John Steinbeck’s East of Eden is less a novel than a moral cosmos: vast, restless, and haunted by the question of what human beings do with the freedom to choose. Its greatness lies not only in the sweep of its California setting or the interlocking tragedies of the Trasks and the Hamiltons, but in the … Continue reading T.A.E.’s Book Review – East of Eden by John Steinbeck
Revisionist Poetry – “What the Woods Make of Loss” – A Bit of Goldsworthy & Adams, v.3
On a dry day, the woods become a galleryof broken trunks and exposed grain.I walk beneath thick leavesand find the fallen treesas if they had been arranged for study: a rib cage of branches,a canted spine of wood,a sunlit tangle of linesthat seems to belong to both accident and design. Goldsworthy would know this language:stone … Continue reading Revisionist Poetry – “What the Woods Make of Loss” – A Bit of Goldsworthy & Adams, v.3
T.A.E.’s Book Review -Start With Why by Simon Sinek
Simon Sinek’s Start With Why is less a business book than a manifesto of moral orientation. Beneath its polished corporate surface lies a surprisingly old and enduring literary idea: human beings are moved not first by method, product, or efficiency, but by purpose. The book’s central argument—captured in the author's famous formulation that people do … Continue reading T.A.E.’s Book Review -Start With Why by Simon Sinek
Revisionist Poetry – “Suburban Reliquary” – A Bit of Goldsworthy & Adams, v.2
The sun presses through the leaves on this dry afternoonas I wander the small suburban woodsearching for fallen trunks,for branches bleached open by weather and time— the kind of accidental arrangementGoldsworthy might have welcomed,the kind of lightAnsel Adams would have sharpened into silence. The ground gives under my steps,a brittle crackle of leaf mold and … Continue reading Revisionist Poetry – “Suburban Reliquary” – A Bit of Goldsworthy & Adams, v.2
T.A.E.’s Book Review – You Are a Badass Everyday… by Jen Sincero
You Are a Badass Every Day by Jen Sincero is less a conventional self-help book than a portable ritual of self-address. Penguin Random House describes it as a “companion” built from “one hundred exercises, reflections, and cues,” and that framing is exactly right: the book is modular, repetitive, and designed for daily return rather than … Continue reading T.A.E.’s Book Review – You Are a Badass Everyday… by Jen Sincero
Revisionist Poetry – “The Thrift-Store Gargoyle” – Bargain Store Gargoyle, v.5
In the thrift store’s farthest corner,under a ceiling fan ticking its slow blade,I found the gargoylehalf-buried in dust and dead price tags. It was small enough to fit in one hand,but its face was all old menace—a snagged lip,a blind, bulging stare,teeth like pebblesforced through a grimace. Its concrete body felt dampthough the shop was … Continue reading Revisionist Poetry – “The Thrift-Store Gargoyle” – Bargain Store Gargoyle, v.5
T.A.E.’s Book Review – The Japanese Pottery Handbook by Penny Simpson, Lucy Kitto, and Kanji Sedeoka
The Japanese Pottery Handbook is the kind of book that quietly reveals its seriousness by refusing the vanity of seriousness. First published in 1979 and later revised in 2014, it presents itself not as an ornamental art book but as a working manual: compact, bilingual, and deliberately hands-on. That practical identity is not a limitation; … Continue reading T.A.E.’s Book Review – The Japanese Pottery Handbook by Penny Simpson, Lucy Kitto, and Kanji Sedeoka
Revisionist Poetry – “Little Guardian in the Thrift Store” – Bargain Store Gargoyle, v.4
In the back of the bargain store,where glassware clinks softlyand a cracked lamp throwsits yellow pool on the shelf,I find a gargoyleno bigger than a loaf of bread. Its concrete skin is pitted,its nose chipped,its mouth set in a permanent scowlthat somehow looks more like concern. I turn it in my hands.A little dust lifts … Continue reading Revisionist Poetry – “Little Guardian in the Thrift Store” – Bargain Store Gargoyle, v.4
T.A.E.’s Book Review – The Giving Tree by Shel Silverstein
Shel Silverstein’s The Giving Tree is one of the most deceptively simple books in modern children’s literature. Beneath its spare line drawings and uncluttered prose lies a fable of extraordinary emotional and philosophical complexity. At first glance, the story appears to be about love, generosity, and gratitude. Yet its quiet ache invites far deeper questions: … Continue reading T.A.E.’s Book Review – The Giving Tree by Shel Silverstein
“Crown Swipe: Royal Clout” – Poetcore Shakespeare: The Bard for Gen Z
(T.A.E.’s LitBites) – A modern retelling of Henry VI, Part 3 by William Shakespeare Alright — picture England as a giant group chat that exploded. The main thread? Who gets the crown. No one can agree. King Henry’s inbox is full of SOS messages but he’s checked out: kind, dreamy, zero vibes for politics. His queen, … Continue reading “Crown Swipe: Royal Clout” – Poetcore Shakespeare: The Bard for Gen Z
