After the reckoning, in an afterlife of facts, the wiki passes over where the author was wrong.
Excerpt:
Sean Lennon has a smaller frame than his stepbrother Julian, but both, like their father, have ectomorphic physiques, and neither is overweight.
In the Library of Congress Classification system, work on male homosexuality as such is cataloged in the subclass HQ: The Family, Marriage, Women—under the subrubric Sexual Life. Specifically, HQ 75-76.8. Erotica can be found in the HQ 450s.
Valor and Dolor, as such, were not among the gods worshipped in ancient Greece.
Brian Blanchfield is a poet and essayist whose most recent book is Proxies: Essays Near Knowing—a collection equal parts cultural studies and dicey autobiography, published by Nightboat Books and winner of a 2016 Whiting Award in Nonfiction. His first two books, both poetry, are Not Even Then (University of California Press) and A Several World (Nightboat), which received the 2014 James Laughlin Award. His essays and poetry have appeared in Harper’s, BOMB, The Nation, The Paris Review, Brick, StoryQuarterly, Lana Turner, and other publications; and two long sequences—one poetry, one prose—are available as chapbooks: The History of Ideas, 1973-2012 (Spork Press, 2013) and Correction. (Essay Press, 2016). A 2014-15 Howard Foundation Fellow, he is an editor of Fence, a guest editor this year of the PEN Poetry Series, and host of Speedway and Swan, a biweekly poetry and music show on KXCI Community Radio in Tucson.