Blog

Nelson Mandela – A life of passion and persistence

By Adrienne Raptis | December 10, 2013
|

The world suffered a great lost when Nelson Mandela, former president of South Africa and longtime revolutionary, died on December 5th, 2013. Mandela was South Africa’s first black president and the first president that was democratically elected, a feat that was only made possible by Mandela’s decades of political activism. Mandela was an African nationalist…

Read More >

Author Spotlight – Graham Greene

By Adrienne Raptis | November 4, 2013
|

English novelist and playwright Graham Greene was one of the most widely read authors of the 20th century. A superb storyteller, he had a flair for writing suspenseful, action-packed stories. His themes were often morally ambiguous and blurred the line between good and evil. A prolific writer, Greene’s bibliography contains over 150 titles, including novels,…

Read More >

Author spotlight – William Faulkner

By Adrienne Raptis | October 18, 2013
|

Faulkner is one of the most important writers in U.S. Southern literature, along with Mark Twain and Flannery O’Connor. His novels deal often with Southern culture and what he perceived to be its fall from grace in the transition into a new era, while his writing style is cerebral and experimental with meticulous attention to…

Read More >

Author Spotlight – Milton Friedman

By Adrienne Raptis | September 24, 2013
|

Few people have had such a dramatic impact on shaping the views of the American public as Milton Friedman. His influence has shaped politics, academics and popular culture. A brilliant, world renowned statistician, Friedman was recognized around the globe for his role in shaping international and domestic economics. He was an outspoken activist for smaller…

Read More >

The Good Earth – Pearl S. Buck’s Love for China

By Adrienne Raptis | August 18, 2013
|

The Good Earth, scholars agree, created sympathy for China in the oncoming war with Japan: “If China had not captured the American imagination, it might just have been possible to work out a more satisfactory Far Eastern policy,” but such works as The Good Earth, “infused with an understandable compassion for the suffering Chinese, did…

Read More >

Author spotlight – Ernest Hemingway

By Adrienne Raptis | July 19, 2013
|

Every year in July, the Florida Keys have a unique celebration of author Ernest Hemingway, who lived and left a powerful legacy in the region. Its called “Hemingway Days” and according to the Florida Keys website, “scheduled events include a look-alike contest for stocky white-bearded men resembling Hemingway, readings and book signings, an awards ceremony…

Read More >

Chess Champions: Grandmaster Larry Evans’s influence on Bobby Fischer

By Adrienne Raptis | June 24, 2013
|

Bobby Fischer is perhaps the most celebrated American chess player of the Twentieth Century. His latent talent is of no question, but understanding his success suggests going beyond his acumen and studying also those who influenced him. His friend and mentor Larry Evans is one such figure, and their long-standing friendship contributed to Fischer’s career.…

Read More >

Author Spotlight – Maurice Sendak

By Adrienne Raptis | June 10, 2013

Have you seen the Maurice Sendak Google Doodle that is up today? It celebrates what would have been his 85th Birthday. He passed away last year, but he will live on forever through his amazing illustrations and the legacy that he gave the world. Sendak’s love of books began when he was a child. He…

Read More >

Author Spotlight – F. Scott Fitzgerald

By Adrienne Raptis | June 7, 2013
|

With all the buzz of the recent movie, The Great Gatsby, we thought we should spotlight F. Scott Fitzgerald this month so that you can learn a little bit about the man behind the story. After the success of his first novel, This Side of Paradise (1920), F. Scott Fitzgerald and his wife Zelda became…

Read More >
Sigmund Freud – Civilization and its Discontents

Sigmund Freud – Civilization and its Discontents

By Adrienne Raptis | May 3, 2013
|

Civilization and Discontents is considered one of Freud’s most important and widely read works (Gay, 1989). While it can be seen as political philosophy or anthropology, it is also a psychoanalytic explanation of religion. The main theme of the work is “the irremediable antagonism between the demands of instinct and the restrictions of civilization” (Strachey,…

Read More >