
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


It's funny that in one's recovery from illness, the "band width" is still nowhere near what it used to be. I used to be able to read a novel by Dostoyevsky one week, then a book by Forde the next, then a novel by Cozzens the next.
**Sayonara to that! **Now one is fortunate to be able to read The Runaway Bunny.
So hey, I've gone back to reading in three-page spurts. And the perfect author for this "new way of walking, new way of talking" is... Robert Nathan.
You remember Robert Nathan. He wrote The Bishop's Wife and Portrait of Jennie, to name just two of his roughly 40 or so fantasy novels. But the thing is, Robert Nathan's novels are all short -- more like novellas -- and they read like pudding, because he was an excellent and simple narrator.
Anyway, I'm back to Nathan, like it or not; and today's cast updates you on this charming "Mid-Century" author.
It is good to note, too, that Robert Nathan was Jewish but had zero chip on his shoulder. That may be because he was born into a wealthy Manhattan family and didn't feel he had to prove himself in the wider American scene. (We would say today that Nathan was a child of "privilege".)
One corollary of Nathan's un-reactive growing up is that he was explicitly favorable to Christianity. You see this in several of his novels, and also in his poetry, which was much acclaimed on the home front during World War II.
Well, that's lesson two for 2022, and I hope it's the second of many, for Mockingbird, in our New Year. LUV U.
By Mockingbird4.8
6969 ratings
It's funny that in one's recovery from illness, the "band width" is still nowhere near what it used to be. I used to be able to read a novel by Dostoyevsky one week, then a book by Forde the next, then a novel by Cozzens the next.
**Sayonara to that! **Now one is fortunate to be able to read The Runaway Bunny.
So hey, I've gone back to reading in three-page spurts. And the perfect author for this "new way of walking, new way of talking" is... Robert Nathan.
You remember Robert Nathan. He wrote The Bishop's Wife and Portrait of Jennie, to name just two of his roughly 40 or so fantasy novels. But the thing is, Robert Nathan's novels are all short -- more like novellas -- and they read like pudding, because he was an excellent and simple narrator.
Anyway, I'm back to Nathan, like it or not; and today's cast updates you on this charming "Mid-Century" author.
It is good to note, too, that Robert Nathan was Jewish but had zero chip on his shoulder. That may be because he was born into a wealthy Manhattan family and didn't feel he had to prove himself in the wider American scene. (We would say today that Nathan was a child of "privilege".)
One corollary of Nathan's un-reactive growing up is that he was explicitly favorable to Christianity. You see this in several of his novels, and also in his poetry, which was much acclaimed on the home front during World War II.
Well, that's lesson two for 2022, and I hope it's the second of many, for Mockingbird, in our New Year. LUV U.

16,074 Listeners

1,885 Listeners

8,693 Listeners

14,298 Listeners

1,130 Listeners

5,188 Listeners

1,037 Listeners

7,179 Listeners

121 Listeners

81 Listeners

1,097 Listeners

405 Listeners

209 Listeners

40,965 Listeners

578 Listeners