Blog Archives

Downtown, 1965

I happened to come out of work on Gay Street in Knoxville at precisely 4 pm. Crystal blue sky, cool, slight breeze, the blazing emerald green of early spring and the downtown clarion bells were playing an elaborately melodic version

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Sara’s arancini

Here is the arancini recipe of my mother-in-law, Sara Conti. Like many great intuitive cooks, much of what she does is by look and feel. But this is what she says she always does and the arancini are always wonderful.

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Making arancini

Arancini, or fried rice balls (literally “little oranges”) are a Sicilian wonder. My mother-in-law, Sara, from Licata on the southern coast of Sicily, is a master. You’d think that fried rice balls would be heavy, but not hers. They are

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Victorian spring cleaning

Reading this list of what spring cleaning meant in the well-run Victorian household makes me plenty glad to not live then with those standards. It’s from Country Gentlemen and apparently not the whole list, but the dizzying load of work

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80% of American colonists

You remember the history lesson/s: how “our forefathers came to the New World searching for religious and political freedom” and so forth? Ain’t necessarily so, or if so, those lofty yearnings were tangential. In fact 80% of all white (mostly

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Some faces speak

Some faces just speak to you. You want to meet the person, drink wine together, take a walk, hear them talk. This is Mrs. John Philip Sousa (aka Jane van Middlesworth Bellis Sousa, 1862-1944). She has nada to do with

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Humorous Phases of Funny Faces

In researching vaudeville acts for my next novel, I came upon J. Stuart Blackton, here pictured, who came to America from Yorkshire in 1894, gifted in rapid charicature, and created an act called the “Komikal Kartoonist.” As KK, he was

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1900 predicts the year 2000

Predictions of the Year 2000 The Ladies Home Journal from December 1900, contained predictions by John Elfreth Watkins, Jr. of “What May Happen in the Next Hundred Years”. Mr. Watkins wrote: “These prophecies will seem strange, almost impossible. Yet, they have

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Italian deer inherit the land

Some images work on your mind, whispering “story” or “metaphor” or “fable” or “warning.” Italy is freezing this winter, blanketed with quantities of snow unseen in many years. Here in the village of Alfedana in the mountainous spine of Italy,

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Which side are you on?

The new Ani DiFranco album, “Which Side Are You On?” calls to the great union song of the same title, written by Florence Reece, wife of Sam Reece, a coal miner and organizer during the bloody strike of 1931 in

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Recent Review
“Absorbing and layered with rich historical details, in Under the Same Blue Sky, Schoenewaldt weaves a tender and at times, heartbreaking story about German-Americans during World War I. With remarkable compassion, the author skillfully portrays conflicted loyalties, the search for belonging, the cruelty of war, and the resilience of the human spirit.”—Ann Weisgarber, author of The Promise and The Personal History of Rachel Dupree

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