From the same story, Oliver at his desk with
- notebook
- fountain pen
- typewriter
- PC with WordPerfect installed
What more could a writer need?
From the same story, Oliver at his desk with
What more could a writer need?
Teaching The Nine Tailors to 16 first-year students and they are into it. I am rather shocked by their enthusiasm. We’re three-fourths of the way through — I wonder how they will feel about the ending. 📚
I like to visit the corner of our department where we keep office supplies, which I adore. Pencils, pens, highlighters; sticky notes in all sizes and colors; manila folders; printing paper in seven — seven — colors; four sizes of binder clips. I stand there mesmerized and imagine uses for them all.
A powerful and much-needed word from Sara Hendren, AKA @ablerism:
I think the clamor among young people to gather diagnostic names for imperfection — every imperfection, from the clinically serious and undertreated to the elaborate neologisms for capturing ordinary variability and performed eccentricity — begs for more sustained philosophical inquiry. If bodily or cognitive imperfection is not merely a mechanical glitch, what is it? How do we countenance it, make meaning alongside it, make our uneasy peace with its inevitable arrival? Young people need our patient accompaniment to ask these questions. They’ve already been abandoned once to the algorithms. I won’t abandon them again with scorn.
You’ll never hear a better version of “Amazing Grace” than this. Indirectly via Ted Gioia. ♫
My friend and colleague David Corey told me that this is how he explains to his students how musical fugues work. What a cool animation.
Yeah, sure, y’all keep looking stuff up on the “internet,” I’ll just be over here with my REFERENCE BOOKS.
It seems, my dear friend, that the brains of the greatest men contract when they are gathered together, and that where there are more wise men, there you will also find less wisdom. The great assemblies are so preoccupied with minutiae, with formalities, and with empty orthodoxies, that essential issues are always relegated to the end.
— Montesquieu, The Persian Letters
I approve of the design and typography of this poster.
Decades ago I started porting my Desires and Preferences to my Reason, but WOW are there still a zillion bugs in the code.
Real talk:
Sometimes less really is more.
Currently reading: Passions of the Soul by Rowan Williams. This book is exactly what I need right now. 📚
Ove at the Hog Blog, I wrote about how Montesquieu teaches us the value of triangulation. (That may sound somewhat forbidding, but I promise, it’s an accessible post.)
The primary work of the Cardozo Kindersley Workshop is letter cutting in stone, and you couldn’t find a better example than this:
You can pursue a three-year apprenticeship at the Workshop, and I am greatly tempted to apply.
Stone carving by the Cardozo Kindersley Workshop for Clare College, Cambridge.
TIL (from John McWhorter) that long ago the opposite of business or busyness was busiless.