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...days after they returned from the consulate, Maes drank some tea offered by Al-Zahid. According to Keene, Maes immediately became violently ill and from that time until his death his health steadily deteriorated...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Not What They Bargained For | 10/26/1992 | See Source »

...motorcade sped through leafy Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, in late September, Al Gore leaned against his orthopedic back pillow, drank bottled water and reflected on the human spirit and his newfound sense of self. How is it that the wooden-tongued policy wonk of 1988 has emerged as an introspective spokesman for the inner child, an icon of the new manhood? Says Gore simply: "I found the connection between my head and my heart...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Al Gore' s O.K., You're O.K. | 10/12/1992 | See Source »

...paradox creeps through literary history like a specter: Edgar Allen Poe and Earnest Hemingway killed themselves. Jack Keroauc drank himself to death. My case is not so extreme, either in talent or depression. But the urge to write, and the emotions that fuel good writing, stem from a deep sensitivity to the world outside. A writer's conscience is like skin so sensitive that the air hurts. You've got to dance with the dark side, my brother always tells...

Author: By Joshua W. Shenk, | Title: Endpaper | 10/8/1992 | See Source »

...paradox creeps through literary history like a specter: Edgar Allen Poe and Ernest Hemingway killed themselves. Jack Keroauc drank himself to death. My case is not so extreme, either in talent or depression. But the urge to write, and the emotions that fuel good writing, stem from a deep sensitivity to the world outside. A writer's conscience is like skin so sensitive that the air hurts. You've got to dance with the dark side, my brother always tells...

Author: By Joshua W. Shenk, | Title: Writing for Living | 10/8/1992 | See Source »

Lincoln was largely self-taught in the area of books and literature. But in politics he underwent a long, hard schooling from his peers, and he graduated magna sine laude from that bruising course. Opponents would later exaggerate his crudity; but as a man on the frontier who neither drank whiskey nor smoked cigars, he used his disarming gifts as a storyteller in ways that later Americans have preferred not to remember. Today it might be called a character issue that Lincoln told racist and obscene stories to make a point among his none too delicate peers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Dishonest Abe Lincoln | 10/5/1992 | See Source »

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