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Byline: Carson Welch

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A review of the Death of Stalin

“To convert political horror into comedy might only be possible at the risk of transposing the profundity of mass death, racism, greed and systemic terror into something as trivial as quibbles over funeral decorations.”

by Carson Welch on April 22, 2018April 21, 2018

Gerald Murnane’s Farewell to Fiction

“The fear of leaving something left unsaid, a deep and unwavering fear, is somehow negotiated with calm in Border Districts.”

by Carson Welch on April 9, 2018April 9, 2018

A Form of Evidence

Inside Firestone’s special collections, coins tell us about history.

by Carson Welch on November 19, 2017November 17, 2017

Please, No

“Could the old man in the banana suit, sitting across from me in the corner of the train, mumbling obscenities, half-caked in his own vomit…”

by Carson Welch on February 26, 2017February 26, 2017

A Brief and True History of That Nagging Feeling You’re Actually a Californian Redwood Tree

You guess it started in middle school when you really related to that photosynthesis unit in intro Biology

by Carson Welch on December 11, 2016

A Brief and True History of Traffic Lights

How we came to live life in red, yellow, and green.

by Carson Welch on October 16, 2016

When I Think About Tennis

Musings on the elegant game.

by Carson Welch on October 16, 2016April 17, 2017

A Brief and True History of Adirondack Chairs

Any school child knows that Neil Armstrong was the first man to sit in an Adirondack chair on the moon, but few know the story of its humble roots as a wee embryo in the mind of Thomas Lee.

by Carson Welch on October 2, 2016

No Homo Love Poems V: The Climatic Conclusion

The finale of Princeton’s most beautiful no-homo love story

by Ben Perelmuter, Carson Welch on May 16, 2016August 10, 2016

Freshman Reflections

This time last year I was in the Indian Himalayas, spending my days basking in solitude, seeking the serene, the isolated. Before, I had always preferred interaction to isolation. I thrived off of the social, was known as an extrovert. … Read More

by Ben Perelmuter, Carson Welch, Katie Duggan on May 16, 2016May 16, 2016

In Defense of Nicolas Cage

Why the much-maligned actor might just be a genius.

by Carson Welch on April 24, 2016April 24, 2016

No Homo Love Poems IV

A Weekly Correspondence from your Resident Bros.

by Ben Perelmuter, Carson Welch on April 24, 2016May 16, 2016


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