Poetry
Beehive Huts
Dunquin Dingle Peninsula, Ireland Little stone domes no matrix, no glue, monk-built, by crevice and heft, taut little sheep fold, where men sat in their sheep clothes, with wooly tongues, holding Continue reading
America's Finest Environmental Magazine
Dunquin Dingle Peninsula, Ireland Little stone domes no matrix, no glue, monk-built, by crevice and heft, taut little sheep fold, where men sat in their sheep clothes, with wooly tongues, holding Continue reading
Cuba is a small country, yet it is the largest island in the Caribbean Sea. In square miles, including the many keys and islets that dot its coastline, it is just a bit larger than Tennessee. Continue reading
Not far from Austin, a dirt road winds through patches of bluestem, spiked mesquite, and twisted live oaks on the working Freeman ranch, owned by Texas State University. Continue reading
I’m often asked what I do for a living. My answer, that I am a professor at the University of Kentucky, inevitably prompts a second question: “What do you teach?” Continue reading
When we say infrastructure, we’re talking not just about bridges, freeways, and sewer lines but the entire suite of townscape and buildings that makes up the human habitat. Continue reading