Author: Doug Thomson

  • Venice Biennale Art Show 2024 – Part 2

    Venice Biennale Art Show 2024 – Part 2

    My wife and I spent April 2024 in Venice, mostly to relax, soak up history and culture, and indulge in more than a few happy hours, mostly centered on drinking Aperol Spritzes and eating cicchetti, the ubiquitous, cheap and addictive Venetian appetizers. But in addition, we chose April in part because we could attend the…

  • Paintings that announce “I’m here”

    Paintings that announce “I’m here”

    My most recent post was about the Venice Biennale art show, which my wife and I visited in April of last year. It was a long one, maybe setting my personal blog-post length record, but that was not because I was going for a record (LOL) but because I wanted to talk about a lot…

  • Venice Biennale Art Show 2024 – Part 1

    Venice Biennale Art Show 2024 – Part 1

    Venice – the one in Italy – alternates two huge fairs, the Architecture Biennale and the Art Biennale, in a tradition that dates all the way back to 1893, when it marked the 25th anniversary of the marriage of King Umberto I of Italy to Margherita of Savoy. In April my wife and I were…

  • The remarkable and tragic story of Phillis Wheatley

    The remarkable and tragic story of Phillis Wheatley

    Book Review:  American Women of Achievement: Phillis Wheatley by Merle Richmond, published by Chelsea House Publishers, New York, 1988. (5 out of 5 stars). Imagination! who can sing thy force?Or who describe the swiftness of thy course?Soaring through air to find the bright abode,Th’empyreal palace of the thund’ring God,We on thy pinions can surpass the wind,And leave the…

  • Between Knole and Sissinghurst

    Between Knole and Sissinghurst

    Book Review:  Vita: the Life of V. Sackville-West by Victoria Glendinning, published by Phoenix, London, 1983. (5 out of 5 stars). I really enjoyed this book. Victoria Glendinning is a very skilled and fluent writer, like (I think) a higher percentage of British than US writers. If the author is one of those highly articulate…

  • Innocence and Impecuniousness

    Innocence and Impecuniousness

    Book Review:  Northanger Abbey by Jane Austen, published by Modern Library (Random House), New York, 2002. (5 out of 5 stars). This novel was the first written by Austen (around 1803 when she was 28) but was not published until 1817, after her death, so she likely didn’t pick the title – I’m not sure…

  • The Mayor of Bank Street

    The Mayor of Bank Street

    Book Review: Growing Up Bank Street: A Greenwich Village Memoir, by Donna Florio, published by New York University Press, New York 2021. (5 out of 5 stars) This is a wonderful, well-written memoir that any lover of New York City, and specifically Greenwich Village, will enjoy. Donna Florio is an engaging tour guide who’s knowledgeable,…

  • A chalk line from the Met

    A chalk line from the Met

    Book Review: Fierce Poise: Helen Frankenthaler and 1950s New York by Alexander Nemerov, published by Penguin Books, New York 2021. (4 out of 5 stars) This is an interesting, ambitious and mostly well-written book, which focuses on artist Helen Frankenthaler’s early career in the 1950s, when she burst on the New York scene fresh out…

  • Gertrude Stein’s entertaining take on Picasso

    Gertrude Stein’s entertaining take on Picasso

    Book Review: Picasso by Gertrude Stein, published by B.T. Batsford Ltd., London 1938; reprinted by Dover Publications, New York 1984. (4 out of 5 stars) It’s always fun to read reviews of Gertrude Stein’s books, for example on sites like GoodReads that publish reviews by the common rabble. She provokes a wide variety of reactions,…

  • Indigenous bookstore haunted by a wannabe

    Indigenous bookstore haunted by a wannabe

    This novel starts out intriguing and fun, with amusing riffs on a wide variety of topics, but in the second half kind of peters out, like the author lost interest somewhat and was already thinking about her next project. The premise is fun & interesting: the protagonist, Tookie, works in Erdrich’s small, quirky Minneapolis bookstore…