Thursday, March 19, 2026

Hans Christian Andersen / The Brave Tin Soldier

THE 

BRAVE TIN SOLDIER 


A fairytale by Hans Christian Andersen



There were once five-and-twenty tin soldiers, who were all brothers, for they had been made out of the same old tin spoon. They shouldered arms and looked straight before them, and wore a splendid uniform, red and blue. The first thing in the world they ever heard were the words, "Tin soldiers!" uttered by a little boy, who clapped his hands with delight when the lid of the box, in which they lay, was taken off. They were given him for a birthday present, and he stood at the table to set them up. The soldiers were all exactly alike, excepting one, who had only one leg; he had been left to the last, and then there was not enough of the melted tin to finish him, so they made him to stand firmly on one leg, and this caused him to be very remarkable.1222

‘We’re losing accessibility’: America says goodbye to the mass-market paperback

 


‘We’re losing accessibility’: America says goodbye to the mass-market paperback

The so-called ‘pocket book’ sold in supermarkets is being phased out across the US, the latest sign of an ongoing shift in how people are choosing to 


David Smith in Washington
Tuesday 24 February 2026

Shelly Romero has early memories of going to her local supermarket and picking pulp fiction off the shelves. “We were very working class; my mom was working two jobs sometimes,” she recalls. “The appeal of books being cheaper and smaller and able to be carried around was definitely a thing.

Carmen Boullosa / Quotes

Carmen Boullosa

QUOTES
by Carmen Boullosa

Women are allowed to enter the spaces of the senses, the space of the body, the spaces opened by sensations, all kinds of feelings, but women are not allowed to enter the spaces of reason to the same extent, that is to say the space of ideas, political ideas. 
Even though language has its richness the relationship between language and the writer is always like a stone and you have to make the stone human. 
I was an angel of the desert. In your arms I broke my wings. .
Some people die, others just run out of fuel. 
The name Cleopatra wakens the world to life.

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

‘We all went crazy for her’: ‘One Deadly Summer,’ the tragic movie that made Isabelle Adjani a legend

 

Isabelle Adjani in 'One Deadly Summer,' the film in which she made the transition from a pale, long-suffering tragic heroine to a calculated, irresistible criminal mind.FILMS PRODUCTIONS (ALBUM) (TF1 FILMS PRODUCTIONS / ALBUM)


‘We all went crazy for her’: ‘One Deadly Summer,’ the tragic movie that made Isabelle Adjani a legend

It’s been 40 years since the now-classic sultry French film noir premiered and made its leading actress a sex symbol

Irving Penn / Women


The Twelve Most Photographed Models
NY 1947
Irving Penn
WOMEN
Lisa Fonssagrives wearing a bicorne skimmer by Lilly Daché
Vogue, February 15, 1950


Freckles

The secret lives of six body doubles: ‘They wanted Julia Roberts to have curvier legs

 

Lookalikes … left, Michael B Jordan in Sinners, where he plays twins; right, Percy Bell, his body double. Composite: Warner Bros Pictures; Kevin Wurm

The secret lives of six body doubles: ‘They wanted Julia Roberts to have curvier legs’

What is it like to be Michael B Jordan’s twin, Andie MacDowell’s hands or Rachel Weisz’s hair? Some of Hollywood’s best stand-ins reveal 

Lucy Knight
17 March 2026

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

Hans Christian Andersen / The Little Mermaid


THE 

LITTLE MERMAID 



A fairytale by Hans Christian Andersen


Far out in the ocean, where the water is as blue as the prettiest cornflower, and as clear as crystal, it is very, very deep; so deep, indeed, that no cable could fathom it: many church steeples, piled one upon another, would not reach from the ground beneath to the surface of the water above. There dwell the Sea King and his subjects. We must not imagine that there is nothing at the bottom of the sea but bare yellow sand. No, indeed; the most singular flowers and plants grow there; the leaves and stems of which are so pliant, that the slightest agitation of the water causes them to stir as if they had life. Fishes, both large and small, glide between the branches, as birds fly among the trees here upon land. In the deepest spot of all, stands the castle of the Sea King. Its walls are built of coral, and the long, gothic windows are of the clearest amber. The roof is formed of shells, that open and close as the water flows over them. Their appearance is very beautiful, for in each lies a glittering pearl, which would be fit for the diadem of a queen.

