Autonomia
Autonomia Podcast
Heartstrings: Grief in the Temple
0:00
-24:01

Heartstrings: Grief in the Temple

Introducing a new series on grief for the paid subscriber
Grief, courtesy of Jackie Grawe

Listen to my Easter Sunday thoughts—including on Easter’s themes, such as fertility—and introduction to a new series for Autonomia’s paid subscriber.

In this episode, I discuss forthcoming reviews of various books—as well as the previously reviewed album by Taylor Swift (read my 31-song review here) on romantic grief and loss—focused on resilience from grief. I refer to my grief over America’s rejection of a boy who’d escaped dictatorship to live free (listen to my episode on the 25th anniversary of Elian being forced into slavery at U.S.-sponsored gunpoint).

I also discuss the image included herewith, courtesy of Kansas City, Missouri artist Jackie Grawe. Jackie told me that her painting “is pastel on toned paper” adding that “the actor did a Facebook Live in 2020 after watching police brutality against a young black man.” Jackie tells me she took a screenshot before painting the portrait by hand.

Finally, Classic Chicago magazine published my new, in-depth profile of writer L Frank Baum as the lead story on this Easter Sunday. It’s a tale I titled: “From Failure to Fiction: L. Frank Baum in Chicago.” You can read the article (for free) here. I discuss the article and its meaning and relevance to Easter in this episode.

This is part of my series, Industrial Revolutions, for the Chicago publication, which previously published my profiles of Walt Disney, Charles Ingalls and the Standard Oil Building. The website recently started publishing short fiction, debuting with my winter-themed short stories. My newest short story, a mythical, science fiction tale about an old woman born in a log cabin, debuts next month.

The article about Mr. Baum has been among my writing projects for over a year. I’ve been interested in this author, and the role Chicago played in the development of his children’s stories, since I first read and reviewed his first book about Oz. Chicago deserves more credit than I’d realized. Born in New York, with adventures from east to American West as a printer, newspaper publisher, oil salesman, opera house manager, journalist, businessman, husband, father and, ultimately, curious Chicago capitalist who lived and died in Hollywood, I trace Baum’s amazing literary life. I hope you enjoy reading the article.


Related Episodes, Articles and Links

America Versus the Immigrant

America Versus the Immigrant

The roots of many Americans’ and scholars’ fundamental philosophical errors on what constitutes rational immigration policy trace back to their opposition, complicity, silence, reticence and middle-of-the-road blankness in the case of Elian Gonzalez, whom I met and conversed with in a historic exclusive meeting at his Miami home 25 years ago today.

Heartstrings: “Tiny Dancer”

·
April 13, 2023
Heartstrings: “Tiny Dancer”

Which things recur throughout your lifetime? This is the first story in a series about that which recurs throughout mine; in this case, a six-minute, 17-second ballad by Elton John. Like a ghost from the past, the tune appears and re-appears in variation.

Heartstrings: the Goal of the Happy Birthday

·
November 17, 2023
Heartstrings: the Goal of the Happy Birthday

With the daunting goal to practice the virtue of selfishness, I invited certain friends to write about me—i.e., an Autonomia testimonial or personal tale—for my birthday.

Heartstrings: “Running Up That Hill”

·
February 6, 2024
Heartstrings: “Running Up That Hill”

Scott Holleran on “Running Up That Hill” by Kate Bush (EMI Records, 1985).

Music Review: The Tortured Poets Department: The Anthology

·
June 6, 2024
Music Review: The Tortured Poets Department: The Anthology

Taylor Swift’s April 19, 2024 album, The Tortured Poets Department, is like a muted storybook. With incisive lyrics, the moody, electronic album about losing a loved one—including losing the loved one—contains 31 thought-provoking songs.

“Flowers for Father”

·
June 16, 2024
“Flowers for Father”

New, grief-themed articles reflect personal thoughts and writing about loss. In recent months, I’ve been reading and learning in the aftermath of several, simultaneous losses, including the death of my father. I’ll publish my thoughts. Thanks to the same source that recommended a romantic relationship book I reviewed earlier this year,

Discussion about this episode