Voices In Time c. 31 | Rome Different Strokes In the classical world, everyone wants their fifteen minutes of fame.More
Voices In Time 1711 | London We Few, We Famous Few Joseph Addison on fame as a double-edged sword.More
Voices In Time 1835 | Philadelphia Setting His Stage P.T. Barnum discovers there’s no business like show business.More
Preamble Dancing with the Stars By Lewis H. Lapham The vanity of princes is an old story; so is the wish for kings and the gazing into the pool of Narcissus. More
Essay Against Appearances By Bruce Bawer Orson Welles became a star not by creating some great work, but by simply scaring the hell out of people. More
Essay Consumer Products By Stephen Marche Celebrity culture may seem ahistorical, but its roots reach deeply into the past four hundred years. More
Essay Vanishing Act By Paul Collins Barbara Newhall Follett was a prodigy who transfixed the literary world—and then vanished. More