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Essays / Books and Random Wanderings of Mind and Body (formerly Lost Essays)
Essays / Books and Random Wanderings of Mind and Body (formerly Lost Essays)
Author: michael hill
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© michael hill
Description
The essay should be celebrated, and that is what we do here. We have found that all essays are not lost and that many are still being created so moving forward we will celebrate the lost and found, past and future essays.
25 Episodes
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A timeless examination of how to be heard.
Sir Francis Bacon's thoughts about wealth.
What would Teddy think about the "Strenuous Life" of 2022?
While not an essay - Nikolai Gogol's protagonist in Diary of a Madman transcends time and can teach many lessons today - so while it is almost just flash fiction - it, in my opinion, has some essay qualities. Enjoy.
Bangs thinks books are medicine - some think books are poison.
Robert Louis Stevenson wants you to cut class - listen to his support of truancy.
Is reading expensive? A luxury reserved only for the few? Find out on Lost Essays.
Let us exist for a moment with a young Albert Halper in his first writing environment.
Let us join E.B. White while he attempts to clean house.
First appearing in Atlantic Monthly - Helen Keller creates an emotionally moving piece of prose.
Join Lost Essays as we discover author Charles S. Brooks and visit his essay - Serious Stupid Persons.
The magic of #joandidion #prose and the suspension of time and the wonders of words.
What do you think of the Pulitzer Prize-winning author?
Let Ben encourage good sleep.
Where have all the cowboys gone? - Explore two centuries of the American Cowboy with C.L. Sonnichsen in his essay investigating the character of the American Icon.
Find out what D.S. Savage thought about Hemingway in his 1950 collection of criticism - The Withered Branch
Revisit Crothers' essay exploring the difficulty of becoming a unique person in a society that limits the individual's interest.
What is the objective of reading unless something definite comes of it?
Is the American Southwest Edward Abbey's land? Lawrence Clark Powell might disagree with his extensive study of those who embraced the area decades and centuries before Abbey.
Let's get judgemental here.






