• READING
    Fiction
    Arcadia – Tom Stoppard
    Fulgentius – César Aira, tr. Chris Andrews
    Her First American – Lore Segal
    Hotel de Dream – Edmund White
    Lord of the Rings (books 2 & 3) – JRR Tolkein
    Malicroix – Henri Bosco, tr. Joyce Zonana
    Marce Catlett: The Force of a Story – Wendell Berry
    Mrs. Dalloway – Virginia Woolf
    Shadow Ticket – Thomas Pynchon
    Song of a Blackbird – Maria van Lieshout
    The Skin of Dreams – Raymond Queneau, tr. Chris Clarke
    The South – Tash Aw
    Warlock – Oakley Hall

    Poetry
    Becoming Altar: New and Selected Poems – Kyla Houbolt
    Don’t Forget to Love Me – Anselm Berrigan
    Green Radius/ The Gate/ Parmenides in Minneapolis – Henry Gould
    Model Answers – David Harrison Horton
    Modern Poetry – Diane Seuss
    Out of the Blank – Elaine Equi
    Spilt – Jordan Stempleman
    St. Matthew Passion – Gertrude Schnackenberg
    The Form of a City Changes Faster, Alas, than the Human Heart – Jacques Roubaud, tr. Keith & Rosemarie Waldrop
    The Odyssey – Homer, tr. Daniel Mendelsohn
    Vessels – Robert Van Vliet

    Non-Fiction
    A Chance Meeting: American Encounters – Rachel Cohen
    Cy Twombly – Jonas Storsve, ed.
    Erik Satie Three Piece Suite – Ian Penman
    Generations – Lucille Clifton
    Love’s Braided Dance – Norman Wirzba
    Manimal Woe – Fanny Howe
    One Day Everyone Will Have Always Been Against This – Omar El Akkad
    Unexplained Presence – Tisa Bryant
    We Die Before We Live – Daniel Berrigan
    Zero at the Bone: Fifty Entries Against Despair – Christian Wiman

    VIEWING
    A Complete Unknown (Mangold, 2024)
    A Little Prayer (MacLachlan, 2025)
    A Real Pain (Eisenberg, 2024) 
    Adolescence (Barantini, 2025 series) 
    American Utopia (Lee, 2020) 
    Art Speigelman: Disaster is My Muse (Bernstein & Dolin, 2024)
    Black Bag (Soderbergh, 2025)
    Code Unknown (Haneke, 2000)
    Come See Me in the Good Light (White, 2025)
    Death by Lightning (Makowsky, 2025 series)
    Eephus (Lund, 2025) 
    Flow (Zibalodis, 2024)
    Frankenstein (del Toro, 2025)
    Hard Truths (Leigh, 2024)
    Knives Out (Johnson, 2019)
    Marcel the Shell with Shoes On (Fleischer Camp, 2021)
    Nickel Boys (Ross, 2024) 
    Peterloo (Leigh, 2018)
    Rumble Fish (Coppola, 1983)
    Silence (Scorsese, 2016)
    Sinners (Coogler, 2025)
    Soviet Jeans (Tokalovs, 2024 series)
    Take Out (Baker and Tsou, 2004)
    The Last Republican (Pink, 2025)
    The Phoenician Scheme (Anderson, 2025)
    The Wild Robot (Sanders, 2024) 
    Universal Language (Rankin, 2025)
    Vermiglio (Delpero, 2024)

    LISTENING
    After the Last Sky – Anouar Brahem
    Age of Monsters – The Bonnevilles
    Fiery Gizzard – Joseph Decosimo
    Getting Killed – Geese
    Live at St. Mark’s – Clifton Chenier
    Oh Snap – Cecile McLorin Salvant
    Only Frozen Sky Anyway – Jonathan Richman
    Opus 109 – Vikingur Olafsson
    Sad and Beautiful World – Mavis Staples
    Salt River – Sam Amidon
    Satie: Piano Music (complete) – Jean-Yves Thibaudet (Pascal Rogé)
    The Black Dog and the Wandering Boy – James McMurtry
    The Delta Sweete – Bobbie Gentry
    The Purple Bird – Bonnie “Prince” Billy
    The Question – Anna Tivel
    Twilight Override – Jeff Tweedy

  • In this series of poems, the guiding concerns of Berry’s life merge. Here plowing (and not just in a metaphorical sense – remember, Berry actually plows actual fields) turns up the field of memory and gives us a glimpse of the beauty that comes when we love a place and its people particularly and deeply.

