Abraham Lincoln

Editorials

Obama’s America  read more »

Prophecy’s Heroic Prose, The Glue That Unites Us

Greil Marcus (b. 1945) is the author of nine previous books.
Thierry Arditti
Greil Marcus (b. 1945) is the author of nine previous books.

Our culture of publicity makes it difficult to talk in negative terms about a new book without sound  read more »

Prophecy's Heroic Prose, The Glue That Unites Us

Our culture of publicity makes it difficult to talk in negative terms about a new book without sound  read more »

Don't Ask For That

I couldn't resist posting this.

Hillary Clinton noted that Abraham Lincoln "didn't hesitate" to change generals during the Civil War, and that said "We have a secretary of defense who is not credible anymore."

John Spencer responded, "Abraham Lincoln changed generals...you're not president yet Mrs. Clinton, so don't call for that."

-- Azi Paybarah

For an Airplane, a Tragedy; For a Writer, an Opportunity

That Reporter--or, as he called himself, T.R.--sat at his desk and thought about words. It was a Wednesday in New York, and an airplane had hit an apartment building. Had what? Hit it? A building? Yes, it had. Debris had fallen from the sky. Debris lay scattered in the street. Debris and facts.

Who would gather the facts? Other reporters would gather the facts. They were out there, in the rain, the other reporters. Rain was falling, like the debris had fallen. Rain was falling on the other reporters.

But T.R. was thinking about words. Words were his tools, because he was a writer. Perhaps he should start calling himself "T.W." He was not some grunt-working fact-gatherer. T.R. was an interpreter. Other people could gather the bricks and mix the mortar and lay the bricks and plaster the walls and make sure the building stood up and install the plumbing. T.R. was the architect. That was a metaphor. T.R. knew that was a metaphor; that was the sort of thing that a writer would know.

T.R. looked at his screen.  read more »

Letters

Times They Are a-Booin’

To the Editor:  read more »

Soldiers

The Brit Aristocrat: Billy Connolly stars in <i>Billy Connolly Live!</i> at 37 Arts on  West 37th Street.
James Hamilton
The Brit Aristocrat: Billy Connolly stars in Billy Connolly Live! at 37 Arts on West 37th Street.

It was not your typical V.F.W. reunion.  read more »

The Wrong Kind of People: I'm Farmisht With Charles Grodin!

Charles Grodin has written a play about co-op board meetings in a Fifth Avenue building.  read more »

The Wrong Kind of People: I’m Farmisht With Charles Grodin!

Playwright Charles Grodin.
Getty Images
Playwright Charles Grodin.

Charles Grodin has written a play about co-op board meetings in a Fifth Avenue building.  read more »

Honest Abe to the Rescue- Goodwin Needs Him; Nation, Too

One score and nine years ago, Doris Kearns Goodwin launched her career as a Presidential historian w  read more »

Why Are We in Iraq? For Our Own Good

"This is the famous city of Baghdad, the home of sweetness!  read more »

Hard Leftists Hope War on Terror Fails

Barricaded in Buckingham Palace, President George W.  read more »

A City of Monuments, Or a City of the Future?

Now we know what Mayor Bloomberg would have done had he been Mayor on 9/11: summoned the shade of Ab  read more »

Ask Not What Your S.U.V. Costs

Wise though he was, Abraham Lincoln had no way of knowing in the summer of 1864 that the war he was  read more »

Defending Freedom By Suspending Liberty

Only those with a valid claim to geezerhood are old enough to remember a pre-Miranda-warning America  read more »

It's Over? When Did We Begin?

Lately, I've come to think that I don't talk enough about the positives of dating.  read more »

'Foundling Father' Honest Abe Just Can't Find Honest Work

It's rare and so very touching when a playwright is called up onstage to receive our applause.  read more »

Slumming in Squeeze Gut Alley: The Story of the Dirtiest Ward

Five Points: The 19th-Century New York City Neighborhood That Invented Tap Dance, Stole Elections, a  read more »

Henry Villard: Gutsy Reporter, Railroad Baron and Nice Guy

In 1881, raising capital on the strength of his name alone, Villard took control of the Northern  read more »

Sure, Dick Was Tricky, but So Was Honest Abe

I got a phone call the other day from a rollicking-voiced person at National Public Radio who wanted  read more »

History Presents A Problem

The day he was appointed Acting Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights, Bill Lann Lee gave this  read more »

Peter Bogdanovich's Movie of the Week

Three quintessential works in American film history this week, two by an Englishman, one by an Irish  read more »