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Listen-alikes: Voices of America, by By Heather Booth

Listen-alikes: Voices of America, by By Heather Booth
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Of Poems, Pandemics and Death

Of Poems, Pandemics and Death
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Bay Area Reporter :: Thoroughly Modern - actor, comedian & poet Catherine Cohen

Seek Treatment), Cohen s debut poetry collection God I Feel Modern Tonight: Poems from a Gal About Town (Knopf, 2021) has just been released. Striking a careful balance between the poetic ( I love sex and I love before it /the double vodka soda leg touch ) and the playful ( going swimming is an amazing way/to stop being on your phone ), Cohen never ceases to entertain. I spoke with Catherine shortly after the book was published. Gregg Shapiro: Your book God I Feel Modern Tonight is subtitled Poems from a Gal About Town. Were you a gal about town in (your native) Houston or did that come later?

The Pandemic on Paper

Many of us have turned to artistic endeavors throughout the pandemic to fill some free time, writers included. While DC Public Library holds a number of titles about the “hard” side science and medicine of COVID-19, the books on this list explore the “soft” or social and psychological sides from both fiction and nonfiction perspectives. From a family travel memoir to a collection of meditations on what it means to be alone together, writers examine our lives since COVID-19 invaded, including a remarkable first-hand diary of COVID-19 in Wuhan. Note: All titles are linked to their physical copies unless otherwise noted, and many are available as library e-books and/or e-audiobooks with OverDrive and its app Libby.

A spike in new words: Pandemic introduces new lingo | News, Sports, Jobs

“Language is adaptable,” said the professor of English and creative writing at SUNY Plattsburgh. “That is one of the cool things about language. It’s always changing and incorporating the social milieu that we live in.” LGBTQIA is an example. “It’s even on college applications,” she said. “It’s a legal accepted phrase that did not exist five to 10 years ago. Our society is adapting to real sexualities that we have been in denial of for many, many centuries. The adaptability of language is a beautiful thing. “Language has muscle. It has an ingenious way of being fluid to what is happening to humans. New phrases are borne all the time.”

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