Entertainment

Timeless Twaddle

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Art is in the eye of the beholder and the passion thereof time and limitless. The same can be said about Brad Twaddle’s immeasurable energy and passion for Dancing and the Arts.

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Latest Posts in Entertainment

Robin Lindley Interviews Professor Doug Underwood

A Third Act: At Last, Renowned Professor Doug Underwood Launches His Debut Novel, "Always, Tessie,"  a Tale of the Turbulent 1960s Set in the Pacific Northwest.  Professor Underwood relates the story of young lovers Tessie and Derek who live in a Portland, Oregon suburb during the turbulent 1960s. He captures the concerns of the period as the Vietnam War raged, a civil rights movement challenged racism and segregation, and women demanded equal rights as they gained more personal freedom with the advent of the birth control pill. The beauty and relative isolation of the Pacific Northwest loom over the young couple and their friends as they deal with past trauma, social pressure, the threat of the military draft, intense competition, and other ominous developments in their rapidly changing world.


The Crowded Shroud: Weird, Wonderful, Wicked

The story surrounding Florenz Baron might prove to be more interesting than her novel The Crowded Shroud. Born as Florenz Hasratoff in 1919, she spent most of her life living as a bohemian artist in conservative, blue-collar Yonkers. 


My Friend Sue

Whenever I traveled to New York, I visited Sue at the Museum, making up for the time lost between us. We both marveled that we had escaped a blue collar fate. Other Yonkers girls took service jobs as health care workers or waitressing, a few taught in public schools. There wasn’t anything intrinsically wrong with these jobs, except they were so Yonkas.

 


The Mother of My Words

My mother told me I had a way with words. She was proud of my poetry and stories, and said I was a natural born writer. I was flattered but I didn’t entirely believe her. She was a high school dropout and suffered from schizophrenia. I’m not sure if schizophrenia caused her to drop out of high school at sixteen. She often heard voices telling her to do things. 


Book Review: Brawler Screams Desperation

Lauren Groff’s collection of stories share only one common thread: the loud, squawking desperation of working-class lives that inevitably come to an end in a one-two knockout punch. I’m glad to see a writer of considerable merit depicting working-class characters that no one really wants to know about. People are dying, rotting away, flicking cigarette ashes on the food they are about to eat, before blowing out their brains with a shotgun.