Nick Alimonos's Blog, page 6
September 8, 2023
May 26, 2023
Racism in The Poppy War?
R.F. Kuang’s The Poppy War starts as a typical coming-of-age fantasy about a girl from humble beginnings who discovers she has special powers. Despite a cliched beginning, the first chapter had me hooked, as it’s probably the best bit of writing in the novel — not surprising given the knock-them-dead-from-page-one nature of publishing today. The... Continue Reading →
Published on May 26, 2023 10:24
May 7, 2023
My Father’s Story, Part II: Coming to America
Arthur Alimonos, my father, passed away in March of this year at the age of ninety after having lived an amazing life. Twelve years ago, he asked me to share his story with the world. This is Part II of that story, where he journeys from his homeland in war-ravaged Greece to the shores of... Continue Reading →
Published on May 07, 2023 21:45
April 28, 2023
Wars, Rings, Trek, and the Death of the Artist
Everything old is new again! Nostalgia sells, and like any good business, Hollywood is banking on your childhood like never before. Instead of the innovative storytelling we grew up with in the ’80s, we are inundated with sequels, prequels, remakes, and reboots. Disney gave us new Star Wars, Amazon’s Rings of Power brought us back... Continue Reading →
Published on April 28, 2023 12:10
April 22, 2023
Station Eleven Review
Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel (what a name!) centers around an apocalyptic, end-of-the-world scenario involving a super-flu that wipes out most of humanity. It’s a more concise and grounded version of Stephen King’s The Stand, and was of particular interest to me given our post-COVID world. Mandel weaves a complex narrative with multiple... Continue Reading →
Published on April 22, 2023 14:39
April 9, 2023
My Father’s Story, Part 1: Hunger and War
After ninety years on this Earth, my father passed away in March of this year. Here, I share the remarkable life of Arthur Alimonos as he tells it, beginning in 1933 in the little-known village of Magoula, Greece. Having lost his father to tuberculosis at age five, Arthur struggled to survive in a family of... Continue Reading →
Published on April 09, 2023 21:29
March 30, 2023
O Babas Then Einai Etho (Greek Version)
Ο μπαμπάς δεν είναι εδώ. Η μητέρα μου ήρθε με αυτή τη γραμμή καθώς φτάσαμε. Ο μπαμπάς δεν είναι εδώ, μπήκε καθώς περπατούσαμε στο διώροφο όπου ζούσε ακόμα με τον πατέρα μου πριν από μια εβδομάδα. Τον είδα στο φέρετρό του στην κηδεία, περιτριγυρισμένο από τις επιχρυσωμένες εικόνες των Ορθοδόξων Αγίων, αλλά καθώς πλησίαζα το άκαμπτο... Continue Reading →
Published on March 30, 2023 10:48
March 27, 2023
Dad’s Not Here: A Tribute to my Late Father, Arthur Alimonos
Dad’s not here. My mother came up with that line as we arrived. Dad’s not here, she intoned as we walked into the duplex where she’d still lived with my father a week ago. I saw him in his casket at the funeral, surrounded by the gilded icons of the Orthodox Saints, but as I... Continue Reading →
Published on March 27, 2023 11:43
March 9, 2023
A Girl Called Wolf by Stephen Swartz
In today’s exciting podcast, I sit down with Stephen Swartz to discuss his semi-biographical novel, A Girl Called Wolf. It’s the harrowing true survival tale of an Inuit girl named Anuka (a fan and friend I’ve known for many years through Facebook) and the rare indie book deserving more attention. Then in true Story Matters... Continue Reading →
Published on March 09, 2023 23:08
March 3, 2023
Artificial Intelligence: Better Than Us
We were wrong about the future. Everyone had it wrong, in fact. The fears instilled in us from 80s and 90s films like The Terminator and The Matrix were off the mark. AI isn’t going to kill us and it won’t turn us into slaves (or batteries). But that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t be afraid... Continue Reading →
Published on March 03, 2023 05:25