
Meeting Manny Fox
I of course knew nothing about Manny Fox the one and only time I met him; only years later would the obituaries inform me that
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.

I of course knew nothing about Manny Fox the one and only time I met him; only years later would the obituaries inform me that

The widespread practice of polygamy and polyandry among the 19th-century Saints is one of those thorny topics that no one in LDS studies can avoid

Across the street from Voodoo Donuts in downtown Portland sits a can’t-miss-it wall painting that reads: “KEEP PORTLAND WEIRD.” I’ve heard it claimed that Austin,
When I was a teenager I read The Catcher in the Rye. I also read Catch-22, Calvin and Hobbes comics, wore Chuck Taylors, and listened

Back when I still taught in Salt Lake, a Navajo student approached me after class one day to get an absence excused. She’d had to

Lost amidst all of the furor of the purported blasphemy of the tongue-in-cheek religious horror/comedy The Wednesday Night Bible Study Club is just how one-the-nose

[Presented before the Association of Mormon Letters at the UC-Berkeley LDS Institute of Religion, 29 March 2019] “Mark Z. Danielewski was born in New York City and

(A transcript of a real-life conversation in Rexburg, ID from the Kim Clark era, who was noted for opening every Tuesday Devotional with…) It’s another

“It is a laborious madness and an impoverishing one, the madness of composing vast books – setting out in five hundred pages an idea that
Whether you’re an interested writer or reader, subscribe below and we’ll keep you in the loop.