Deliberate Cruelty: Truman Capote, the Millionaire’s Wife, and the Murder of the CenturyRoseanne Montillo “And the violence that caused the death of Billy Woodward would, as recounted by Truman Capote in 1975, incite fresh violence that would ultimately destroy them both.” When wealthy socialite Ann Woodward shoots her husband Billy in 1955, New York society…
Tag: Popular Science
What I read: June 2024
Breakfast with Seneca: A Stoic Guide to the Art of LivingDavid FidelerNon-fiction, paperback “Virtue, or excellence of one’s inner character, is the only true good.” More than any other ancient philosophy, Stoicism has stood the test of time because of its universal relevance. No matter where/when we live or the specifics of our circumstances, we…
What I read: April 2024
The Making of Home: The 500-Year Story of How Our Houses Became HomesJudith FlandersNon-fiction, paperback “…the woman’s ability to keep house became central: it reflected her value. It was no longer simply a matter of was the house adequately cleaned, scrubbed, polished? It was how the upkeep had been achieved, which measured not hygiene, but…
What I read: March 2024
The Facts of MidlifeRobyn PetermanFiction, audiobook “I’d only been forty for three hours and it was already seriously bad. The solitary hand was the rancid icing on top of a really crappy birthday cake.” Daisy knew that turning 40 would mean some changes — gluing body parts back onto ghosts wasn’t on her bingo card….
What I read: June 2023
The Unexpected Mrs. PollifaxDorothy GilmanFiction, audiobook “It struck her as extremely characterless for any human being to sit around waiting for execution. It wasn’t that she had so much character, thought Mrs. Pollifax, but rather that always in her life she had found it difficult to submit. The list of her small rebellions was endless….