    The poems stand in relationship with each other. The fields of one poem become fertile soil for a meditation on language in the next, which in turn yields a prophetic vision in which “On the other side of the partition / the dead are living.”

    Read all of “Six New Poems by Wendell Berry” in Plough.

  • Marce Catlett offers a path forward. At the same time, it reveals a road not taken. As the century moved along, the Democratic Party submitted more and more to the mandate of corporate power, doing its part to engineer what Sheldon Wolin acidly dubbed “Democracy Inc.” This structural submission became easier when, in a cultural sense, Pryor Berry became “backward” and John Berry Sr. a throwback. The party forgot both its story and its storytellers. Now we have Trump to pay.

    Read all of “An Ancient Wealth” by Eric Miller at Commonweal Magazine.

  • Joan Zwagerman offers some thoughts on the should-be-famous debate between Wendell Berry and erstwhile Secretary of Agriculture Earl Butz.

    It would have been interesting to have been in the room with Butz and Berry. The sound quality, especially during the question-and-answer period, was poor, and it was hard to hear the audience.

    I came away wondering if Berry had won many people to his side that day, but “winning” was not his goal. He called for a return to the traditional values of democracy, neighborliness, kindness.

    Through the years, he persisted in farming, speaking, and writing. His intimacy with the land taught him to take the long view.

    That long view seems to be bearing fruit. Today, more people are asking some of the same questions that Berry had been posing for decades. What are we doing with this inheritance of land? Why are we doing it? What is the truest and deepest value of our actions?

    Read all of “Butz and Berry in debate” by Joan Zwagerman at the Storm Lake Times Pilot.

    The debate in question can be found HERE on YouTube.

    “Earl Butz versus Wendell Berry” pdf (News that Stayed News: Ten Years of CoEvolution Quarterly, orig. CoEvolution Quarterly, Spring 1978)

  • Law & Liberty, an online magazine of Liberty Fund, has published two articles today that respond to Wendell Berry’s short new novel, Marce Catlett: The Force of a Story.

    The first, “Growing Tobacco in Hell” by John-Paul Heil, criticizes Berry’s book for a shift away from literary art toward didactic dualism in service of a political position.

    “Berry’s world really does sort into two camps: the intellectually enlightened, hard-working old farmers and their ignorant, ease-seeking prodigal sons. Certainly, we need both meaningful work and meaningful play to live truly flourishing lives. A life without hard work would be miserable. But the health of human culture is not determined simply or primarily by common work but by common worship, the highest leisure activity, the ultimate pursuit of a good in itself.”

    In “Wendell Berry’s Epilogue” Nadya Williams replies to Heil, attempting to counter his reading by viewing Marce Catlett as a fitting conclusion to the narrative sweep of Berry’s whole Port William project.

    “Berry at last offers his readers—and himself—needed closure. There is a force to the overall story of Port William, we realize as a result—just as there is force to the overall story of American farmers and others who live in towns like Port William or Port Royal. Most of all, though, there is force in telling stories of virtue prevailing over vice in an age that makes the latter so much easier. And the ultimate virtue is to stay, choosing to love a place and its people well.”

    I lean toward Williams’ more generous perspective. Longtime readers understand that, of course, the elder Wendell Berry is likely to drift into didactic territory in his fiction (maybe predictable since Andy Catlett’s critique of the academics in Remembering). And in 2017 he explicitly allowed real people to visit his fiction in “The Order of Loving Care.” So I cut him some slack and accept this as the way he chooses to go—sort of how I handled a few squirm-inducing moments in The Need to Be Whole. Mr. Berry doesn’t require or expect anyone’s abject fealty. I’m grateful that even at this late date he is with us and willing to share his challenging, worthwhile understandings.

