With his all-American good looks and musical talent to burn, Keith Lockhart has given Utah music lovers more than their fair share of enjoyment. After inspiring us as conductor and musical director of the Utah Symphony since 1998, he now is bowing out from the Utah stage, leaving us all a little poorer.
Continue reading "Keith's Finale, Bernstein's MASS: City Weekly" »
Living in Utah, you’ve heard it before: old creepy guy marries prepubescent virgin on polygamous compound. When explored in fiction, such stories can be as over-baked as last Sunday’s casserole. But Carol Lynch Williams does the improbable in her latest novel The Chosen One. She takes a far-too-common headline and creates a brave, uncommon voice in the character of 13-year-old Kyra.
Continue reading "The Chosen One by Carol Lynch Williams: City Weekly" »
Inspired by Wilson Quarterly's "In Essence," I write a regular piece for Sunstone summarizing overlooked scholarship and writing that intersect with Mormon culture. In the May 2009 issue I talk about two recent pieces on Mormons and politics:
Continue reading "In the World: Politics as Usual? in Sunstone" »
In the current milieu of “extreme” magic, David Copperfield seems downright old-fashioned. But his style has inspired countless magicians who have gone their own way, including rebels such as Chris Angel and David Blaine. And while presentation changes over time, the magic remains the same in attempting to connect to another person through story and wonder.
Continue reading "David Copperfield: City Weekly" »
I have occasionally pondered on the possibility of getting an MFA in creative writing. The idea has never really appealed to me, especially weighing the cost/benefit. Would it make me a better writer? Likely, but not certain. Does it guarantee a writing career? No, not particularly. Would it put me in a awful state of debt? Without a doubt.
Continue reading "Random Thoughts on MFA Writing Programs, Ponzi Scemes, and Workmanlike Novels" »
Just found out about this year’s Pulitzer Prize book winners. Interesting choices. Fiction always seems something unexpected, something that is usually off my radar. For those who care about awards, here’s the list.
Continue reading "Pulitzer Prize Book Winners, 2009" »
Here is a short piece I wrote a couple months back for the City Weekly, but it was quickly orphaned and never made print. For those interested in the Utah art scene (yes, believe it or not, there is one!), 15 Bytes is the premiere source.
"Do you ever find yourself coming home from Gallery Stroll or finishing the latest City Weekly arts coverage, but still craving more aesthetic and creative goodness? Then look no further than the smart and lively 15 Bytes. It is a local hidden gem of a magazine dedicated solely to art, artists, galleries,
and more.
Continue reading "The Utah Art Scene: 15 Bytes" »

Looking to get out, but yearning for something off the beaten track? Taking a road trip to Spiral Jetty at Rozel Point will provide a unique afternoon on the shores of the Great Salt Lake where art and the outdoors create unusual bedfellows.
Continue reading "Coil of the Wild: Robert Smithson’s re-emerged Spiral Jetty demands a visit." »
In the painting of architecture, the subject is rarely revisited with a new, interesting perspective. Siddarth Parasnis brings something different that shakes our vision and shows unexceptional walls and windows as something more beautiful than we expect.
Continue reading "Art of Siddarth Parasnis" »
Tackling the looming political conundrum of illegal immigration would be a challenge for any novelist, let alone a young adult novelist. But Julia Alvarez spins a brave tale in Return to Sender, putting a face on the fears and challenges of illegal workers in America with personal aplomb.
After being injured in a tractor accident, Tyler’s father hires a migrant family to help keep their Vermont farm going. Tyler can’t help but look on this family with fear—especially Mari, the oldest daughter among three, who is proud of her Mexican heritage but is slowly becoming connected to American culture.
Continue reading "Julia Alvarez's Return to Sender" »
With an endless stream of books on polygamy and its discontents, do we really need another one? If the answer includes mention of Nauvoo Polygamy: "… but we called it celestial marriage" by George Smith, it would be a definitive yes. Ten years in the making, Nauvoo Polygamy traces the origins and establishment of Joseph Smith's vision of "spiritual wives" before it ever stepped foot in the State of Deseret. The book should dispel forever the common misperception that Joseph pined after only one wife and that polygamy was Brigham's idea while crossing the plains.
Continue reading "George D. Smith's Nauvoo Polygamy" »
Before we get carried away with holiday cheer, the Utah Symphony is reminding us that some of the most soul-stirring music is not always about babes in mangers, reindeer or winter wonderlands. Mozart's Requiem is a funeral mass that became his own swan song, with the current performance marking the 217th anniversary of Mozart’s death.
Continue reading "Utah Symphony: Mozart's Requiem" »
David Ebershoff’s moving and humorous story The 19th Wife explores the unlikely lives of two remarkable characters: Jordan Scott, a 21st-century “lost boy” and hardscrabble gay man, who travels from Los Angeles back to the site of his polygamous upbringing to help absolve his mother of the murder of his father; and Ann Eliza Winters, the novel’s namesake, who divorced Brigham Young and lectured against polygamy across 19th-century America.
