Jane Haddam

  • Books by Jane Haddam / Orania Papazoglou
  • Books by William L. Deandrea
  • Books by Matthew Deandrea
  • Blog
  • R&W – Main Page
    • R&W – Lists – American Lists
      • Bah! Humbug!
      • R&W – Lists – American Lists
        • R&W – Lists – The American List
    • R&W – Commentaries
      • R&W – Commentary – Jonathan Edwards
    • R&W – The Western Canon According to Me
    • Essay – An Essay for Larisa
    • R&W – Introduction
    • R&W – Canonball Run
  • Links
  • Biography
Illustration of a bird flying.
  • Sheff vs. O’Neill

    The title today refers to a law suit filed in the state of Connecticut over twenty years ago by parents of students in the Hartford Public Schools, demanding that Connecticut either provide equal funding for all the state’s schools or allow students from inner city systems (like Hartford’s) to attend neighboring suburban schools (like those…

    May 18, 2009
  • And Then…

    Well, I’d like to start by saying at I’m really impressed by Mique’s experiences quitting smoking.  My experience was hell on wheels.  Bill used to say that my quitting smoking was the hardest thing he ever did, including dealing with cancer.   I wrote an entire book I couldn’t remember, and I was a bitch on wheels…

    May 17, 2009
  • How It Works

    Let me start by trying to address some of the issues Cheryl brought up. She says she’s never seen a number so low for the percentage of people who start trying to quit or enter rehab who actually end up clean and sober. The benchmarks for that are actually fairly straightforward.  Nobody says “cured.”  They…

    May 16, 2009
  • Do What Works. Or, You Know, Not.

    Here’s the thing.  I’m a firm believer in the idea that everything that survives serves a function, even if it’s not the function we think it’s supposed to be serving.  But the fact remains that a lot of what we do does not serve the function we say we want it to serve, and not…

    May 14, 2009
  • What Works

    So–Lymaree thinks the system isn’t working, Robert and Mary think it is. I think it sort of is. First, Robert is of course right–to a large extent, the purpose of demanding a degree has nothing to do with anything the applicant has learned, and everything to do with the fact that a meritocracy needs to…

    May 13, 2009
  • Results

    Well, to start, I want to say that I  didn’t mean to imply that the phenomenon  I was talking about–the tendency to do end runs around institutionalized systems of credentialing–was inherently American or inherently capitalistic.  It just is, and I think it’s an enormous advantage when we’re operating in a world where so many advanced…

    May 12, 2009
  • So Anyway

    I’m back again, sort of.  I’m finished blogging over at Moments in Crime, at any rate, but today I’ve been too messed up to actually get anything sensible written, or even thought about. So, a couple of things. First, the fortieth reunion of my high school class in coming up, organized largely by a woman…

    May 11, 2009
  • Just a Note

    I haven’t disappeared.  I’m blogging at http://www.momentsincrime.com this week.

    May 5, 2009
  • The Sokal Hoax

    Ah.  Great.  I’d forgotten that one, and it’s about the best introduction to what I see as The Problem in the Humanities as I can find. Sokal and his partner wrote a book about his experiences with Social Text, which was the journal that published his joke article, but even the name of the journal…

    May 3, 2009
  • Two Cultures

    Over at Arts and Letters  Daily, there was a link today to an article about C.P. Snow’s famous essay on the mental and cultural divisions between “literary intellectuals” (in which he included all the Humanities) and “natural scientists.” Called “The  Two Cultures,” it outlined what Snow thought at the time were the major reasons for…

    May 2, 2009
←Previous Page
1 … 107 108 109 110 111 … 128
Next Page→

Jane Haddam

Proudly powered by WordPress