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The Art of the Noteworthy — Bimonthly

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Ars Notoria

The Art of the Noteworthy — Bimonthly

July Issue

What are you, FBI or something?

Yves Montand in Grand Prix en 1966. Photograph French National Archives, Joop van Bilsen / Anefo, Public Domain

Editorial

The July issue opens with Ulises Paniagua mourning the loss of authentic football and the traditional World Cup spirit, overtaken by commercialization, betting, corruption, and spectacle, while celebrating the successes of the Mexican team in The 2026 Football Simulacrum. It has been very hot in Europe, with many of us in the north at a loss about what to do, and Arun Kapil comes to the rescue, drawing wisdom from Indian culinary traditions, kokum sherbat, chaas, shikanji, coconut water, cooling spices, as a response to British heatwaves, advocating collaboration with heat rather than fighting it with technology. Ismaël Diadié Haïdara sends us on an infinite journey, exploring Saharan two-verse poems as fractal structures, linking them to broader African traditions of architecture, fabrics, braiding, divination systems, music, and design, in Tebræ, African Art and Fractal Geometry. Africa had fractal geometry long before Mandelbrot, and knew it. Sukrita Paul Kumar is awarded the rare and prestigious Poet of Honour recognition, which celebrates her poetry blending Rumi-like mystical rhythms with yogic realism and raw human loss.

Richard Steinhardt suggests that while the UK and the EU are strategically fortifying regional security, at the prompting of the USA they are also risking catastrophe. To be clear, Phili Mills is not an advocate for extreme ethno-nationalism, but she is arguing for the strengthening of Cornish identity, a language revival, land rights, and autonomy within the UK, with the good news that the Cornish language is experiencing a revival. Richard Steinhardt, in his exploratory piece Stasis and the Infantilisation of Humanity, writes that political stasis is not an accident, it is induced, and draws parallels between the relative powerlessness of people to change society for the better in the 2020s and the powerlessness of actual slaves. The unscrupulous hoard all agency, economic, political, social, moral, spiritual (and even sexual), and mechanisms are used to infantilise the masses and keep the stasis quo. Richard Tuley and Phil Hall discuss whether Israel is the USA’s cat’s paw, and how the European project, so essential to the wellbeing of all Europeans, was undermined.

Peter Cowlam explores the tenuous connection between himself and two notoriously colourful reprobates. Is this guilt by association? David Yip, the impressively honest and competent Lake District chef, writes the penultimate instalment of his memoir, And Then Came COVID.

Arun Kapil also writes about sane food in insane times, when people are ruthlessly manipulated and food trends are managed for profit, arguing for mindful, traditional eating, without prissiness, as a response to the chaos of modern life. Paul Halas, in À Bas le Fast Food, is amused at the British media reaction to French President Jacques Chirac criticising British food, which prompts Halas to discuss the state of French cooking. Halas is in love with it, but regrets how its glory is fading.

Derek Bright writes a short history of the Pilgrims’ Way, the ancient English pilgrimage route that is acquiring greater cultural and religious significance as the new archbishop walks to Canterbury, the British Pilgrim Society grows in numbers, and millions walk the Camino de Santiago. Stephen Hoare expertly describes Edwardian clobber. If you were ever tempted to be retro-stylish (like a gentleman dressing at the height of the British empire) or you are tempted to be a flâneur, Hoare is your guide.

Phil Hall is personal, open, and descriptive about his experiences of Christmas celebrations and culture in Michoacán and Guadalajara, Mexico, and in another travel piece he describes a visit to Venice which left him gobsmacked, overawed, and a little exhausted. Abhay K, the former Indian ambassador to Madagascar and poet, celebrates the uniqueness of its natural beauty with photography, carefully gauged description, and a beautiful string of haiku. Thomas Levene ups the adrenalin. The smooth operator goes to the biggest poker game in the world in Macau and comes out a winner.

Ars Notoria published an interview Tony Hall had with Yves Montand, on the French actor-singer’s career, politics, and art in 1966. The interview was published in The Daily Nation, so only Kenyans read it at the time. As the seasoned reporter who interviewed Nelson Mandela in hiding, and an activist, Hall surprises Yves Montand into a series of frank and illuminating responses. Norman B. Schwartz, the veteran sound editor of many a Hollywood blockbuster, forays again into film and politics with a description of the rise of John F. Kennedy. In Unto Us, a Son Is Given, Norman gives us the inside dope in elegant prose. His articles on Hollywood and Politics published here first, have now been compiled into a book by CentreHouse Press. Inge Colijn, the photographer and former UN senior development worker, combines her social insight with flamboyant colour and thoughtful composition in her photo essay: the Women of the Indonesian Markets.

