No bitcoin ETF? No problem. Here’s another way to play the boom.
Saved
China is reinventing the way the world reads
To be creative, practice
One last time: custom styling radio buttons and checkboxes | scottohara.me
What is UX design? | Webflow Blog
22 inspiring web design trends for 2022 | Webflow Blog
The Real Benefits Of Staying Off Social Media
Scriptnotes Episode 522: Blindspots and Natural Structure, Transcript
America Is Running Out of Everything
Situated Software
Blockchain voting is overrated among uninformed people but underrated among informed people
Recruitment tools want a fairer process for young talent
Like it or not, iOS is a better OS than Android for the average user
Why Skyfall is a masterclass in cinematography - Kat Clay
Lynch on Mulholland Dr.
California sues Activision Blizzard over a culture of ‘constant sexual harassment’
Surface Tension
How to Be an Excellent Gift Giver
I Miss it All
Moving from brand strategy to visual identity
A Handy Little System for Animated Entrances in CSS | CSS-Tricks
How Facebook and Google fund global misinformation
Elites Won’t Save the Planet — We Need a Mass Movement
How This All Happened
End Procrastination – iA
10 Books On Negotiation Particularly For Business
Noam Chomsky: GOP’s Soft Coup Is Still Underway One Year After Capitol Assault
The War on Terror Has Been Very Successful at Creating New Terrorists
Hanya’s Boys
Author of A Little Life, A negative critique
A Little Life was rightly called a love story; what critics missed was that its author is one of the lovers.
This is Yanagihara’s principle: If true misery exists, then so might true love. That simple idea, childlike in its brutality, informs all her fiction. Indeed, the author appears unable, or unwilling, to conceive love outside of life support
Luxury is simply the backdrop for Jude’s extraordinary suffering, neither cause nor effect; if anything, the latter lends poignancy to the former. This was Yanagihara’s first discovery, the one that cracked open the cobbled streets of Soho and let something terrible slither out — the idea that misery bestows a kind of dignity that wealth and leisure, no matter how sharply rendered on the page, simply cannot.
“There’s a point,” Yanagihara once said of Jude, at which “it becomes too late to help some people.”
These are difficult words to read for those of us who have passed through suicidal ideation and emerged, if not happy to be alive, then relieved not to be dead. It is indeed a tourist’s imagination that would glance out from its hotel window onto the squalor below and conclude that death is the opposite of paradise, as if the locals did not live their little lives on the expansive middle ground between the two.
even Yanagihara’s novels are not death camps; they are hospice centers. A Little Life, like life itself, goes on and on. Hundreds of pages into the novel, Jude openly wonders why he is still alive, the beloved of a lonely god. For that is the meaning of suffering: to make love possible. Charles loves David; David loves Edward; David loves Charles; Charlie loves Edward; Jude loves Willem; Hanya loves Jude; misery loves company.
The Undoing of Joss Whedon