October, 2011 Commentary Now Available
The Genius Loci, the Human-Animal Bond, and Following Atticus by Tom Ryan I don't recall that anyone ever <a href="http://www.asunglassesoutlet.com/miu-miu-sunglasses-c-270.html"><strong>Miu Miu Sunglasses</strong></a> taught me that some places possess a spirit, a genius loci. If someone did, it must have been when I was very young because I don't remember ever not noticing how a place felt, its spirit, as well as how it looks. Over the years I've encountered some picture-perfect locations that struck me as sterile and others the conventional wisdom would slap a condemned notice on that possessed more spirit than the greatest cathedral. When I first visited New Hampshire as a child, I intuitively recognized that I was as close to being home as I could ever be on this earth. Decades <a href="http://www.bestsunglassesoutlet.com/category/tom-ford-sunglasses"><strong>Tom Ford Sunglasses</strong></a> later when I learned that this place met the ancient spiritual criteria of a dragon's or tiger's lair, I understood why the realtor's fuzzy faxed picture of the nondescript little structure and its property made my heart flip when I first saw it. Unlike Tom Ryan's genius loci, which resides in the breath-taking White Mountains of New Hampshire, mine resides in the pre-foothills or footlets of the Whites, the tippy-toe hills that channel the Little <a href="http://www.shopingtrade.com/armani-sunglasses.html"><strong>armani sunglasses</strong></a> Sugar into the Connecticut River. Read more
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