wants to tell and the one the translator has brought into your linguistic world.
Writing
Writing
fromThe New Yorker
2 weeks ago

The Tree House and the Oil Pipeline

Climate activists occupied a tree house to physically block construction of an oil pipeline in Vancouver, using direct action as a protest tool against fossil fuel infrastructure.
#virginia-woolf
fromPsychology Today
2 weeks ago
Writing

Virginia Woolf and the Reclaiming of Attention

Virginia Woolf's stream-of-consciousness technique demonstrates how attention shapes consciousness and remains relevant to contemporary struggles against digital distraction.
fromThe New Yorker
1 month ago
Writing

The Myth of the Perfect Writer's Room

Creative work often arises in ordinary, cluttered, shared, or constrained spaces rather than in idealized secluded retreats.
Writing
fromPsychology Today
2 weeks ago

Virginia Woolf and the Reclaiming of Attention

Virginia Woolf's stream-of-consciousness technique demonstrates how attention shapes consciousness and remains relevant to contemporary struggles against digital distraction.
Writing
fromIndependent
2 weeks ago

Ciara Kelly: It feels like I've been warding off a deep sadness since my beloved sister's death and I need a break. So, I'm signing off for a while

Losing a sibling to cancer differs profoundly from other grief experiences because siblings represent lifelong companionship and shared history from childhood.
#narrative-structure
Writing
fromThe New Yorker
2 weeks ago

Yiyun Li on Stories That Happen Twice

Retrospective narrative reveals how stories gain completeness through the knowledge of future events, transforming present moments into layered reflections on fate and identity.
fromFuturism
2 weeks ago

Startup Generates Caring Letters to Your Friends Using AI, Handwrites Them Using Robot Pen

In an age where we are all drowning in electronic communication, handwritten notes really stand out. The company's website brags that its robo-scrawl is virtually indistinguishable from human writing, produced with unmatched speed, quality, and realism through a large language model that generates content and a proprietary robot that inks it onto stationary.
Writing
Writing
fromEsquire
2 weeks ago

The Lost Art of Writing a Note by Hand

Handwritten letters have become rare due to digital communication, but writing them remains a meaningful way to express thoughtfulness and create lasting impressions.
Writing
fromForbes
2 weeks ago

5 Techniques To Write A Strong Professional Bio For Career Advancement

Professional bios should authentically introduce you as a person while highlighting credentials, expertise, and professional identity to shape your personal brand and reputation.
Writing
fromDefector
2 weeks ago

What I Learned From My Annoyingly Long Correspondence With "Elena Ferrante" | Defector

An AI-generated scam email impersonating Elena Ferrante used phrases from published book descriptions to deceive an author, revealing how AI can convincingly mimic famous writers while containing telltale signs of fabrication upon scrutiny.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 weeks ago

I paid people with pints and chips': Georgina Duncan on the prize-winning play she tapped out on her phone

Sapling won the Women's playwriting prize; the Belfast-set drama examines teenage grief and the long, community-defining scars left by past violence.
Writing
fromVulture
3 weeks ago

The Horny Girls Who Walked So Heated Rivalry Could Run

M/M slash fanfiction, often written by women and known as BL in Asia, evolved through fandoms like Star Trek, enabling mainstream successes like Heated Rivalry.
Writing
fromThe Atlantic
3 weeks ago

Two Portraits of My Father in a Tree

On a Christmas climb, companions tie coats to trees, relieve heat, then face darkness and cold as one climbs a pine seeking home.
Writing
fromwww.aljazeera.com
3 weeks ago

Where are the most endangered languages in the world?

Over 7,000 languages exist worldwide, with roughly 44 percent endangered and major languages like English and Mandarin dominating global use.
Writing
fromThe Atlantic
3 weeks ago

The 'Hopeless Labor' of Writing

AI chatbots and delivery robots threaten traditional writing by offering frictionless ease, undermining the pedagogical value of sustained effort and arduous composition.
Writing
fromEsquire
3 weeks ago

Tom Junod Finally Reckons with What It Means to Be a Man

Tom Junod contemplates personal ambiguity in the South while reflecting on a long career probing diverse, provocative subjects and confronting historical memory.
fromMetro Silicon Valley | Silicon Valley's Leading Weekly
3 weeks ago

Venita Blackburn in San Jose | Metro Silicon Valley | Silicon Valley's Leading Weekly

The Center for Literary Arts presents acclaimed author Venita Blackburn, Compton-born creative writing professor and founder of Live, Write, an organization offering free creative writing workshops.
Writing
Writing
fromHi-Fructose Magazine - The New Contemporary Art Magazine
3 weeks ago

Sometimes You Just Have To Hug That Walrus: The Humorously Surreal Paintings of Bruno Pontiroli Twist Our Relationship with the Animal World - Hi-Fructose Magazine

Pontiroli's paintings reuse recurring hybrid characters and animate inanimate motifs to create playful, surreal poem-images combining animals, humans, and flesh-like objects.
#crossword
Writing
fromMedium
4 weeks ago

Get behind me, AI writer

Write a full draft freely, then use ChatGPT to identify sources, correct citations, and preserve the writer's authentic voice while integrating proper references.
Writing
fromwww.computer.org
1 month ago

