Ursula K. Le Guin’s The Dispossessed and The United Order
On a group of pioneers struggling to establish a Zion society of no-rich-no-poor in a desert landscape, and also Utah.
Hagoth favors essays that can trace their lineage back to Michel de Montaigne; whether narrative, analytical, or devotional, these essays lean ruminative, conversational, meandering, impressionistic, and are reluctant to wax didactic. But that doesn’t mean you won’t find the occasional poem or piece of fiction here as well.
On a group of pioneers struggling to establish a Zion society of no-rich-no-poor in a desert landscape, and also Utah.
You know who else went on a Trek?

On the multiple meanings of Funk.

Imperfect love lets in all fear.

On our baptismal covenants and finding resolution in the irresolution itself.
God is an (un?) American.

We are all in the Truman Show now; perhaps we always have been.

Apropos of both Juneteenth and the Summer Solstice.

Or, confessions of a reformed BYU-Idaho graduate…

My students struggle with Hundred Years of Solitude.
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