Steve Donoghue
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Steve Donoghue

Steve's Posts from the Open Letters Monthly Archive

Steve Donoghue’s posts from the original Open Letters Monthly Archives.

Steve Donoghue
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April 30, 2008

Absent Friends: Gentle Poet

April 30, 2008/ Steve Donoghue

At a poetry reading on the Palatine 2,000 years ago, you’d have spent a week’s pay to hear him read. Today he’s unknown, except to our Steve Donoghue (and a few of our readers, no doubt). Here, after a long time gone, is the Roman poet Tibullus.

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April 30, 2008/ Steve Donoghue/
Literary Criticism, Poetry, Absent Friends
Absent Friends, literary criticism, May 2008, Poetry, Steve Donoghue
April 29, 2008

Book Review: Surprised by Hope

April 29, 2008/ Steve Donoghue

N.T. Wright's book of theology earns its allusion to C.S. Lewis' Surprised by Joy. Steve Donoghue reviews.

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April 29, 2008/ Steve Donoghue/
Religion & Philosophy
April 2008, Book Review, C-S- Lewis, N-T- Wright, religion, Steve Donoghue, theology
March 31, 2008

Destruction Manual

March 31, 2008/ Steve Donoghue

Plotlessness, gimmickry, tin-eared dialogue, navel-gazing, heavy-handed symbolism: Howard Mittelmark and Sandra Newman lovingly abuse these and other writerly sins in How Not to Write a Novel, and Steve Donoghue joins in their Bronx cheer

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March 31, 2008/ Steve Donoghue/
April 2008, Book Review, fiction, howard mittlemark, sandra newman, Steve Donoghue
April 01, 2008

Irredeemable

April 01, 2008/ Steve Donoghue

Jane Boleyn took the witness stand and falsely testified that her brother committed incest with her sister-in-law, Anne Boleyn. In this installment of his “Year with the Tudors,” Steve Donoghue tries to fathom the motives of such slander.

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April 01, 2008/ Steve Donoghue/
Politics & History
April 2008, England, history, Steve Donoghue, the tudors
April 01, 2008

Absent Friends: With a Little Help from Saint Martin

April 01, 2008/ Steve Donoghue

Steve Donoghue exhumes the sprawling, illuminating writing of Gregory of Tours, the wrongly forgotten 12th-century saint, historian, and natural-born raconteur

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April 01, 2008/ Steve Donoghue/
Absent Friends, Politics & History
Absent Friends, April 2008, biography, Gregory of Tours, history, Saint Martin, Steve Donoghue
March 21, 2008

Book Review: Quiver

March 21, 2008/ Steve Donoghue

Does Peter Leonard's thriller "Quiver" stand up to the work of his famous father Elmore?

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March 21, 2008/ Steve Donoghue/
Fiction
Book Review, Elmore Leonard, fiction, March 2008, Peter Leonard, Steve Donoghue
March 19, 2008

Book Review: The Rain Before it Falls

March 19, 2008/ Steve Donoghue

Jonathan Coe's The Rain Before it Falls tells the multigenerational tale of women from World War II to the present era

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March 19, 2008/ Steve Donoghue/
Fiction
Book Review, fiction, Jonathan Coe, March 2008, Steve Donoghue
March 01, 2008

Strangers to Ourselves

March 01, 2008/ Steve Donoghue

The premise of Dan Ariely’s Predictably Irrational is that all of us are a lot more irrational a lot more often than we thought; Steve Donoghue tries to determine if the inmates really are running the asylum

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March 01, 2008/ Steve Donoghue/
Politics & History
history, March 2008, politics, Steve Donoghue
March 01, 2008 March 01, 2008/ Steve Donoghue

Henry Howard, the Earl of Surrey: commander, courtier, poet. In this installment of his “Year with the Tudors,” Steve Donoghue tells the story of how such an extraordinary young man fell foul of Henry VIII.

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March 01, 2008/ Steve Donoghue/
Politics & History
history, March 2008, Steve Donoghue, the tudors
March 01, 2008

Absent Friends: In Primordial Seas, They Glide

March 01, 2008/ Steve Donoghue

In this regular feature, Steve Donoghue dives deep into the work of James Russell Lowell, whose splendid writing lurks in the basins of bookstore bargain carts, too often passed over for the smaller fry.

