âDear possible, and if you drown,
Nothing is lost, unless my empty hands
Claim the conjectured corpse
Of empty waterâa legal vengeance
On my own earnestness.â
Posts by The American Scholar
Open our latest edition to learn more about two Kansas rivermen who were said to have perished in pursuit of giant catfish, why the pigment black has held such allure for painters, and how one anesthesiologist learned to expect the worst.
âWrecking Ball,â Rick Bassâs latest book, is âa beautifully composed and deeply insightful longform essay dealing ⊠with race, friendship, God, and football,â writes Steve Yarbrough in his review.
J. Malcolm Garciaâs journalism takes us into the heart of a homeless encampment without âshade, water, shelter, or any kind of supervision,â where some are lucky enough to own a tent and others sleep âon the ground with only their clothes for a blanket.â
Our Autumn 2025 issue has arrived! Highlights include J. Malcolm Garciaâs visit to an Oregon tent encampment; Kristin Idaszakâs look at the link between horseshoe crabs and the human heart; Steve Yarbroughâs profile of writer James Whitehead; and much more!
Thereâs a whiff of George Plimpton in Rick Bassâs decision to play football at age 60, but Bassâs descriptions of the experience in his new book are very different in temperament.
Last month, David Lehman prompted poems inspired by Emily Brontë, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Barnabe Googe, and more.
A bird in the hand is not just worth two in the bush. This week, Clellan Coe quickly discovers she has no idea what to do with the duckling she caught while walking her dogs.
For Doug, who lives at a Portland homeless encampment, simply taking two pills a day can seem like the most daunting challenge. Although Dougâs world is uncertain and dark, those volunteering to help him and his neighbors are trying to make it a little less lonely.
What on earth was Rick Bass thinking? At the age of 60, the celebrated writer of fiction and essays decided to join a semi-pro football teamâthe Texas Expressâand compete in one of the most violent sports there is, against and beside men who were at least half his age.
For the next installment of Next Line Please, David Lehman proposes reversing the usual poem-first, title-second process and using one of his ready-made titles as a jumping-off point.
In this weekâs Asturias Days, Clellan Coe meets a lonely duckling. âCatching it had taken several tries,â she writes. âNot because it was difficult, exactly, but because you hesitate in that momentâyour body unsure whether this is something one really does: pounce.â
The myriad problems associated with homelessness continue to dominate the headlines. But what is it actually like to live in a tent encampment? In our Autumn cover story, J. Malcolm Garcia introduces us to the J Street Lot in Grants Pass, Oregon.
As Pablo Picasso (allegedly) said, âGood artists borrow; great artists steal.â Such was the motivation behind last monthâs âNext Line, Pleaseâ prompt, in which David Lehman offered a handful of âstolen linesâ to his intrepid poets, encouraging them to pick one and ârun with it.â
What was David Brownâs night of baseball about? It was âabout karma, luck, circles closed, optimism, and generosity,â he writes. And a âlosing game that was a big win.â
âI think itâs just really beautiful to understand art and home as being so intertwined in the same way that I understand cloth and family to be intertwined,â says artist Cici Osias.
With baseball season entering its final stretch, David Brown takes us to Baltimoreâs Camden Yards, where the principal attraction on a warm July night isnât necessarily the underwhelming Orioles but rather the ballpark giveaway: Hawaiian shirts.
Thomas Gray wrote âOde on the Death of a Favorite Cat Drowned in a Tub of Goldfishesâ in 1747 when Horace Walpole asked him for an epitaph to commemorate his cat.
Fifty years ago, Paul Theroux published âThe Great Railway Bazaar,â a book that âdazzlingly lifted travel writing out of its midcentury doldrums,â as Thomas Swick writes.
Studying Penelope Fitzgerald, Muriel Spark, and Anita Brookner has led Jessica Francis Kane to wonder if âthere is some pattern to be discerned, some golden ratioâ of motherhood and workâespecially as it seems Fitzgerald is the only one who succeeded at both.
Of all the freebies on offer at Camden Yards, the Hawaiian shirt is arguably the most coveted. The trick? Youâve got to be among the first 15,000 fans to arrive to receive one.
âThe Great Railway Bazaar,â writes Thomas Swick, âis also a book that frequently makes you stop and underline a sentence simply because of how brilliantly it captures a look, a scene ⊠a precious detail, a perfect word, an unexpected finish.â
This past year, textile artist Cici Osias turned her attention to quilting because of its role on the Underground Railroad, where quilting codes signified safe houses for enslaved people seeking freedom.
Socrates, not unlike the Buddha, insisted on subjecting local culture, codes, and customs to rigorous examination, leaving âno established opinion unchallenged.â A new book argues that their similarities donât end there.
Growing up in Marylandâs Baltimore County, Cici Osiasâwho is of African-American, Haitian, Congolese, and Nigerian ancestryâwas surrounded by African art and traditions.
Paul Theroux was a novelist by trade, and, as he set off from London on a journey that would take him across continents, he used fiction techniques to bring a wide cast of characters to life.
âOde on the Death of a Favorite Cat Drowned in a Tub of Goldfishesâ by Thomas Gray has resonated with many cat loversâincluding William Blake, who illustrated the poem just before the turn of the century. @tate.bsky.social exhibited these watercolors in 1971.
âLong ago, @elizmccrack.bsky.social ⊠said, âWe all write with everything we have and for some of us that includes children, and for some of us it does not,ââ Jessica Francis Kane writes. âI believe this. But if I can refresh Fitzgeraldâs literary legacy ⊠Iâd like to.â