In the Moment: Restoring an Edenic Sense of Time
Stephen M. Otis learns from children in the woods that he can add years to his life.

Stephen M. Otis learns from children in the woods that he can add years to his life.
Boyhood’s twelve-year-long view of time serves to reorient our perspective about what is important and meaningful in a lifetime.
The following is a guest post by Matthew Tan. Matthew is a Lecturer in Theology and Philosophy at Campion College Australia. Currently he is a Visiting Professor in Catholic Studies and a Research Fellow at the Centre for World Catholicism and Intercultural Theology at DePaul University in Chicago. Matthew is also the editor of the […]
Review: Only Revolutions. By Mark Z. Danielewski. New York: Pantheon, 2006. 360 pp. In his House of Leaves (published in 2000), Mark Danielewski toys with the apparatus of truth-telling, weaving scholarly narrative into first-person account, embedded in the shreds of paper written, supposedly, by a blind man, all of which attempts to describe a documentary film (which may […]