Our short stories are both unsettling. Tina Bexson writes about a ghost girl she encounters while walking along the Thames. The girl is very far from home. Francesca Young, in her Letters to Former Lieutenant Yamaguchi Hiroshi, 1947, immerses us into what could very well be Yukio Mishima’s worst nightmare.

Ars Notoria is blessed with poetry. This month, in addition to the wonderful Sukrita Paul Kumar, we publish work by outstanding poets like Ulises Paniagua, Dimitris P. Kraniotis, Kiriti Sengupta, Dominic Fisher, and Sonnet Mondal, and we also publish a moving community piece from John Grant at the New Malden Writer’s Workshop about his reflections on fatherhood.

Finally, Phil Hall discusses the wonderful achievements of Eric Laithwaite and furthers the conspiracy theory that his Inertial Cruiser Drive was scotched in public, but developed by the US military into weird darting, spinning craft. Yes, you guessed it, UFOs!


FEATURED


man draped with the argentinian flag

Ulises PaniaguA: THE 2026 FOOTBALL SIMULACRUM

READ

Arun Kapil: COOLING DOWN IN HEATED TIMES

READ

traditional attire in zaria city nigeria

Ismaël Diadié Haïdara: Tebræ, African Art and Fractal Geometry

READ

Sukrita Paul Kumar: Poet of Honour

READ

GEOPOLITICS & POLITICS


close up of the citizens plaza in tokyo

richard steinhardt: Are the UK and the EU strategically fortifying regional security?

READ

phili mills: Kernow, Tyr ha Tavas / Cornwall, Land and Language

READ

RICHARD STEINHARDT: Stasis and the Infantilisation of Humanity

READ

tuley & hall: CAT’S PAW: A Conversation about the US Empire, Israel, and Europe

READ

BIOGRAPHY & MEMOIR


PETER COWLAM:The Tenuous Connection Between Frank W. Garmon Jr’s Account of Charles Cowlam’s Infamous Masquerades, the Present Author, and Geoffrey Robinson’s Hedingham Harvest

READ

DAVID YIP: AND THEN CAME COVID

READ

FOOD & CULTURE


close up of crispy golden potato chips

ARUN KAPIL: Sane Food in Insane Times

READ

holding a caught northern pike fish

PAUL HALAS: A Bas le Fast Food

READ

LIFESTYLE


Derek Bright: A Short History of the Pilgrims’ Way

READ

Stephen Hoare: Edwardian Clobber

READ

TRAVEL


red flower in close up shot

phil hall:Christmas in Michoacan

READ

phil hall: Anyone Goes to Venice

READ

Abhay K:The Magic of Madagascar

READ

Thomas Levene: Smooth Operator

READ

FILM, PHOTOGRAPHY, MUSIC


Tony Hall: an interview with Yves montand

READ

norman b. schwartz: Unto Us, a Son is Given

READ

Inge Colijn: Women of the Indonesian Markets

READ

SHORT STORIES


TINA BEXSON: Ghost Girl

READ

dramatic portrait of soldier with helmet

Francesca Young: Letters to Former Lieutenant Yamaguchi Hiroshi, 1947

READ

POETRY


close up photo of a white tiger

Ulises Paniagua: The Poem Is the Tiger

READ

Dimitris P. Kraniotis: Small Arc

READ

Kiriti Sengupta: I will bequeath my assets to my son

READ

Sonnet Mondal: Poems from the Heart

READ

kid looking through class door

dominic fisher: four poems

READ

COMMUNITY POETRY


adorable baby smiling while relaxing on pillow

john grant: Stare at the monster: remark

READ

SUPPOSITORY SCIENCE


phil hall: THE INERTIAL cruiser

READ

CONTRIBUTORS


WITH MANY THANKS

READ

PAST ISSUES


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POSTS


  • SMOOTH OPERATOR: taking on the biggest poker game in the world

    SMOOTH OPERATOR: taking on the biggest poker game in the world

    30th October 2021

    •

    Ars Notoria

    Grand Lisboa and Wynn buildings in Macau. Photograph Da Na Pexels Macau ‘whales’ are the biggest fish in high stakes poker by Thomas Levene This article is, in part, my personal poker journey and, partly, an insight into the mysterious and secretive world of nose-bleed cash games that just get bigger and bigger. The…

