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Virginia Quarterly Reviewさんのイラストまとめ


An award-winning national magazine at the University of Virginia. Established in 1925.
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Wrapping up is ’s “Beastly Boy,” from Bedtime Stories, which describes the resistance Tomi Ungerer and other controversial children’s authors have faced.
https://t.co/hpAxs99Oon

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Today in 1580, Francis Drake completed the first circumnavigation of the globe. In Spring 2017, Ryan De Velde wrote “Long Way Home,” which chronicles the life of modern circumnavigator Henk De Velde.
https://t.co/8Wsa4L0Knn

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One of the more somber additions to our Bedtime Stories issue, Shelley Puhak’s “Abuses of Enchantment” provides a powerful, exhaustive account of how the once-revered name of Bruno Bettelheim fell from grace.
https://t.co/EF4Hn7EDuN

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Today in 1789, the first Supreme Court was established. ’s “The Meaning of Antonin Scalia,” from Fall 2017, analyzed the late Justice’s courtroom presence in the context of the 2015 legalization of same-sex marriage.

https://t.co/Y779trWLqY

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In “Beastly Boy,” an essay (with a comic interlude!) from our Bedtime Stories issue, celebrates the legacy of controversial children’s author Tomi Ungerer and examines the ways in which “blood, guts, and danger can also just be...fun.”

https://t.co/hpAxs8SdwP

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“When your four-year-old begins talking incessantly about death, there are a few tactics for dealing with it.”

’s essay “Reaper Madness,” from Bedtime Stories, takes an intimate, often hilarious perspective on her son’s title affliction.

https://t.co/QAi52JLHqs

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On Mexican Independence Day, read “Mexico,” Magdalena Mora’s beautifully illustrated postcard accounts of a young girl’s trip to the title country.

https://t.co/eXsbOyojSy

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For our Bedtime Stories issue, illustrator Isol created an interactive set of “colorful & mysterious” Fortune Teller cards to be torn out and used by kids and adults alike! Check out the link for a virtual preview:

https://t.co/ZbhXmO8nnv

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Today is the birthday of Sherwood Anderson (1876–1941), one of earliest contributors. Check out “J.J. Lankes and His Woodcuts,” from Winter 1931, for a poetic profile on “one of the very significant living artists.”

https://t.co/RUAfP5yYNs

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“Don’t you think it’s crazy that people dismiss the importance of kids books?”

asks this question of Eric Carle, one of several children’s book creators he’s addressed his “Open Letters” to in our Bedtime Stories issue. Take a look:

https://t.co/umqb79u9m6

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