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Search resuls for: "Richard B. Woodward"


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Boris later traveled to Japan to be ordained as a Buddhist priest and returned to practice his adopted religion in Manhattan. Mr. Erwitt credited “shyness” — he had arrived in New York speaking no English — with making him a photographer. He began seriously taking pictures in Los Angeles with an antique glass-plate camera when he was 16, then upgraded to a Rolleiflex. The unheroic and the offbeat had already become signature motifs for Mr. Erwitt. He made his first dog-related pictures in 1946, for a fashion story about women’s shoes for The New York Times Magazine.
Persons: Boris, Erwitt, ” —, , , Capa, Steichen, Henry, Henry Luce Organizations: Hollywood High School, Los Angeles City College, New School for Social Research, Army, Army Signal Corps, New York Times Magazine Locations: New Orleans, Japan, Manhattan, New York, Los Angeles, France
Cormac McCarthy Loves a Good Diner
  + stars: | 2022-12-19 | by ( Dwight Garner | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Cormac McCarthy has long presented himself as a man of simple appetites. Diners — which he sometimes calls cafeterias or lunchcounters or drugstores — are all over the place in McCarthy’s fiction. The existential cowboys in McCarthy’s Border Trilogy novels, set out on the frontier, consume many of their meals fireside. Here too, though, hash houses are timeless way stations. The meals are, in this writer’s hands, private acts in public spaces.
Persons: Cormac McCarthy, Richard B, Woodward, McCarthy, Suttree ”, Organizations: The New York Times Magazine Locations: El Paso
New Haven‘Bill Brandt | Henry Moore ” at the Yale Center for British Art reunites two artistic giants whose careers loosely intertwined for four decades. From World War II, when their pictures of a beleaguered London during the Blitz became symbols of national grit, until their deaths in the 1980s, by which time they were respectively Britain’s most internationally acclaimed photographer and sculptor, neither was neglected by the public.
Cormac McCarthy's Venomous Fiction
  + stars: | 1992-04-19 | by ( Richard B. Woodward | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +3 min
Finished off with one of his twinkly-eyed laughs, this mealtime anecdote has a more jocular tone than McCarthy's venomous fiction, but the same elements are there. Each of his five previous novels has been marked by intense natural observation, a kind of morbid realism. A cult figure with a reputation as a writer's writer, especially in the South and in England, McCarthy has sometimes been compared with Joyce and Faulkner. Says the historian and novelist Shelby Foote: "McCarthy is the one writer younger than myself who has excited me. I told the MacArthur people that he would be honoring them as much as they were honoring him."
Persons: McCarthy, wildness, blurbed, Joyce, Faulkner, Saul Bellow, Shelby Foote, Huck Finn, Tom Sawyer, Hemingway Organizations: MacArthur Locations: hovels, East Tennessee, American, England, Texas, Mexico
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