
How to be creative in a busy world
Northwest authors Brenda Miller and Holly Hughes talk about how to engage in writing, art or other creative pursuits in the middle of modern culture. They speak on Sunday.
Robin Lindley is a Seattle-based writer and attorney, and the features editor of the History News Network (hnn.us). His email is robinlindley@gmail.com.
Northwest authors Brenda Miller and Holly Hughes talk about how to engage in writing, art or other creative pursuits in the middle of modern culture. They speak on Sunday.
The roots of much great writing comes the ghosts of war and suffering, seeping into the souls of journalists who lived through those events.
Broadcast host Rachel Maddow brings her acerbic wit and calm reasoning to the literary world, with a compelling narrative of America's silent shift to unchecked presidential power and unseen but perpetual war.
Works at Seattle's Patricia Rovzar Gallery capture why the Bay Area's Ursula O'Farrell became a hit after concentrating on marriage and children. She has drawn on her own life, relationships, studies, but even O'Farrell wonders what comes next in her art.
An architect of the International Criminal Court talks about how America created the treaty that brought a new level of justice but has never ratified the pact. The Bush administration even sought to undermine other countries' participation.