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Jana Hocking: Why being 'ghosted' was the best thing that happened to me


Jana Hocking: Why being ghosted was the best thing that happened to me
11 Mar, 2021 06:53 PM
5 minutes to read
We ve all been ghosted before when it comes to dating, writes Jana Hocking. Photo / Instagram
We ve all been ghosted before when it comes to dating, writes Jana Hocking. Photo / Instagram
news.com.au
OPINION:
Just like a real ghost (because we know those bumps in the night don t just happen for no reason . right?!) the word ghosting can send a shiver up the spine of many a singleton.
It s a cold, brutal, gutless act, and if it has ever happened to you, you will know it leaves you scratching your head and thinking, WTF? . ....

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Ring in the New Year with 'The Chimes'


Everybody knows “A Christmas Carol,” the 1843 novella by Charles Dickens that has become an iconic stage and screen holiday special. Far fewer people are familiar with “The Chimes,” the story he published the following year (and the second in an eventual series of five Christmas books).
Watching artistic director Nick Sandys as Dickens giving a virtual reading of the book for Remy Bumppo Theatre Company, it s not too hard to figure out why.
Mind you, Sandys’ performance of “The Chimes” — subtitled “A Goblin Story of Some Bells that Rang an Old Year Out and a New Year In” — is terrific. He takes on 17 characters, differentiating among their regional British accents, and his adaptation of the tale, trimmed from two hours to 90-or-so minutes, flows along smoothly and fairly clearly. Staged live for Remy Bumppo in 2012 and reprised in 2013, it has been thoughtfully reworked for the digital format with the help of video ....

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The holiday in literature: Christmas, as seen by Charles Dickens


The holiday in literature: Christmas, as seen by Charles Dickens
Mike Timko
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Bob Cratchett carries Tiny Tim in a scene from “A Christmas Carol.”Getty Images
To many, Charles Dickens, Christmas, and “A Christmas Carol” have become synonymous. Evidence, however, shows that the Carol was written more for commercial reasons rather than to celebrate the season; the true roots of his love of the season can be seen in a much earlier story, one written by a much more “innocent” Dickens.
To recognize the true Dickensian love of the season, one needs to look at the Dickens before the Carol. There is where we find the Victorian author who truly loved the season and all it represented, especially the joyful aspect. Dickens, in fact, celebrated the holiday every year with exuberance, both personally and as an author. There are 22 stories in The Complete Christmas Stories of Charles Dickens, including “A Christmas Tree” and “What Christm ....

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God Bless Us, Every Robber Baron


Updated
Dec 24, 2020
How did Charles Dickens beloved Christmas story become a trophy for a Wall Street titan?
By Zachary D. Carter
Marc Janks/HuffPost
Gather round, friends, and savor a holiday fable for our bitter age. As in the Charles Dickens classic 
A Christmas Carol, the villain of this story is money. It features its own Ebenezer Scrooge and ghosts of moral compunction. But the ending of our tale has been adjusted: Money prevails and Scrooge dies miserable and rich, but not before buying off his ghosts and fashioning them into a museum exhibit.
That’s where I’m standing, in the annual Yuletide display of John Pierpont Morgan’s collection of Dickensia at the Morgan Library, the Madison Avenue monument to the excesses and undeniable good taste of the man who invented American banking as we know it. Specifically, I am standing in front of the original handwritten manuscript of ....

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