Skip to content
Ars Notoria
Ars Notoria

The Art of the Noteworthy

  • Home
  • About
  • Humane Socialism
  • Contributors
  • Contact
  • Original Books
  • Checkout
0
Ars Notoria

The Art of the Noteworthy

August Issue

At last, we have the thrilling prospect of a humane socialist alternative, while the Tories and Labour play footsie together—and Reform looms menacingly on the horizon. Six hundred thousand people have already signed up to Zarah Sultana and Jeremy Corbyn’s new party, which remains unnamed—though we’ve suggested the Humane Socialist Party.

This issue begins with Alchemy. Arun Kapil has written an article on cooking with water, flowers, and perfume. It is delicious and wild. If you love and appreciate food, then read it and breathe in the jasmine.

We are also proud to present an interview with A.F. Moritz, alongside three of his exquisite poems. The interview, conducted by J.W. Wood, opens with Moritz reflecting:

“I have the suspicion of the body and the love of the body and the lament of the body and the praise of the body. And I don’t know what this means, but I know that I want to circle around it because it is ultimate.”

This issue is rich with poetry—and why not? We are delighted to publish Yogesh Patel’s poem: a retirement home for gods. Before the eminent poet Sudeep Sen took up his position, Yogesh Patel was our founding poetry editor. Yogesh, was awarded an MBE for his work as a poet, for producing wonderful anthologies and for introducing diaspora poets into the British curriculum and into the mainstream of British literature.

Peter Cowlam, the consummate literary craftsman, has provided us with three well-seasoned, finely-jointed and polished poems, each with its own lustre. From Latin America, we have a wonderful burst of language: Martín Tonalméyotl’s poems appear in Nahuatl, Spanish, and English, while Celerina Patricia Sánchez Santiago’s work is presented in Mixtec, Spanish, and English.

We also feature a delicate portrait of Jackie Bouvier Kennedy Onassis by Norman B. Schwartz. She was a complex and fascinating woman whom Gore Vidal described as “rapacious and salacious,” Schwartz argues she was also gracious.

Short stories abound. Charles Dean, a complete newcomer, offers a science-fiction tale about a broken man in a broken world who claws his way back from despair by putting pen to paper—it’s a powerful debut.

From the experienced polymath and journalist Tina Bexson, we have the first instalment of The Villa of Zamalek, which reads like the opening of a magnificent novel. Meanwhile, the accomplished Amal Chatterjee delivers a twisted story—or, if you prefer, a story with a twist—that only a writer of his skill could pull off.

David Yip presents the second part of his memoir: a moving account of revindication, tracing his journey from working in a Chinese takeaway to becoming a chef—it’s honest, forthright, and confessional writing.

Phil Hall contributes four provocative discussion pieces. One argues that Germany should return to its tradition of neutrality and diplomacy. Another calls for a deliberate act of “civilisational triage,” urging us to think like Venetians in an age of disaster in order to rescue our civilisation. Hall, in another piece, contends that the Arab world must open its borders and accept responsibility for taking in Palestinian refugees, noting the willingness and speed with which millions of Ukrainians were given refuge.  Arab nations remain reluctant to take in Palestinians in the face of unspeakable horror. Why? Finally, Hall praises BRICS, not for taking an oppositional stance to the Western Alliance, but for offering an alternative and constructive framework to tackle global crises, from climate change and AI governance to conflict reduction and inequality. We should welcome and support BRICS.

Our final discussion piece stems from conversations—via email—with Avi Loeb, exploring the nature of an interstellar comet hurtling toward the inner solar system. Loeb entertains the faint possibility that it could be artificial. Why not? As he says, it’s a pedagogical exercise—one that compels us to consider the implications.

This issue is brimming with skill, thoughtfulness and imagination. We really hope you enjoy it.


Food & drink

Cooking with Waters, Flowers & Perfume

Arun Kapil: Cooking with waters, flowers, and perfumes isn’t trickery. It’s the oldest kind of alchemy. We distil, reduce, infuse, coax. We borrow what nature offers and remix it into emotion. This piece is for that art. For the cooks who understand that beauty isn’t owned. It’s noticed. It’s nurtured. It’s remembered.