Professional LinkedIn Profile Template

Optimize LinkedIn profiles with relevant keywords, updated content, clear contact details, and organized sections to maximize employer discoverability.
Writing
fromOpen Culture
1 month ago

Jack Kerouac Lists 9 Essentials for Writing Spontaneous Prose

Writing should be a rapid, breath-driven, associative outpouring that privileges rhythm, immediacy, and improvisation over revision and strict grammatical correctness.
fromHigh Country News
1 month ago

Cote - High Country News

I walk the fencerow with the men,blaze-orange vest draped like a gown.I am too young to have the gunin season when we are afield the string of pearls the wounds can make.
Writing
Writing
fromThe New Yorker
1 month ago

The End of Books Coverage at the Washington Post

Closing the Washington Post's books coverage diminishes serendipitous literary criticism and reduces diverse cultural engagement for general-interest newspaper readers.
fromOregon ArtsWatch * Arts & Culture News
1 month ago

Steve Arndt, ambassador of Portland's literary community, dies at age 77 * Oregon ArtsWatch

Anytime an Oregon author, or any other prominent writer, gave a reading at Powell's Books, Steve Arndt would show up early, sometimes by a couple hours, and reserve front-row seats for his fellow writers. He wanted the writer giving the reading to know they had the support of Portland's literary community. His friends say that habit embodies Arndt's kindness, generosity, thoughtfulness, and the way he fostered and strengthened a sense of community in Portland's literary scene.
Writing
Writing
fromLos Angeles Times
1 month ago

The poet laureate with a bold plan to get Boyle Heights students into the woods - and on the stage

Feng Shui Poetry in the Parks uses poetry and feng shui principles to connect urban Los Angeles students with nature, fostering grounding and environmental appreciation.
Writing
fromThe Atlantic
1 month ago

Literary Theory

Words carry multiple meanings; 'swallow' embodies both bird and ingestion, showing language's power to alter perception and emotional states.
fromSilicon Canals
1 month ago

7 things people do when telling stories that make others tune out immediately without realizing it - Silicon Canals

We've all been there. Someone starts telling a story, and within seconds, your mind starts wandering. Maybe you pull out your phone, suddenly remember an urgent email, or find yourself mentally reorganizing your weekend plans. The storyteller doesn't notice. They keep going, completely unaware that they've lost their audience. After interviewing over 200 people for various articles, I've noticed patterns in how people communicate their experiences. Some captivate you from the first word, while others lose you before they've even gotten to the point.
Writing
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Are There Linguistic Conspiracy Theories?

The term "conspiracy theory" calls to mind a variety of dubious claims and controversies, like rumors about Area 51, claims that the Earth is flat, and the movement known as QAnon. At first blush, these phenomena would seem to have little in common with bogus word origins. But there are a variety of false etymologies that spread virally and refuse to go away, in much the same way that stories about chemtrails, black helicopters, and UFOs refuse to die.
Writing
Writing
fromThe Walrus
1 month ago

Two Poems | The Walrus

A widow keeps her late husband's underpants as haunting, domestic relics while a ghostly presence from him recedes as she starts intimacy with someone new.
Writing
fromSilicon Canals
1 month ago

J.K. Rowling's 12 rejections prove most people quit too early - Silicon Canals

Persistent effort through repeated rejection often leads to success; quitting early prevents potential breakthrough achievements.
Writing
fromUFC
1 month ago

Fight By Fight Preview | UFC Fight Night: Bautista vs Oliveira

Thomas Gerbasi teased the narrator about their enduring passion for the sport, its athletes, and the week-to-week excitement that never dimmed after a decade.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

The pet I'll never forget: Cocolo, the donkey who arrived unexpectedly at our door

A family acquires a donkey named Cocolo in Jerusalem, creating vivid childhood memories, neighborhood tensions, and eventual separation when Cocolo is sent to a farm.
fromABA Journal
1 month ago

Should the bottom line be up front? Only with context, Bryan Garner says

Many lawyers have eagerly adopted the buzzword "BLUF"-bottom line up front-as if invoking the acronym were synonymous with careful thinking. The catch is that almost no one stops to ask the important question: What exactly is meant by "bottom line"? The answer isn't obvious, and it shifts with context. In military writing, the "bottom line" is a concrete decision or action a commander must take-stated at the very start because the commander already knows the mission, the terrain and the stakes.
Writing
Writing
fromThe New Yorker
1 month ago

The Brilliance and the Badness of "The Sun Also Rises"

A narrative that outwardly endorses bravery, nature, and grace is fundamentally held together by hatred.
fromThe New Yorker
1 month ago

Why Shouldn't We Let Demons Do Homework?

A crack of thunder, a flash of light, and a sulfurous mist flooded my apartment. Marax, President of Hell, stood before me. Marax entered my summoning circle, eyes burning with unholy fire, and I gave him the stack of homework to flip through while I brushed my teeth. Marax marked up the papers and fleshed out my bullet points into thoughtful feedback before I even got to my molars. Then-three hours of my life, saved!-I banished him back to Hell.
Writing
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