The Attic reads and reviews this curious collection of curious (and insightful) maps.
Read MoreOnce just a pack of Ivy League smartasses, the Harvard Lampoon is now the stepping stone to comedy careers.
Read MoreWhen the Depression cut off Appalachia, women on horseback brought books into dark hollows.
Read MoreTwenty years ago, after decades of protest, this Puerto Rican island ejected the U.S. Navy and restored peace. And paradise perhaps.
Read MoreClassical was a bore until Leonard Bernstein aired his “Young People’s Concerts.” (As seen in “Maestro.”)
Read MoreWomen couldn’t run 26 miles. Impossible. Then women jumped into the pack in Boston, and ran and ran. . .
Read MoreIn April 1923, the national pastime welcomed a stadium, a legend, and the first field of dreams.
Read MoreBlending Bach with Biggie, "Black Violin" challenges every tired old touchstone.
Read More“Gentle on My Mind” made him famous but John Hartford’s heart was always on the Mississippi.
Read MoreOn the verge of Infinite Jest, DFW took a cruise. His witty, acerbic, heartfelt account bore all the brilliance of his novels.
Read MoreWhen America used “science” to back white supremacy, Franz Boas and his students battled the B.S.
Read MoreChildren’s TV was a wasteland. Then Joan Ganz Cooney took us all to “Sesame Street.”
Read MoreHearst and Pulitzer refused to play fair, so the Newsies walked off the job. And won America’s hearts. (As seen in “The Newsies.”)
Read MorePhotography was losing its focus when Ansel Adams and friends founded Group f/64. And blew us all away.
Read MoreLong before AI and Chat GPT, Wendell Berry asked a question we should all ponder.
Read MoreLaid back and lampooning the Sixties and himself, R. Crumb’s creation keeps on truckin’.
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