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  2. List of book podcasts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_book_podcasts

    The Vintage Podcast: 2016–2017 Alex Clark: Independent [17] The Book Review: 2014–present Pamela Paul: The New York Times [18] Between the Covers: 2010–present David Naimon Tin House Books and KBOO 90.7FM [19] Audio Book Club: 2006–2018 Isaac Butler Slate [20] Sugar Calling: 2020 Cheryl Strayed: The New York Times [21] Bookworm: 2021 ...

  3. Modern Love (podcast) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern_Love_(podcast)

    The idea was developed by the WBUR iLab team and then pitched to The New York Times. [8] When the show was pitched The New York Times did not have an in-house audio production team. [9] Episodes are released every Thursday. [10] Modern Love has also been adapted into a book and a television series. [11]

  4. Ares - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ares

    Gods were immortal but could be bound and restrained, both in mythic narrative and in cult practice. There was an archaic Spartan statue of Ares in chains in the temple of Enyalios (sometimes regarded as the son of Ares, sometimes as Ares himself), which Pausanias claimed meant that the spirit of war and victory was to be kept in the city.

  5. Within the Wires - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Within_the_Wires

    Within the Wires is a dramatic anthology podcast in the style of epistolary fiction.. The series was created in 2016 by Jeffrey Cranor and Janina Matthewson (the latter also narrating the first season), and it has been produced as part of the Night Vale Presents podcast network since June 21, 2016.

  6. Ares Borghese - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ares_Borghese

    The Ares Borghese in the Louvre (Ma 866) The Ares Borghese is a Roman marble statue of the imperial era (1st or 2nd century AD). It is 2.11 metres (6 ft 11 in) high. Though the statue is referred to as Ares, this identification is not entirely certain. This statue possibly preserves some features of an original work in bronze, now lost, of the ...

  7. Alma Mater (New York sculpture) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alma_Mater_(New_York...

    A plaster model of the first design of Alma Mater in 1900. Plans for a statue in front of Low Memorial Library began upon the completion of the building in 1897. When Charles Follen McKim, the building's main architect, designed a set of stairs that would lead up to the building, he included an empty granite pedestal in the middle on which a statue might sit. [2]

  8. Temple of Ares - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Temple_of_Ares

    An inscription on a statue base (IG II 3 4, 242) found near the Agora records the dedication of a statue by "the community of Acharnae... as a thank-offering to Ares and Augustus," when one Apollophanes was priest of Ares. This is probably connected in some way with the transfer of the temple to the Agora, since Acharnae was the location of ...

  9. Emma Stebbins - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emma_Stebbins

    Emma Stebbins (1 September 1815 – 25 October 1882) was an American sculptor and the first woman to receive a public art commission from New York City. She is best known for her work Angel of the Waters (1873), the centerpiece of the Bethesda Fountain, located on the Bethesda Terrace in Central Park, New York.