The Women of Irish Literature Ireland has long been rightly renowned as a country of storytellers that has birthed such legendary authors as Johnathon Swift, Oliver [...] March 10, 2016
The Other Woman – Brooding in the Land of the Midnight Sun Sweden has a long and illustrious history of producing brooding, melancholy, reflective artists who create equally brooding, melancholy and [...] March 6, 2016
Poet’s Corner: “Out of the Blue” – Susan Moorhead Out of the Blue He was afraid of bridges. He wasn’t and then suddenly, he was. I couldn’t understand it. My fears are life [...] February 28, 2016
Legacies: A Guide For Young Black Women in Planning Their Future “I am so perfect, so divine, so ethereal, so surreal, I cannot be comprehended except by my permission…”- Nikki Giovanni, poet [...] February 23, 2016
Paul Theroux’s Deep South – A Must Read for Presidential Candidates Presidential debates, both Democratic and Republican, were held in Charleston, South Carolina recently in anticipation of that state’s [...] February 17, 2016
Lis Wiehl’s The Newsmakers I once asked a travel writer if there are stories she wouldn’t cover. Her response was, “I don’t write about Asia because I don’t [...] February 2, 2016
Luckiest Girl Alive: A Perfect Life That’s a Perfect Lie I inspected the knife in my hand. This is the opening line of Luckiest Girl Alive, the debut novel by Jessica Knoll. The actual [...] February 1, 2016
The Last Thousand: One School’s Promise in a Nation at War “If even a single student wants to come to school tomorrow, the school should be open.” It’s a thing many of us take for granted, the [...] January 26, 2016