Recommended reading / viewing / listening

Lady Gaga, the gothic groundbreaker / Time to rethink obituaries / Coffee has a long term effect on health / The ‘new’ Middle East may not exist / Some in MAGA want Trump to go harder / Napping smarter

This week: Lady Gaga, the gothic groundbreaker / Time to rethink obituaries / Coffee has a long term effect on health / The ‘new’ Middle East may not exist / Some in MAGA want Trump to go harder / Napping smarter

Most of these items come from my social media networks. Follow me on BlueSky, Instagram, Tumblr, LinkedIn, and Facebook for more fascinating videos, photos, articles, essays, and criticism. Learn more about my academic background here and about me here.

1. What you put in your coffee can have an outsize impact on your health
By Trisha Pasricha | The Washington Post | October 2025
“Add no more than 1 teaspoon of sugar and 2 tablespoons of whole milk to each cup. But go ahead and grab another mug; 3½ cups of filtered coffee per day can be good for your health.”

2. A ‘New Middle East’ Is Easier to Declare Than to Achieve
By David Remnick | The New Yorker | October 2025
“As a long-overdue ceasefire takes hold amid the ruins of Gaza, the President’s visit to Jerusalem is more about transactional politics than transformative peace.”

3. A seed bank in England marks 25 years of preserving the world’s plant diversity
By Mustakim Hasnath | Associated Press | October 2025
“The Millennium Seed Bank at the Royal Botanic Gardens Kew holds more than 2.5 billion wild plant seeds from around 40,000 species. The seeds are stored in sealed glass jars and foil packets, and are preserved in temperatures of minus 20 degrees Celsius ( minus 4 Fahrenheit) to guard against extinction.”

4. In D.C., the Arc de Trump Goes Up as the Local Workforce Shuts Down
By Michael Schaffer | Politico | October 2025
“Trump really wants a shining capital. Can you do that while battering the city economy?”

5. Obituaries are important, worth rethinking and reviving
By Kristen Hare | Poynter | November 2021
“Here’s what we discovered from 2.5 years of work, a fellowship and a newsletter.”

6. Putins All the Way Down
By Joshua Yaffa | Foreign Affairs | October 2025
“The Kremlin no longer holds to any democratic pretensions. Putin appears destined to rule indefinitely, and even far down the ballot, independent candidates are kept from running.”

7. The Rise of RFK Jr.
Frontline :: PBS | October 2025
“Tracing the dramatic and controversial rise of Robert F. Kennedy Jr., ‘Frontline’ examines how the scion of a storied dynasty endured tragedy and scandal, broke with the Democratic Party and his family, stoked conspiracy theories, and is reshaping government and public health.”

8. Latinx Shakespeares of the 20th century
By Carla Della Gatta | Shakespeare & Beyond :: Folger Shakespeare Library | October 2025
“Latinx peoples and cultures have been a rich part of American Shakespearean performance for more than 85 years.”

9. The Conservatives Who Think Trump Isn’t Going Far Enough
By David Austin Walsh | Boston Review | October 2025
“MAGA’s base is more fractured than it looks.”

10. Lady Gaga Was Always Gothic. Now the World Has Caught Up to Her.
By Wesley Morris | Cannonball :: The New York Times | October 2025
“At a moment when other pop stars are flirting with dark spectacle, Gaga’s ‘Mayhem’ tour shows that she has perfected it.”

11. ‘Shall We Have a King?’
By William E. Leuchtenburg | American Heritage | Fall 2025
“Some delegates at the Constitutional Convention wanted a strong executive, while others feared the American president might become a king.”

12. How a ‘dark fleet’ of tankers helped a Mexican cartel build a fuel-smuggling empire
By Stefanie Eschenbacher, Shariq Khan and Stephen Eisenhammer | Reuters | October 2025
“The Jalisco New Generation Cartel has mastered the use of tankers to smuggle fuel to Mexico. U.S. oil players are helping them. Reuters traces one ship’s brazen journey.”

13. Revenge is never simple — neither is the legacy of ‘Kill Bill’
By Caroline Siede | Paste | October 2025
“Like The Bride herself, Kill Bill remains a messy, contradictory, thoroughly kickass duology.”

14. The secret to waking up from a nap feeling refreshed (and not groggy)
By Andee Tagle | NPR | October 2025
“Ever woken up from a nap and felt more tired? Or so discombobulated you forgot which planet you were on?”

15. Francis Ford Coppola Forced to Sell His Custom $1 Million Watch After ‘Megalopolis’ Debacle
By Laurie Brookins | The Hollywood Reporter | October 2025
“The one-of-a-kind F.P. Journe watch will be on display in New York before its sale in December. The director spent $120 million of his own money on the film, which grossed just $14.4 million.”

16. Social Ties Help You Live Longer. What Does That Mean for Introverts?
By Dana G. Smith | The New York Times | October 2025
“You don’t have to be the life of every party to reap the health benefits.”

