Emily Maitlis interview: Newsnight presenter defends Cummings intro pressgazette.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from pressgazette.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Don’t let the clickbait-y title of Gaby Dunn’s “Bad with Money: The Imperfect Art of Getting Your Financial Sh t Together” fool you, it’s part personal essay, part how-to guide for
A new post by Ted Gioia, a jazz historian and critic whose 1988 book,
The Imperfect Art: Reflections on Jazz and Modern Culture, directed much of my thinking in an early essay,
The Turntable, heaps lots of deserved praise on J.G. Ballard for accurately predicting life in the 21st century from the considerable distance of the mid-1970s.
Ballard primarily wrote science fiction whose method of speculation was the concentration (and in this sense liberation) of the technological and pop culture trends of his times. He never really leapt (
tigersprung) into the future by the sheer exuberance of extrapolation as, say, the popular TV show
SavingAdvice.com Blog
I read a lot. I mean, a lot – more than most people I know. Often, I read books related to personal finance, especially when I kind find money psychology books. But I have also found throughout the years that a lot of the good financial advice emerges from books on other topics. Some are tangentially related to money: work, life balance, productivity, etc. However, I’ve also gotten financial insight from novels, memoirs, and even occasionally a poem. This morning I started reading the first book of the year, and I thought I’d share what I’ve learned so far (about eighty pages in).