Earlier this week, I translated an excerpt from a wonderful essay by Ivan Ilyin. Although sometimes his language verges on the …
Continue Reading about What is Art? Part II of an Essay by Ivan Ilyin
Earlier this week, I translated an excerpt from a wonderful essay by Ivan Ilyin. Although sometimes his language verges on the …
Continue Reading about What is Art? Part II of an Essay by Ivan Ilyin
What do you think is the most common essay title in the history of literature? I don't know. But if I were to guess, I'd say it …
Continue Reading about What is Art? Part I of an Essay by Ivan Ilyin
(Translated from the July 2016 issue of Foma. Here’s the link to the original Russian article) The Ostromir Gospels is the …
Continue Reading about Some interesting facts about the Ostromir Gospels
Earlier this week, I shared a blog post about the amazing things Russians Tsars did on Christmas day. It struck me as an …
Continue Reading about 5 Amazing Facts about Medieval Moscow
I've always loved good, old-fashioned pageantry. In my novels, I try to include moments of it, since it's not something authors …
Continue Reading about How the Tsars celebrated Christmas in Medieval Moscow
Last year, while spending a very illuminating six months in Belarus, my wife and I were invited to a local television program to …
Continue Reading about Christmas Traditions in the Ancient Rus
If you're anything like me, you usually don't bother making New Years' resolutions, because you never keep them. But for me, this …
Continue Reading about Actual Publishing News (sort of), and How You Can Help
Have you ever felt that no matter what you do, nothing works out? The harder you push, the harder life pushes back? Well, I've …
I'm sure you've heard about "hygge." Variously pronounced as "“hyue-gar,” “hoog-jar” but most commonly “hoo-gah," it's a …
Many people have an allergic reaction to the word "conventional." Or, worse yet, "traditional." They immediately sense the bonds …
Continue Reading about 8 things you’ve never heard about medieval Russian princes
Sometimes, when I get stuck in my writing, it helps to take some time to study the visual arts. The amazing flourishing of serious …
Continue Reading about The Three Warriors of Slavic Mythology: Who Were They?
The Hut on Chicken Feet Slavic mythology would not be the same without the old hag with an odd taste in food and …
Continue Reading about Villains from Slavic Mythology: Baba Yaga
These days, Tolkien isn’t particularly popular among certain readers and publishers of fantasy. To be called “Tolkien-esque” can …
Continue Reading about Things You May Not Know about “Kievan Rus”
In the 18th century, Russia entered the grand stage of European history. It threw aside its "primitive Easternness", and did …
Continue Reading about Slavic “fake-lore”: was Slavic mythology made up?
The Bright Seven Days The first week of Easter is like an extended single day of feasting. Joyful and bright. …
In my second novel (tentatively titled The Garden in the Heart of the World), one of the characters is given a …
As I’ve begun to delve deeply into my second novel, I’m considering using the time of the year as a contrast to the characters’ …
Continue Reading about Seven Ways Russians Used to Celebrate the Coming of Spring
A criticism of an early version of my first novel was that it was not grounded enough, too “out there,” too interested in the …
Continue Reading about Things you never knew about the Russian cradle