About Buried In Print

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So far Buried In Print has created 2140 blog entries.

The One Lovely Blog Award

2014-02-27T16:04:43-05:00

The biggest of book-soaked thanks to A Guy's Moleskine Notebook for the blogging honour of The One Lovely Blog Award. He said: "Every once in a while a new commentator would leave very refreshing and thoughtful remarks in the blog. It’s almost like that revolutionary Apple computer commercial in 1984 in

The One Lovely Blog Award2014-02-27T16:04:43-05:00

Taking Time for Zora Neale Hurston

2021-02-01T11:35:46-05:00

Zora Neale Hurston’s Jonah’s Gourd Vine VMC No. 276 (1934) Two of Zora Neale Hurston’s published works are books of folklore and perhaps it was her background in anthropology that led her to recreate dialogue just as it was heard rather than consistently in “the King’s English”. It was a

Taking Time for Zora Neale Hurston2021-02-01T11:35:46-05:00

Getting to know the author Elizabeth Smart

2014-02-27T16:00:34-05:00

Elizabeth Smart’s Autobiographies (1987) I vividly recall my first attempt at By Grand Central Station I Sat Down and Wept; I read about one page and set it aside because I’d been looking for a quick read. Despite its slim form, Elizabeth Smart’s work is the sort that, for me,

Getting to know the author Elizabeth Smart2014-02-27T16:00:34-05:00

When a Book Just Keeps Getting Better

2014-07-11T16:55:32-04:00

Wayson Choy’s The Jade Peony (1995) Click the image to read a neat story about how Jessica Sullivan designed the cover   I first heard Wayson Choy read from his work about ten years ago, and he told a story about beginning to write, about a class he

When a Book Just Keeps Getting Better2014-07-11T16:55:32-04:00

Christine Longford’s Making Conversation Persephone No. 83 (1931)

2014-03-09T12:19:39-04:00

Making Conversation is, for me, one of those Persephones, like Miss Pettigrew and Miss Buncle, that are readily recommendable: it’s the sort of book that will appeal to a wide variety of readers and has little to discourage. And, just as these books do have more serious ideas beneath their

Christine Longford’s Making Conversation Persephone No. 83 (1931)2014-03-09T12:19:39-04:00
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