Continue reading "David Ebershoff's The 19th Wife" »
The first sentence of the book Massacre at Mountain Meadows sums it up perfectly.
"On September 11, 1857, Mormon settlers in southern Utah used a false flag of truce to lull a group of California-bound emigrants from their circled wagons and then slaughtered them. When the killing was over, more than one hundred butchered bodies lay strewn across a half-mile stretch of an upland meadow. Most of the victims were women and children."
Continue reading "Massacre at Mountain Meadows" »
What does a Buddhist orphanage in Africa have in common with a Park City art gallery? The artist Olivia “Holly” Mae Pendergast. On a recent trip to the country of Malawi, she created a new series of evocative and beautiful figurative paintings of people she encountered.
Continue reading "Pendergast's Portraits of Malawi" »
Whether we think about it or not, during the winter months most of our bananas, broccoli, apples and strawberries come from a different state, and more likely a different country. But for the past 16 years, every Saturday morning during the summer, Pioneer Park has become the burgeoning Downtown Farmers Market, offering us locals a taste of what Utah farmers have.
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Where can you eat Bosnian Cevapi, drink Tahitian Otai, and finish off with Scottish apple tarts for dessert, all at the same place? At the 2008 Living Traditions Festival, of course. But food is only the beginning at this annual celebration of Salt Lake City’s folk arts and ethnic culture. Musicians, dancers, artists, craft makers, storytellers and many more come together every May to offer attendees a unique experience.
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In the small town of Springville, you’ll find one of the best museums in Utah. And now until July 6 is the 84th Annual Spring Salon at the Springville Museum of Art. With close to 300 works of art in a diversity of styles and approaches, you will find something for everyone’s taste: painting, sculpture, drawing, photography, mixed media, and occasionally pieces that are difficult to categorize.
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“They were young, educated, and both virgins on this, their
wedding night, and they lived in a time when a conversation about sexual
difficulties was plainly impossible. But
it is never easy.”
The opening hook to Ian McEwan’s latest novel On Chesil Beach
is a delicious invitation into a world that time forgot. McEwan, the celebrated, literary Limey, whose
previous works include such novels as Saturday, Atonement, and Enduring Love, has now focused his attention on two characters with such a rich and
complex history, taking the reader back to a time and place that we sometimes
wonder existed at all.
Continue reading "Ian McEwan's On Chesil Beach" »
After Mitt Romney dropped out of the presidential race, many people gave a sigh of relief that we would not have to possibly endure years of Mormon jokes delivered on late night television. But a century earlier, Reed Smoot—an LDS Apostle who was elected to the U.S. Senate—caused an even greater media controversy.
Continue reading "The Mormon Church on Trial" »
Before the infamous forger and murderer Mark Hofmann became a household name, he was double-dealing a nonexistent “McLellin collection” to several buyers, claiming it would change Mormon history forever. On Oct. 15, 1985, he was to deliver what he promised was “two apple crates full” of these documents to Salt Lake City businessman Steven Christensen. But instead, on that chilly morning, he delivered pipe bombs, killing Christensen and Kathy Sheets, two innocent believers caught in Hofmann’s psychopathic crossfire.
Continue reading "Apostate Secrets: The William E. McLellin Papers" »
Contrary to popular perception, silent films are not actually silent. I mean, you don’t get to hear the characters talk, of course, but you do get music and all that visual energy that started this whole crazy business we call show. And to unsuspecting audiences, silent films are fun—especially when the music is performed live.
Continue reading "The Mark of Zorro @ The Organ Loft" »
"Why should those two guys over there go to the opera?” asks Guido LeBron, pointing through the windows of the Utah Opera rehearsal hall across the street to two workers taking a break outside of the SpringAir Mattress company. Those “two guys” might be amused to know this conversation is taking place among a talented group of musical artists for their sake.
Continue reading "Utah Opera: Puccini's Tosca" »
During the monthly Gallery Stroll in Park City, the Phoenix Gallery will hold its winter kickoff event, SMALL: The 2nd Annual Miniature Painting Exhibit featuring contemporary paintings that are … well, small. But paintings are just part of the experience at this gallery during the “Sax and Sushi” opening reception.
Continue reading "Sax and Sushi SMALL Show" »
In August of 1993, I stood in a conference room of a local Salt Lake City hotel listening to a passionate and angry speech by a local bankruptcy lawyer and family man—Paul James Toscano—criticizing the leadership of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints for an idolatrous overemphasis on Heavenly Father at the expense of the grace of Jesus Christ. Toscano said such an imbalance leads to an abuse of power in the LDS hierarchy, a false conception of salvation and a misguided view of sexuality. In anticipation for the inevitable backlash, he declared, “We must not fear excommunication.” I thought to myself, “This man is packing some serious chutzpah.”
Just one month later, Toscano was sitting in his own “court of love” for that speech he gave, facing 15 of his local priesthood leaders. And by late afternoon on Sept. 19, he was excommunicated for apostasy.
Continue reading "Paul Toscano's The Sacrament of Doubt" »