  • Sonnet Mondal: Poems From the Heart

    Sonnet Mondal: Poems From the Heart

    16th March 2021

    •

    Yogesh Patel

    Ever since I stumbled on Sonnet Mondal’s poems, I have been captivated by their stunning simplicity and words evoking a magical experience. That he achieves this consistently is breath-taking. In this occasional series, our aim is to connect you with some of these exceptional beauties I come across. These are rare, as they don’t…

  • THE CHOSEN ONES

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    Sinai. Photograph Tina Bexson by Tina Bexson I slowly slide my head an inch across my forearm so I can see the three prisoners by the door. I do this in such a way to make me appear asleep – I do not want them to know I am watching them. They crouch in…

  • IRELAND, COOKED FROM THE INSIDE

    IRELAND, COOKED FROM THE INSIDE

    17th January 2026

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     With potato grower Willie Scannell of Ballycotton Enough lessons. Come to the table! by Arun Kapil I didn’t understand Irish food by reading about it. I came to understand it by standing still – week after week – watching what people bought, cooked, trusted. For fifteen years – Dingle, Donegal, Dublin, Waterford, Kerry, Galway…

  • THE OFFENSIVE PSEUDOHISTORY OF THE KINDLY Erich von Däniken (RIP)

    THE OFFENSIVE PSEUDOHISTORY OF THE KINDLY Erich von Däniken (RIP)

    13th January 2026

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    Pacal in the Mayan Underworld, in the World Tree. Tomb Lid. Illustration Madman2001 Wikimedia Commons The ancient astronaut theory is a racist escape fantasy by Phil Hall Erich von Däniken, who died on 10th of January this year at the age of 90, wrote a book called Chariots of the Gods in 1968 which sold 70…

  • GOODWILL AND THE RUSSIAN STATE

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    1st January 2026

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    Photograph Phil Hall (1984) Putin should stop kissing icons and start jailing more oligarchs by Richard Steinhardt To the extent that Vladimir Putin seeks to restore legitimacy to the current Russian state, he must confront its foundational crimes and confiscate the assets stolen by the criminal oligarchic class. President Vladimir Putin constantly invokes Russia’s…

  • ESCAPING THE AI FARM

    ESCAPING THE AI FARM

    30th December 2025

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    Experiments with AI September 2024. Phil Hall, using Bing. We Need Modular, Autonomous AI ‘They say, “Sing while you slave” and I just get boredI ain’t gonna work on Maggie’s farm no more’ Bob Dylan by Phil Hall Scanning the horizon carefully reveals a divergence in the application of artificial intelligence that sets a…

  • Save Our Souls: The Fight to Preserve Britain’s Churches, Meeting Houses and Temples

    Save Our Souls: The Fight to Preserve Britain’s Churches, Meeting Houses and Temples

    23rd December 2025

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    Photograph Phil Hall New data reveals a sharp increase in the number of historic churches, meeting houses and temples at risk, threatening the vital social and economic fabric of Great Britain. by Phil Hall The historical parallel is stark. The dissolution of the monasteries under Henry VIII did not just target religion; it dismantled…

  • Metropolis

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    23rd December 2025

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    Cityscape. Photograph Phil Hall by Amal Chatterjee  When I was a child, I dreamed of aeroplanes, great silver birds crossing continents and oceans, I watched their thin vapour trails draw and spread as they made their way from distant cities to others yet more distant. But now the novelty has worn off, I know…

  • Stories of Football and Madness / Cuentos de Fútbol y Locura

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    23rd December 2025

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    In the Maracana Photo by Andre Dantas on Pexels.com by Ulises Paniagua Down the Right Wing The poor child (…) finds in football the possibility of social ascent, having no toy but the ball: the ball is the only magic wand he can believe in.Eduardo Galeano He received the ball down the right wing,…

  • 5. Life in the Sun

    5. Life in the Sun

    23rd December 2025

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    Ars Notoria

    by David Yip Aged 32, I am single—my first gay relationship has ended. After lying to myself and others for years and only dating women, perhaps I had too many expectations, but I am devastated. My younger sister tells me to give myself a couple of weeks. During that time she comes to the…

  • The President’s Feast

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    22nd December 2025

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    Ars Notoria

    Belshazzar’s Feast Rembrandt, National Gallery, Public Domain Christmas is a time of feasting and self-indulgence for the lucky and powerful. For most of the world it is a time of hardship and starvation. And so it has always been. In the Bible, the story of Belshazzar’s Feast (in the Book of Daniel) tells the…

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