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March 01, 2008/ Steve Donoghue/
Absent Friends, Politics & History
history, March 2008, Steve Donoghue absent friends
February 01, 2008 February 01, 2008/ Steve Donoghue

Daniel Walker Howe’s What Hath God Wrought turns on the 1828 presidential race between John Quincy Adams and Andrew Jackson, a tawdry epic of mudslinging the likes of which would not be seen until our own era. Steve Donoghue revisits how it all, alas, began.

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February 01, 2008/ Steve Donoghue/
Politics & History
February 2008, history, Steve Donoghue
January 31, 2008

‘What Wickedness is Here, Hooper?’

January 31, 2008/ Steve Donoghue

Steve Donoghue continues his “Year with the Tudors” with this look at Chris Skidmore’s biography of Edward VI, the ill-starred son of Henry VIII who might have been the most formidable Tudor monarch of all.

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January 31, 2008/ Steve Donoghue/
Politics & History
February 2008, history, Steve Donoghue, the tudors
January 31, 2008

Absent Friends: Oh True Apothecary!

January 31, 2008/ Steve Donoghue

In this regular feature, Steve Donoghue celebrates the books of the 17th-Century physician Nicholas Culpeper, whose medicine may be archaic but whose wisdom and literary merit are by no means obsolete.

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January 31, 2008/ Steve Donoghue/
Science and Technology, Absent Friends, Politics & History
Absent Friends, February 2008, history, science, Steve Donoghue
December 31, 2007

When You See Me, You Know Me

December 31, 2007/ Steve Donoghue

As Steve Donoghue writes, the epitome of what a monarch can be was embodied in the massive form of Henry VIII, and not a year passes without another biographer struggling to tackle the man and his legacy. 2007 was no different….

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December 31, 2007/ Steve Donoghue/
Politics & History, Keeping Up w/ the Tudors
history, January 2008, Keeping up with the tudors, King Henry VIII, Steve Donoghue
January 01, 2008

Absent Friends: Between the River and the Mountains

January 01, 2008/ Steve Donoghue

In our regular feature, Steve Donoghue revisits Giovanni Guareschi’s Little World of Don Camillo, an eternally comforting fictional oasis set in the heart of the Cold War.

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January 01, 2008/ Steve Donoghue/
Fiction, Literary Criticism, Absent Friends
Absent Friends, fiction, January 2008, literary criticism, Steve Donoghue
November 30, 2007

Proper Red Stuff

November 30, 2007/ Steve Donoghue

There was no popular conception of the serial killer in Victorian England in 1888. Jack the Ripper was self-made man, and, as Steve Donoghue writes, no one knows who he was.

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November 30, 2007/ Steve Donoghue/
Politics & History
December 2007, history, Steve Donoghue
November 30, 2007

The Latest from Yasnaya Polyana

November 30, 2007/ Steve Donoghue

With so many versions of War and Peace to choose from, is there anything that translators can do to set themselves apart? Yes, says Steve Donoghue, they can make old mistakes.

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November 30, 2007/ Steve Donoghue/
Fiction, Literary Criticism
December 2007, fiction, literary criticism, Steve Donoghue
November 30, 2007

Proper Read Stuff

November 30, 2007/ Steve Donoghue

Fed up with the abuses of book reviewers, Gail Pool in her book Faint Praise advises editors to supply freelancers with a list of writing guidelines they would have to sign and abide by. Steve Donoghue isn’t quite ready to put his name on the dotted line.

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November 30, 2007/ Steve Donoghue/
Fiction, Literary Criticism
December 2007, fiction, literary criticism, Steve Donoghue
October 31, 2007

Pehin Hanska Ktepi

October 31, 2007/ Steve Donoghue

George Custer knew damn well how many Indians he’d be fighting at Little Bighorn, but the myths of that battle have overcrowded the truth. To sort one from the other, Steve Donoghue charges into a shelf of Custerology.

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October 31, 2007/ Steve Donoghue/
Politics & History
history, November 2007, politics, Steve Donoghue, WWII
October 31, 2007

Oh! Lion in the White House

October 31, 2007/ Steve Donoghue

A good man’s life is rare and pure enough to revisit for its own sake. Steve Donoghue looks back on why Theodore Roosevelt meant so much to so many, and how he earned his spot on that big rock.

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October 31, 2007/ Steve Donoghue/
Politics & History
American Presidents, biographies, history, November 2007, politics, Steve Donoghue, Theodore Roosevelt
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