March 2009
Christophobia on the march?
Double-dealing at Wiley-Blackwell: the case of the Encyclopedia of Christian Civilization.
Double-dealing at Wiley-Blackwell: the case of the Encyclopedia of Christian Civilization.
On the regulation of children’s books by the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008.
On The Future of Liberalism by Alan Wolfe.
On Inside the Stalin Archives by Jonathan Brent.
On the classical sources of inspiration and emotional intensity in Riccio’s sculpture.
On the collected works of John Cheever and Blake Bailey’s new biography, Cheever: A Life.
On the life, letters & linguistic genius of William Jones (1746–94).
On Becky Shaw at the Second Stage, The American Plan at the Manhattan Theater Club, and Sleepwalk With Me at the Bleecker Street Theater.
On “Pierre Bonnard: The Late Still Lifes and Interiors” at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, January 27–April 19, 2009.
On “Grand Scale: Monumental Prints in the Age of Dürer and Titian” at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, January 31–April 26, 2009.
On “The Thaw Collection of Master Drawings: Acquisitions Since 2002” at the Morgan Library, New York, January 23, 2009–May 3, 2009.
On “Louise Nevelson: Dawns and Dusks” at Pace Wildenstein.
On Antony and Cleopatra and Rigoletto at the Metropolitan Opera; Gustavo Dudamel and Pinchas Zuckerman with the New York Philharmonic; Vladimir Feltsman at the Metropolitan Museum of Art; Marilyn Horne’s 75th birthday gala at Carnegie Hall; Ricardo Muti with the New York Philharmonic; the Miró Quartet at Weill Recital Hall; Joyce DiDonato at Zankel Hall; James Levine and the Metropolitan Orchestra at Carnegie Hall.
On the ignoble science of boxing’s hangers-on.
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