17. A new island erupted from the sea – can it show us how nature works without human interference?
By Patrick Greenfield | The Guardian | October 2025
“The volcanic island of Surtsey emerged in the 1960s, and scientists say studying its development offers hope for damaged ecosystems worldwide.”

18. Stonewall Uprising
American Experience :: PBS | June 2023
“When police raided the Stonewall Inn, a popular gay bar in the Greenwich Village section of New York City on June 28, 1969, the street erupted into violent protests that lasted for the next six days. The Stonewall riots, as they came to be known, marked a major turning point in the modern gay civil rights movement in the United States and around the world.”

19. Inside Llewyn Davis: The Sound of Music
By Kent Jones | The Criterion Collection | January 2016
“The world of the Coens is the world of everyday heroes and scoundrels, of you and me and the stranger sitting across from us, the ordinary citizens trying to make sense of life as we live it, who have neither the time nor the wherewithal to develop into the Transformative Figures of Our Age.”

20. The Inca
By Melvyn Bragg | In Our Time :: BBC 4 | 2011-2019
Also see: The Taiping Rebellion | Maimonides | Aristotle’s Poetics | The Mexican Revolution


Interested in more like this? Since June 2011, Stillness of Heart‘s “Recommended” series has accumulated a magnificent collection of articles, essays, music, podcasts, historical analyses, cultural reflections, and documentaries. Scroll through the offerings here.

Recommended reading / viewing / listening

Being alone / Planning for post-Assad Syria / NASA preps for Mars landing / Larry David and Jerry Seinfeld get coffee / RFK’s secret archive

Most of these great items come from my Twitter feed or Facebook news feed. Follow me on Twitter and on Facebook for more fascinating videos, articles, essays and criticism.

1. How to be alone
By Tracy Clark-Flory | Salon | Aug. 4
“We all have to learn to be by ourselves, whether it’s after a breakup, a move or a divorce — but how, exactly?”

2. State Department and Pentagon Plan for Post-Assad Syria
By Steven Lee Myers and Thom Shanker | The New York Times | Aug. 4
“Mindful of American mistakes following the invasion of Iraq in 2003, both agencies have created a number of cells to draft plans for what many officials expect to be a chaotic, violent aftermath that could spread instability over Syria’s borders …”

3. Ruins a memento of Iraqi Christians’ glorious past
By Kay Johnson | Associated Press | Aug. 5
“[R]uins have emerged from the sand over the past five years with the expansion of the airport serving the city of Najaf, and have excited scholars who think this may be Hira, a legendary Arab Christian center.”

4. NASA braces for ‘7 minutes of terror’ Mars plunge
By Alicia Chang | Associated Press | Aug. 5
“The Curiosity rover was poised to hit the top of the Martian atmosphere at 13,000 mph. If all goes according to script, it will be slowly lowered by cables inside a massive crater in the final few seconds.”

5. Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee: Larry Eats a Pancake
By Jerry Seinfeld and Larry David | Crackle | July 2012
“Jerry’s special guest is Larry David in the premiere episode of Comedians In Cars Getting Coffee.”

6. He May Be Leader of Peru, but to Outspoken Kin, He’s Just a Disappointment
By William Neuman | The New York Times | Aug. 4
“The president’s brother Ulises, the oldest of the seven Humala children, compared the family’s wranglings — ‘Humala vs. Humala’ is a headline that needs no translation here — to the escapades in ‘Dallas.’ ”

7. Theo Jansen creates new creatures
TED | September 2007
“Artist Theo Jansen demonstrates the amazingly lifelike kinetic sculptures he builds from plastic tubes and lemonade bottles.”

8. Kennedys keep vise-grip on RFK papers
By Bryan Bender | The Boston Globe | Aug. 5
“Scholars and government officials believe the 62 boxes of files covering Kennedy’s three years as attorney general during his brother’s administration could provide insights into critical Cold War decisions on issues ranging from the Cuban missile crisis to Vietnam.”

9. Left for Dead in Virginia
By Ronald S. Coddington | Disunion :: The New York Times | June 28
“George T. Perkins and his Union comrades breathed a collective sigh of relief on the afternoon of June 27, 1862.”

10. Mississippi 1964: Civil Rights and Unrest
By Walter Cronkite | NPR | June 2005
“Walter Cronkite recalls the story of the slaying of three civil rights workers in 1964. Cronkite saw the drama unfold amid two struggles: one for civil rights and another against the Vietnam War.”

******************

TUNES

My soundtrack for today included:
1. FULL MOON, EMPTY HEART Belly
2. COME TOGETHER The Beatles
3. STEP BY STEP Jesse Winchester
4. ATLANTIC CITY (Live) Bruce Springsteen
5. COME RAIN OR COME SHINE (Unplugged) Don Henley
6. ARE YOU GONNA GO MY WAY (Unplugged) Lenny Kravitz
7. RACING IN THE STREET Bruce Springsteen
8. AGAIN Lenny Kravitz
9. HOUSE OF THE RISING SUN The Animals
10. HELTER SKELTER U2

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