Skip to main content

Posts

Featured

iterations

The penultimate semester of my undergrad career in fall of 1996, I found myself driving to campus one night a week for a 4 hour long seminar in Tudor-Stuart history. While I had had many evening classes, this was the first one that was formatted entirely as a lecture class, which was a different 4 hours than the ones I had spent in more workshop courses. I don't remember which Henry we started with, but my only memory was the several weeks where we talked about Henry VIII and all his wives. It was equal parts scholarship and gossip, and I looked forward to it, and would show up eagerly with a giant coffee and a notebook and pen. History was a humanities requirement at RC, so I didn't really take any classes in it beyond a semester of contemporary history (ie 1945-90s) during my community college semester. I was required, however, as an English major, even one who took far many more classes in American Lit and Drama than English ones, to take at least one British history seminar...

Latest Posts

more scenes from wintering

holiday hauntings

self-publishing diaries | the final stretch

more scenes from wintering

who tells your story

scenes from the art advent

coming december 1st...

the rest is silence and snow

on gratefulness

sticking it out

swine daughter

novembers

notes & things | 11/16/2026

call for submissions: dangerous terrain

naming the beast: more on titles and taxonomy

in which the poet writes a play

the gothic landscape

curation vs gatekeeping

horror on stage