"Heart of Darkness" Review



"Heart of Darkness" Review


Written by Joseph Conrad on the eve of the century that would see the end of the empire that it so significantly critiques, Heart of Darkness is both an adventure story set at the center of a continent represented through breathtaking  poetry, as well as a study of the inevitable corruption that comes from the exercise of tyrannical power.

The best recent science fiction, fantasy and horror – review roundup



Review

The best recent science fiction, fantasy and horror – review roundup

The Library of Traumatic Memory by Neil Jordan; The Red Winter by Cameron Sullivan; Travel Light by Naomi Mitchison; Between Two Fires by Christopher Buehlman; Spoiled Milk by Avery Curran


Lisa Tuttle

Friday 13 March 2026


Neil Jordan - The Library of Traumatic Memory

The Library of Traumatic Memory by Neil Jordan (Head of Zeus£20) 
Better known as a film-maker, Jordan has never stopped writing novels. His latest opens in 2084 in rural Ireland, where Christian Cartwright works for the Huxley Institute in the titular library, secretly misusing its memory storage technology to talk with his dead lover Isolde, restoring her to a semblance of digital life. The story moves between Christian’s experiences and similar events two centuries earlier in the life of his ancestor, Montagu Cartwright, the architect responsible for the Huxley Mansion and local church, who owned an ancient obsidian mirror, believed to have been the famous scrying glass of John Dee. Lyrically written, brimming with ideas, sometimes sinister and often humorous, it’s an enchanting read.

Monday, March 16, 2026

Brendan Lemon / Danilo Kiš

Danilo Kiš
Poster by T.A.

A Conversation with

Danilo Kiš

 By Brendan Lemon


From “The Review of Contemporary Fiction,” 
Spring 1994, Vol. 14.1

I met Danilo Kis for the first time at his Paris apartment on the day of our interview—a cool, overcast afternoon in May 1984. Kis hadn’t been part of my original business in France. On the flight over from New York I had run into a writer friend who happened to be reading the French version of Kis’s novel Hourglass, and this friend, who was doing some uncredited work on the English translation of the book which was then in progress, urged me to buy a copy of the novel as soon as I arrived. If I liked it, he said, he could help me arrange an interview with the author. To shorten a long story, a few days later I found myself arriving at Kis’s tenth-arrondissement apartment building, tape recorder in hand. With gruff graciousness, the author ushered me into a modest-sized flat and, after procuring me a whiskey, over to a table abutting the door to a small balcony. We spoke for a couple of hours, in French, before a suddenly active telephone made it clear that it would be prudent to depart.

The Forgotten Russian / The Genius of Nikolai Leskov LISTO



The Forgotten Russian: The Genius of Nikolai Leskov

We all know about Tolstoy, Chekhov, and Dostoevsky, but what about their compatriot, Nikolai Leskov? Benjamin Lytal is baffled and delighted by this forgotten genius, whose work has been freshly introduced by translation superstars Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokhonsky.

Saul Bellow’s Spectacular Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech on How Art and Literature Ennoble the Human Spirit

Saul Bellow


Saul Bellow’s Spectacular Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech on How Art and Literature Ennoble the Human Spirit

“Only art penetrates … the seeming realities of this world. There is another reality, the genuine one, which we lose sight of. This other reality is always sending us hints, which without art, we can’t receive.”

In a 1966 interviewSaul Bellow (June 10, 1915–April 5, 2005) articulated the seed of what would blossom into a central concern of his life, and of our culture: “Art has something to do with the achievement of stillness in the midst of chaos. A stillness which characterizes prayer, too, in the eye of the storm… Art has something to do with an arrest of attention in the midst of distraction.” A quarter century later — already an elder with a Pulitzer Prize, a National Medal of Arts, and a Nobel Prize under his belt — Bellow would come to explore this duality more deliberately in his stirring essay on how artists and writers save us from the “moronic inferno” of distraction.

