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Book Reviews

A Worthy Weep: a Memoir-ic Reflection on Paul Kalanithi’s “When Breath Becomes Air”

A Worthy Weep: a Memoir-ic Reflection on Paul Kalanithi’s When Breath Becomes Air

On the whole, it’s probably wise that we as a culture have drifted away from the granite-like male sentiment that ‘real men don’t cry.’ Men can cry. That’s cool.

But that being said, as a man, I tend to shy away from a good, hearty cry. Call me old fashioned. As a six-foot-four male who weighs about the same as an adult black bear, I prefer a more stoic attitude toward life. It is no simple task to get these waterfalls gushing. But were you to walk into my Traber dorm room on one blustery January morning, you would find me strewn across a couch, a very recently read copy of When Breath Becomes Air sat ajar on my lap, looking as if I’d somehow mixed up my eyedrops with Jalapeño juice. I haven’t cried that much since Avengers: Endgame.

Categories
Book Reviews

In Honor of Solitary Writers: A Reflection on Hemingway’s “The Old Man and the Sea”

In 1952, Ernest Hemingway published a novella titled The Old Man and the Sea. This novella won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction and helped Hemingway win the Nobel Prize for literature in 1954. What is it about this simple eighty-page narrative that makes it so compelling?