Articles

  • Oct 26, 2024 | commondreams.org | Sean Kelly

    It’s been a hell of a year for everyone. Record-breaking natural disasters have decimated entire cities, gun violence continues to plague our schools and public spaces with little-to-nothing done to stop it. Grocery and rent prices are high, wages are low, the U.S. war machine rages across the globe while we have no choice but to foot the bill, and yet another major election looms. For disabled folks across the country, these issues and more have never been more amplified.

  • Aug 27, 2024 | medium.com | Sean Kelly

    According to analysis of wastewater samples by the Pandemic Mitigation Collaborative, over a million people are getting infected with SARS-CoV-2 every day, with 1 in 41 (2.5%) actively infectious right now nationwide. In some locations the numbers of infected during summer wave rivals or exceeds the peaks reached during last winter, or “respiratory virus season,” with the west and south hit particularly hard. The national average masks the considerable amount of transmission in many states.

  • Mar 21, 2024 | themonthly.com.au | Toni Jordan |Sean Kelly |Russell Marks |Ceridwen Spark

    April 2024 Life Sentences The author pays tribute to those who have committed ‘unhistoric acts’ that have made good in her world The bearded man in chinos on his way to an appointment who pulled up on his bicycle when I tripped and smashed my face on the corner of the bluestone gutter in Wellington Street, who called the ambulance and waited with me until it came and then pedalled away, never to be seen again; the neighbours who dropped over spaghetti bolognaise, with parmesan, grated, in a...

  • Mar 21, 2024 | themonthly.com.au | Tara Kenny |Sean Kelly |Russell Marks |Ceridwen Spark

    Netflix’s adaptation of Liu Cixin’s hard sci-fi novel, from the creators of ‘Game of Thrones’ and ‘True Blood’, is sentimentalised but easily digestible In a postscript to the 2014 English translation of his novel The Three-Body Problem, the Chinese sci-fi writer Liu Cixin waxes lyrical about his love of science:I’ve always felt that the greatest and most beautiful stories in the history of humanity were not sung by wandering bards or written by playwrights and novelists, but told by science.

  • Mar 21, 2024 | themonthly.com.au | Michael Williams |Sean Kelly |Russell Marks |Ceridwen Spark

    From the title itself, there’s a bait-and-switch going on in Jonathan Lethem’s latest book, or at the very least a gentle confounding of expectations. Brooklyn. Crime. Novel. Three well-known elements, you’d think.

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