Sunday, March 15, 2026

‘His friendship changed my life’: 25 years of camaraderie with Robert Duvall

Robert Duvall and Scott Cooper


‘His friendship changed my life’: 25 years of camaraderie with Robert Duvall

Film-maker Scott Cooper describes how his small role in a civil war drama starring Duvall led to a happy, lifelong friendship with the great actor



Scott Cooper
Wednesday 18 February 2026


Ifirst met Robert Duvall in a muddy field in Maryland in 2001, on the set of Gods and Generals. It was a Warner Bros civil war epic, the kind of production where the scale alone made you feel small. I was playing a low-ranking Confederate aide-de-camp to General Stonewall Jackson. I was young, unsure of myself, and painfully aware of exactly where I stood in the hierarchy of things.

The life, death and resurrection of Ethan Hawke’s Hollywood career: ‘I was only 30, and I was washed up’

 

Ethan Hawke, Pedro Almodóvar y Pedro Pascal


The life, death and resurrection of Ethan Hawke’s Hollywood career: ‘I was only 30, and I was washed up’ 

The star of Pedro Almodóvar’s latest film has been in show business for four decades despite remaining true to his principles and his reluctance to become a mainstream actor


Eva Güimil
EVA GÜIMIL
JUN 03, 2023 - 10:21 COT

Ethan Hawke is proud of his crooked teeth. When a former agent asked him to fix them, he got angry. “I watched the Oscars on TV a few years ago, and they all looked like they were pod people. They looked so fake. And then crazy Sean Penn got on stage, and I thought to myself, ‘There’s a human being.’” He decided that day that he wouldn’t get his teeth fixed. “I just hate how homogenized people want us all to be. Nobody ever talks about Eleanor Roosevelt’s crooked teeth, because she was a woman of substance. And we don’t talk about how Mother Teresa would have been better if she could have lost 15 pounds, because she was a woman of God.”

‘If you don’t have his money and charisma, forget it’: is it possible to imitate John-John Kennedy without looking ridiculous?

John Kennedy Jr. in 1995 in one of his most memorable looks: head-to-toe white and backwards baseball cap.LAWRENCE SCHWARTZWALD (LAWRENCE SCHWARTZWALD)


‘If you don’t have his money and charisma, forget it’: is it possible to imitate John-John Kennedy without looking ridiculous?

Since the premiere of the series ‘Love Story’, it’s become popular to emulate JFK Jr.’s much-adored son — but good luck replicating his ‘90s blend of elegance and self-confidence

MARTA REPRESA
MAR 12, 2026 

The Kennedys are once again a topic of conversation, and this time, it’s not due to RFK Jr. reminiscing about doing lines of cocaine off a toilet seat or killing a bear and abandoning its body in Central Park. Love Story, the talked-about Ryan Murphy that series reconstructs the relationship between John Kennedy Jr. and Carolyn Bessette, who died together in an airplane crash along with her sister in 1999, has dazzled Generation Z. A few days ago, news broke that one of Carolyn’s jackets had sold at auction for $192,000. The show’s fans are upbraiding Calvin Klein for no longer producing the same kind of clothes as in the era the series portrays. And in the month that has passed since its debut, there’s been no end to articles in men’s magazines explaining how one might emulate John-John’s style, not to mention the videos of influencers dressed up as him, and even look-a-like contests.

Saturday, March 14, 2026

Jackie Kennedy and the billion dollar nude: 50 years since the first case of ‘revenge porn’


Jackie Kennedy on Skorpios (Greece) in July 1975.ANASTASSELIS POLYDOROS (GAMMA-RAPHO VIA GETTY IMAGES)


Jackie Kennedy and the billion dollar nude: 50 years since the first case of ‘revenge porn’

In 1973, ‘Screw’ magazine published unauthorized photographs of the former first lady of the United States sunbathing naked on the Greek island of Skorpios. The man who leaked the images was her own husband, the Greek magnate Aristotle Onassis




Martín Bianchi
MARTÍN BIANCHI
Madrid - SEP 11, 2023 - 13:31 COT

“Sometimes I have to undress to put on my bathing suit. My wife does the same thing,” commented an unperturbed Aristotle Onassis when journalists showed him a copy of the Italian magazine Playmen in December 1972. In that issue, his wife, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, widow of President John F. Kennedy, appeared completely naked during her summer vacation on the private island of Skorpios (Greece). The Greek tycoon did not seem surprised or outraged by the unauthorized images of Jackie, then 43, as God had brought her into the world: sunbathing bikini-less, carefree, and without losing her graceful demeanor as a former student of Miss Porter’s School in Connecticut.