Major Jackson on Greg Delanty’s The Alien, from Selected Delanty, on episode 1133 of The Slowdown.
Read MoreThree Little Books
For the well dressed breast pocket, or top pocket if you prefer, a hanky has been the traditional go to. But it’s a good place for a little book — and The Good Book in the breast pocket saved the life of Sam Houston, Jr., General Sam Houston’s son, at Shiloh, stopping a musket ball. The General lost his governorship in 1861 for refusing to take an oath of allegiance to the Confederacy, but understood the younger Houston’s desire to pursue his military career, a student at the Bastrop Military Institute. Injured at Shiloh and imprisoned at Camp Douglas, Sam Houston, Jr. studied medicine after the war, but later abandoned his practice, in favour of writing.
Fifty pages unbound, folded double in his top pocket, along with his metal spectacles case, slowed a bullet fired from a Colt .38 by unemployed saloonkeeper, John Schrank. Written on the fifty sheets was a fifty minute speech, delivered by the Bull Moose Party leader, who showed his bloodstained shirt and bullet holes in the manuscript, after someone shouted “Fake!” from the crowd, in response to a bodyguard having told the audience of the assassination attempt:
The warning, in part:
Three Little Books every good citizen ought to consider for their top pocket rotation ¹ — for inspiration if not salvation:
And, while we can’t say it will save you, we can say it will fit in your top pocket, one more from Un-Gyve Press:
My neighbor’s pine tree
Is easily the best thing
About my neighbor
HAIKU Harry Thomas
¹ May we suggest this ➢ Faux Leather Zippered Pocket Bible - KJV; it’s available in black and brown. (And, On Deck for Un-Gyve Press: Top Pocket Manuscripts.)
Today, the happiest of turmoils all over the world.
Today, the happiest of turmoils all over the world. Rightly a tribute to the art even more than to the artist, the Nobel triumph – like the art itself – will endure. For the triumph of genius does the heart good, and not only the heart.
Read MoreThe Lyrics. Since 1962 Bob Dylan @bobdylan #1 Best Seller - The Weight: 13.33797 lb
As it was well put by Al Kooper (the man behind the organ on “Like a Rolling Stone”), “Bob is the equivalent of William Shakespeare. What Shakespeare did in his time, Bob does in his time.” Christopher Ricks, editor of T. S. Eliot, Samuel Beckett, Tennyson, and The Oxford Book of English Verse, has no argument with Mr. Kooper’s assessment, and Dylan is attended to accordingly in this authoritative edition of his lyrics.
Read MoreThree Talks by Christopher Ricks
7:30PM | THE KOSCIUSZKO FOUNDATION | 15 EAST 65th STREET, NYC
October 1 More than One Waste Land
October 8 The strength to force the moment to its crisis: Thomas Hardy and George Eliot
October 22 Just Like a Woman? Bob Dylan and the Charge of Misogyny