【Frivolous Lola】
Staff Picks: The Frivolous LolaUnseen Bestiary, The Avoidance of Love
This Week’s Reading

From ‘Monstrorum Historia,’ by Ulisse Aldrovandi, 1642.
Just in time for Borges’s birthday, Lindsey Carr is curating a collaborative art project documenting creatures that have never been seen. The project, The Unseen Bestiary, a sort of DIY Book of Imaginary Beings, is soliciting brief descriptions to accompany Carr’s drawings. —Mackenzie Beer
I’m rereading Stanley Cavell’s great essay on King Lear (and everything else), “The Avoidance of Love,” in preparation for what I’m toldis another great essay, by Mark Greif, in the new issue of n+1. (Some lifetime subscription thatturned out to be!) —Lorin Stein
I’ve been slowly working through the strikingly lyrical essays in City Dog this summer, so I was excited to see new poems by W. S. di Piero in the fall issue of ZYZZYVA. Something about them reminded me of the end of summer. “Starting Over” perfectly evoked that late-August feeling of everyone coming home: “here you are the nothing / that is the place, / and all the places are you, / none of them yours to keep.” —Ali Pechman
I just learned everything I know about Batman from intern Cody, who puts the superback in superheroes. —L.S.
Since I realized that Spotify has such a great collection of Alan Lomax recordings, I’ve been totally hooked. —Sadie Stein
Moving books around in my house, I rediscovered my copy of Boulevard Transportation, a collaboration between Rudy Burckhardt and Vincent Katz. The former’s photographs—framing and juxtaposing country and city streets, architectural elements, faces—and the latter’s poetry—casual glances and delighted observations—are perfectly suited to each other. On one spread, Burckhardt’s closeup of reeds waving against sun-dappled water is set opposite this from Katz: “I put bare / feet to Terra / swim in the lake / all day long / there is nothing / to do / listen to wind in the trees.” —Nicole Rudick
I was one of those lame kids without a rock collection, but Léonard Rosenthal, famed 1920s Parisian jeweler and author of The Kingdom of the Pearl, has reformed me. If you aren’t sold on reading about rocks, check out the Edmund Dulac illustrations that originally accompanied the text. —M.B.
I’ve always felt more like a New Yorker than a Californian, but this video is amazing. — A.P.
Search
Categories
Latest Posts
Hot World, Cooler Heads
2025-06-26 01:18Kim Kardashian praised for her response to Trump's Muslim ban
2025-06-26 00:02The Perishable Politician
2025-06-25 23:04Popular Posts
No Wokeness, No Worries
2025-06-26 00:46Scientists face 'nightmare' amid Trump's Muslim ban
2025-06-26 00:44Rupert Grint gets new look in Crackle series 'Snatch'
2025-06-26 00:05This space agency is planning to launch 104 satellites in one go
2025-06-25 23:20Slim Returns: Eminem’s call for unity
2025-06-25 22:45Featured Posts
Catholic Sisters Storm Capitol Hill
2025-06-26 01:17J.K. Rowling slams Mike Pence with 1 biblical tweet
2025-06-25 23:48No Filter
2025-06-25 23:26Popular Articles
These Citadels of Power
2025-06-26 01:24This is why you should never, ever leave your phone at work
2025-06-26 00:56Widower's ad looking for a fishing buddy is too sweet for words
2025-06-26 00:54Trump’s Family Leave Shell Game
2025-06-26 00:12Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest updates.
Comments (129)
Sharing Information Network
The Listening Con
2025-06-26 01:29Expressing Aspiration Information Network
Illustrator perfectly sums up how Brits feel about Theresa May holding Trump's hand
2025-06-26 00:56Highlight Information Network
Miss Universe contestant proves that no one can resist the music of Beyoncé
2025-06-25 23:44Focus Information Network
Scientists face 'nightmare' amid Trump's Muslim ban
2025-06-25 22:57Transmission Information Network
Communicator Breakdown
2025-06-25 22:49