From Stanford University (“20 minutes of action”) to the White House (“grab her by the pussy”), the news seems downcast for those seeking more certain outcomes for brutes
Orlando Montoya
Photographer documents Georgia barrier islands
I’M GOING to write something terrible about Georgia’s wonderful barrier islands. It might get me some mean looks here and there. It’s not even true. How about truthy? Our dear islands, at least […]
Sarita Pittman’s Stiletto Society
SETBACKS, failures and disappointments. We’ve had enough of them recently. I’m quite ready for them to stop, honestly. But I feel a Karen Carpenter moment coming on. We’ve only just begun. Retired cosmetologist and former […]
Special Report from the Georgia Climate Change Conference
THOSE DAYS after Hurricane Matthew were quite strange on the Georgia coast. It seemed like our marshy world was standing still. There was an eerie silence and nothing looked familiar. […]
The Rayners: Writing as real-world therapy
CYMBALTA, Lexapro, Effexor. Honestly, these things sound like characters from He Man. Zoloft, Celexa, Prozac. Popular anti-depressants, they work for many. But, for a time, retiree Gordon Rayner took these medications without much success. […]
Children’s Hospital vision perseveres despite setbacks
AFTER Hurricane Matthew, the collapse of the Novant-Memorial partnership has to be one of Savannah’s biggest stories from 2016. Unnoticed by many, fully understood by no one (including me), it set our community back […]
Danelle Lejeune, Literary Mama of the Marsh
IT’S SAFE to say that Danelle Lejeune’s passions all came together on Georgia’s coast because of bacon. A poet, photographer, farmer, teacher, historic preservationist and mother, she has many passions to weave together. So […]
A mile in Lisa Rosenmeier’s shoes
I DON’T think I understood why I wear Hawaiian shirts until I met Lisa Rosenmeier. I have a closet full of flowery, aloha button-downs. And as long as it’s nice out, I wear […]
Kim Polote: Not just another pretty voice
‘My life is my ministry,’ she says. ‘How am I touching my fellow man? It’s not just about change. It’s about change for the better. There is no in between.’
Jonathan Rabb’s Living journey
It’s really a gripping story about one man, a death camp survivor, as he discovers his path through sweeping changes in his own life and in the world around him
Jamie Herbster’s musical therapy
I REALLY don’t feel like getting out of bed or staring at this infernal screen some days. And those days, I harness the power of three very simple, and some might say, sappy […]
The Chathamization of Collin Moulton
You wouldn’t say anything about his gig is on Tybee Time
