Published inThe Coastline is QuietThe Sun Also Rises is Essential History in Literary FormHow Ernest Hemingway’s first novel opens historical doorsJun 17, 2024Jun 17, 2024
Published inThe Coastline is QuietCollege Football 25 and the Resurrection of Childhood EnthusiasmReflections on the uniqueness of a beloved returning franchiseJun 5, 2024Jun 5, 2024
Published inThe Coastline is QuietReflections on re-reading Frankenstein in 2023Why this 19th century masterpiece still resonates todayNov 22, 20231Nov 22, 20231
Published inThe Coastline is QuietHow ‘The Expanse’ established itself as peak science fictionWhy this nine-book series sets itself up as one of the best of all timeOct 5, 2023Oct 5, 2023
Published inThe Coastline is QuietLet’s all be less onlineLessons for the Church from Jay Kim’s Analog ChristianitySep 8, 2023Sep 8, 2023
Published inThe Coastline is QuietAI is not our friend — it’s the Tower of BabelOrganized ramblings on the many, many dangers of AIJul 12, 20231Jul 12, 20231
Published inThe Coastline is QuietAdrian Tchaikovsky’s ‘Lords of Uncreation’ sticks the landingThe end of this trilogy lived up to his high standardsJul 7, 2023Jul 7, 2023
Published inThe Coastline is Quiet‘God of War Ragnarök’ succeeds in every area that matters mostWhile not quite the masterpiece that its predecessor was, ‘Ragnarök’ is a worthy conclusion to Kratos’s Norse sagaJun 28, 2023Jun 28, 2023
Published inThe Coastline is QuietThe National’s First Two Pages of Frankenstein is a melancholy victory lapThe album is comfortable and competent, if a bit underwhelmingApr 29, 2023Apr 29, 2023
Published inThe Coastline is QuietSome of 2023’s best music is on Manchester Orchestra’s experimental EPWhy The Valley of Vision is worth a listenApr 16, 2023Apr 16, 2023