Our Linktr.ee has every link you need for our socials and podcast platforms.
On the Living Literature podcast feed, I will post episodes that deep dive into a great book, each season like a masterclass on a classic work of literature.
We’re not on *all* the major platforms yet: Still waiting for approval from Apple.
We’re on Amazon Music and Audible!
Subscribe To Our Youtube Channel!
On the Substack’s main feed, I’ll post these in written form, with more context and visuals. Also on the Substack, I will have paid content, including my personal pictures and videos from the places we visit in the literature, along with other exclusive bonus material.
On the “Art In Its Place” Substack sub-feed, I’ll post occasional deep dives into places that you might know from a pop song or short story, and then flesh out the story in full. Usually, these are places I’ve come across in my travels and utterly bored my family with. My first literary trip takes us to London’s “Electric Avenue”: You know the song, but did you know that it’s originally about the Brixton Riots of the early 1980s?
“Portrait of Husband by Wife, While He Reads About the Old Thing He’s Standing in Front Of” (2014). Here, the St Pancras Old Church Graveyard, Where Young Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin Went on Supervised Dates With Percy Bysshe Shelley Four Years Before They Eloped and She Wrote Frankenstein.
On the “Unsentimental Humanities” Substack sub-feed will be articles on the teaching of humanities and history. "Unsentimental Humanities" is an homage to Professor Kevin Dettmar's 2014 article "Dead Poets Society Is a Terrible Defense of the Humanities," which helped me understand how “Dead Poets Society” irreparably harmed my profession. Mr. Keating never actually read Robert Frost and owes J. Evans Pritchard, PhD an apology. Up first is my analysis of the recent article in The Atlantic, “The Elite College Students Who Can’t Read Books.”
They Were Right To Fire Him.