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Op-Ed: A year ago, we asked you to share tales from the pandemic Here s what some of you told us

Op-Ed: A year ago, we asked you to share tales from the pandemic. Here s what some of you told us © (Camily Tsai for The Times) (Camily Tsai for The Times) From last March to now, we’ve heard from dozens of people reaching out from quarantine. They wrote about life on the frontline and life interrupted, of lockdowns and shutdowns, masking and Zooming and the pursuit of normality. Here’s what they told us, excerpted and updated. MARCH We should have been twirling around to Whitney Houston in a friend’s backyard in Phoenix, me looking like Paul Newman in a navy suit and her like Joanne Woodward in a white gown I still haven’t seen. Life had other plans.

One year of life under COVID quarantine - Los Angeles Times

As our series of Dispatches from the Pandemic marks a year, we feature excerpts and updates from those who reached out during a year of COVID-19.

Op-Ed: A year ago, we asked you to share tales from the pandemic Here s what some of you told us

Op-Ed: A year ago, we asked you to share tales from the pandemic Here s what some of you told us
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Book Review: Consent, by Vanessa Springora - The New York Times

New in Paperback: Blowout and The Last Trial - The New York Times

New in Paperback: ‘Blowout’ and ‘The Last Trial’ By Jennifer Krauss AT THE CENTER OF ALL BEAUTY: Solitude and the Creative Life, by Fenton Johnson. (Norton, 272 pp., $15.95.) An author of novels, essays and memoirs who grew up next door to Trappist monks, Johnson argues that solitude, the opposite of loneliness, is essential not only to creativity (as evidenced by the outputs of 11 historic arts figures), but also to living fully, and usefully, in the world. RUN ME TO EARTH, by Paul Yoon. (Simon & Schuster, 288 pp., $17.) “Beauty and violence coexist” in a universe “by turns cruel and wondrous,” our reviewer, Tash Aw, wrote of this “richly layered” novel that follows three Laotian children whom we meet in a field hospital during American bombing raids. What they don’t yet realize is “how the pain of their wartime years will spread its tentacles … across continents and over decades.”

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