short bluesky summary
⌘ Prose poetry, journal entries, and shards of fiction, covering topics as diverse as activism, spirituality, children’s rights, “bewilderment,” and suicide. It isn’t a grab-bag, though—it works as a single ethical inquiry, cohering in an unstable, Howe-ish way
⌘ the last time I read a Howe book (see this post imported here from 2018 Twitter), I described its organizing logic as a "strange, irregular line" drawn around disparate figures, and that description easily applies to NIGHT PHILOSOPHY too. It works, but not in a way that just anyone could emulate
⌘ Howe's description of her process: "I would scrawl [fragments] all over the place as fast as I could, by hand. and then come back to the fragments and try to organize them as if they were spoke or a letter to someone and I knew what I was saying" (NIGHT PHILOSOPHY, p. 24). That's one way to do it!
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Notes [oldest to newest]
3. Bewilderment