Those Pandagon Boys

Those Pandagon Boys

So, I have to admit, the idea of asking Moreno to co-author this blog with me was party inspired by Ezra Klein and Jesse Taylor over at Pandagon.net. Here were two young guys, one in Ohio, the other Cali, both interested in politics, both articulate and witty, and...

Above San Diego

A couple nights ago long time friend and fellow caffeine peddler/small plane pilot, Nat took Mei and I up into San Diego’s most inner outasphere. For most of the time we were about 3000 feet above sea level but the ground below us looked teasingly touchable....
Huntington Responds

Huntington Responds

Just after posting that last bit I found a very interesting exchange of letters and a response by Huntington here on the FP website. (they annoyingly ask you to register) Here is what my old advisor, Wayne Cornelius wrote: Wayne Cornelius Gildred Professor of...
Mercy Among the Children by David Adams Richards

Mercy Among the Children by David Adams Richards

Mercy Among the Children is a stunning novel by David Adams Richards. It has nothing to do with international conflict, but a nation at war should stare into its flame … There’s light here for anyone who can stand the considerable heat he generates. Told with racing suspense and a style that swings between gritty realism and Old Testament myth, Mercy Among the Children is a bitter antidote to the proud slogans of war between neighbors or nations. Here is the reason to read fiction.

My email to Ilan Stavans

Earlier this morning I sent the following email a Ilan Stavans – un profe at Amherst y escritor de Spanglish: the making of a new american language. I’ll write a review sobre el libro pronto but what I want to know now is how many of you would help...

The New Americans

On Tuesday night I was able to catch part of Steve James’ (Hoop Dreams) new documetary, The New Americans on PBS. It was really well done and when it comes out, I’m gonna rent it on DVD. Here’s an excerpt from an NYTimes interview: HALE Where did you...
This is not up to my potential

This is not up to my potential

This past week an old high school classmate came into my work – “Miracles Cafe” a small independent seaside coffeehouse – and asked me the inevitable: “So … what are you up to these days?” She said it with such cheerfulness...
Why "El Oso?"

Why "El Oso?"

El Oso means “the bear” in Spanish. It unfortunately carries no sophisticated metaphor whatsoever and is not a literary allusion. Nor is it descriptive: I am a small, approachable white boy – about as fierce as Woody Allen. The story goes like this:...