  • Though we shared time in Lexington and in the Patterson Office Tower on the university’s campus, Gurney was never officially my teacher. That said, as seen above in the ways he encouraged me to listen more intently, Gurney did provide some clear instruction, especially as I pored over his writings and documentaries to learn more about him, his influence, and his place in Appalachian literature and in bringing countercultural ideas to the Commonwealth of Kentucky. Thus, I gladly count myself one of Gurney’s students. Unlike most of his students, I don’t write fiction. I do, however, write stories. And I remember vividly the moment in 2019 when I read Gurney’s “Storied Ground,” in which he insisted that “Stories are meant to be told and retold, again and again, not just by the original tellers but by others in a family or community who have recognized them as living treasures to be cared for and handed on.” As a historian, then, I learned from Gurney that it is okay to be one of those who is telling and retelling a story.

    Read all of “Inside a Web of Love: Thoughts on Gurney Norman” by Richard A. Bailey at Front Porch Republic.

  • Through the eyes of Jayber Crow, Wendell Berry tells the story of 20th century rural America and how it changed from post-war industrialization and the “get big or get out” ideas espoused in American agriculture policy. He shares how it changed both the place and the people, often in a manner that they didn’t realize until it was too late. It is an extraordinary work, relatable to many of us who grew up in small towns. Characters will remind us of people that we know. The story of Port William mirrors so many other rural communities. Older folks will have witnessed a similar local arc, while younger ones like myself look at our local history and see the parallels.

    Read all of “Reading Wendell, Part 1″ by James Decker.

  • Gurney Norman, an Appalachian writer who documented his native region with humor and love and became a beloved creative writing professor credited with mentoring numerous Kentucky authors, died Oct. 12 at the age of 88. He died peacefully of natural causes, said his wife, Nyoka Hawkins.

    Norman was one of Kentucky’s “Fab Five”, a group of writers that included his friends Wendell Berry, Bobbie Ann Mason, and the late James Baker Hall and Ed McClanahan. Like several of them, Norman traveled to California after receiving a Wallace Stegner Fellowship in Creative Writing at Stanford University in 1960.

    Read more of “Gurney Norman, chronicler of Appalachia, member of ‘KY’s Fab Five’ dies at 88

    See also: “‘Kind and generous,’ Gurney Norman, Kentucky writer and teacher, dies at 88” by Jamie Lucke (Hoptown Chronicle, 14 October 2025)

    See also: “Inside a Web of Love: Thoughts on Gurney Norman” by Richard A. Bailey (Front Porch Republic, 16 October 2025)

  • The Peace of Wild Things: Filmmaker Laura Dunn takes another look at Wendell Berry

    I mean, he thinks that film, television, and the screen contributes to the decline of literacy. That it, you know, is a negative force in the world. I think that’s generally his perspective. I mean, that’s what he would say to me, but, you know, at the same time he has friends like [Kentucky author] James Baker Hall, who take lots of photographs and even make short films. And I know he worked on that beautiful ‘Wilderness’ book with [Lexington-based photographer] Ralph Eugene Meatyard. So he has a real respect for image-makers, photography in particular. But I think the moving image is really a different thing, and I think he’s watched it become so dominant in our culture and he thinks it deadens the imagination. He does. So he’s against the screen as a medium, number one. Number two, he often would say things to me, and I’m paraphrasing him, because I can only tell you the gist of what he says so perfectly, but basically that he didn’t want to be made an idol of, that, you know, he would say he’s not anything but for the people around him and for his place, that ‘I am my place.’ He didn’t want the story to fixate on him. And he also just hates being on camera.

  • “Wendell Berry’s Grief and Gratitude” by Russell Moore (Christianity Today Sept/Oct 2005)

    Several persistent Berry themes are here. One is the importance of community as drawn from Paul’s epistles (1 Cor. 12:12–31), not as an abstract concept but as membership and belonging to one another. This book defines the “only rule of membership: When any of them needed help, the others came to help.”

    “By extension of their one rule, there was no ‘settling up,’” Berry writes, in implicit contrast with the tobacco monopoly. “All help was paid for in advance by the knowledge that there would be no end to anybody’s need for help, which would be given to the limit of life and strength.”

    This membership is a covenant between not just those who live among each other but also between the living and the dead. The story unveils in quiet power what Berry has told us in his previous works: That covenant has been broken.