Heading off to JFK this evening for a night on Delta’s big steel bird, but the #radicalmischief begins today. I’m hoping, after a sleepless night & quick jaunt across the Midlands, to throw myself into the mix for a few hours tomorrow afternoon. But who knows what Hermes the god of travelers & interpretation will have to say?
It’ll be my fourth trip to the International Shakespeare Conference, counting two years ago in 2016 when the tiny ISC was swallowed by the great every-five-years whale of the World Shakespeare Congress, which was split in the anniversary year of 2016 between Stratford-upon-Avon and London. Singapore in 2021!
The highlight of these trips is the chance to see theater with a gaggle of my favorite Shakespeare nerds, plus my intrepid daughter Olivia, who joined me in 2016 and is back in 2018 at the age of fifteen. We’ve got tickets to three at the RSC in Stratford: Romeo and Juliet on Monday, Macbeth on Wed, and Duchess of Malfi on Th. Then we shift to London for Othello at the Globe (with Mark Rylance as Iago!) and an outdoor Tempest in Covent Garden. Plus a side-trip to Oxford to see the J.R.R. Tolkien exhibition at the Bod, not to mention high tea at the Berkeley Hotel!
Looking forward to seeing some Shakespeare friends in the UK!
Are you answer’d? (4.1.61)



I met Erik Blachford in fall or winter of 1985-86, when we were classmates in our first year of college. We played rugby together and were both English majors with creative interests: Erik remains an actor and theater person, and I did creative writing. But when I took a post-college academic turn, Erik headed off to Microsoft in Seattle, where he was part of the group that founded 
I met Judy Chevalier, a professor of economics and finance at the Yale School of Management, through my son, who has been going to school with her son since both of them were little kids. It’s been a somewhat sideways way to enter into a professional conversation; I’m pretty sure that almost the entirety of the first couple years of our dialogue was about pick-up and drop-off times and each of us checking that our son had not overstayed his welcome at the other’s house. (I don’t think either ever did; I know we loved having Judy’s son with our family for part of our beach vacation last week.) Her perspective as a professor of Economics and Finance connected Shakespeare’s dramatic presentation of usury and dealmaking with longer histories of money and culture in and beyond Europe. She helped conclude our session with a brilliant exploration of why the Venetian state feels compelled to uphold the bond even when it clearly does not want to — her ringing description of the state’s role in structuring and enforcing legal contracts was one of several moments in our conversation that felt somewhat ripped from this year’s headlines.












As we turn into summer, I’m especially looking forward to having Karin Coonrod’s Merchant of Venice come to New Haven for a week in June, with performances 
Maybe it’s just that I’ve seen Fiasco’s 

SAILING WITHOUT AHAB: AN ECO-POETIC VOYAGE – PART TWO




Such a pleasure to spend three days in May eco-ing with such imaginative and generous colleagues!
I’m just back from a lovely short trip to Oxford, MS, where I was pleased to deliver the 46th Annual James Edwin Savage Lecture in the Renaissance. My talk, “Nature Loves to Err: Catastrophe and Ecology in The Winter’s Tale” is part of the larger 