POETRY

“POETRY IS PRIMORDIAL” – AN INTERVIEW WITH A.F. MORITZ

A.F. Moritz: I have the suspicion of the body and the love of the body. You know I have the lament of the body and the praise of the body, and so I don’t know that I know what this means, but I know that I want to circle around it because it’s ultimate. I want to stay near it and in it, because it’s ultimate.


GEOPOLITICS

Will Europe Escape the USA’s Death Spiral?

Phil Hall: Germany is being steered toward a reckless confrontation with Russia, inverting its post-war legacy, but this alignment with Washington’s neoconservative agenda (backing NATO expansion, sabotaging energy autonomy, and escalating arms shipments to Ukraine) must be seen for what it is: a temporary hijacking of German policy, not its natural trajectory.


SHORT STORY

Hengshan Park

Amal Chatterjee: The windows shudder as another train roars past. Through the grey-streaked glass, he sees the city growing, cranes yellow against the sky, towering over the already giant blocks that have risen while he’s been at his desk. Or so it feels, each day stepping out into a city just that fraction more different, each month clearly a little more, every quarter changed, every year almost renewed. 


MEMOIR

OUT OF THE FRYER

David Yip: One day, sitting together having something to eat, we are all given bowls of rice with chopsticks—we are to help ourselves to the other dishes. I whisper to my dad, who gets up and comes back with a fork for me. The other chefs notice this, and one says, “What? Your dad didn’t teach you Chinese, and you can’t use chopsticks either? He is a bad man!” My dad doesn’t reply, and we continue eating. That night, I take a pair of chopsticks from the takeaway back to the flat and ask my dad to teach me how to use them.


POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY

Think Like a Venetian

Phil Hall: Abandon hope, all ye who enter here. We need a deliberate act of civilizational triage. The first step to survival isn’t hoarding guns, food, or medicine in a bunker in Iowa, it’s thinking like a Venetian. 


SHORT STORIES

The Villa of Zamalek

Tina Bexson: He’d taken just two steps back to the street when the gate rattled. Then a staccato rhythm of unlocking. Then he saw her. She wore a burgundy chiffon dress and multi-strapped heels. Her face shone under the moonbeam light.


SCIENCE FICTION

man with a briefcase in his hand

THE BROKEN BANKER

Charles Dean: This, then, is my story—a story about a broken man in a broken world, a writer named Carston Dean, who clawed his way back from the edge of despair by putting pen to paper.



POETRY

Peter Cowlam: 3 Poems

Yogesh Patel: A Retirement Home For Gods


GEOPOLITICS

Let Gaza Live: The Arab World Must Open Its Borders Now

Phil Hall: If Europe can accept millions of Ukrainians, why are Arab nations like Jordan, and Saudi Arabia reluctant to take in Palestinian refugees?


GEOPOLITICS

BRICS: A New Planet Swims into View

Phil Hall: BRICS is not merely oppositional. It offers a constructive framework addressing existential challenges faced by all members of the Global South for many years, and a way to tackle serious problems that face the entire world, from climate change to AI governance and the reduction of conflict and inequality. As the old order breaks down in violence and corruption, the contours of a fairer system are emerging—and we should welcome and support it.


SCIENCE

Don’t Panic, 3I/ATLAS is Coming

Phil Hall: The possibility of a planet-killing / alien visitation / alien fly-by black swan event, however remote, must be taken seriously due to its catastrophic potential. If 3I/ATLAS were an artificial impactor, we would have roughly 100 days until collision and no means to stop it.

DON’T PANIC!


POETRY

Martín Tonalméyotl in Náhuatl, Spanish & English

BIOGRAPHY

10. Gracious, Salacious & Rapacious?

Norman B. Schwartz: Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy-and-Onassis was a very complex woman determined to live her life as she wished. Her half-brother Gore Vidal, who knew her well, perhaps better than most people ever did, said of her that the one thing we must never forget about Jackie was that she was both “rapacious and salacious.” In her honor, examining Jackie’s life led fully with courage and elegance, I believe we should precede his description with another word, perhaps more fitting … “Gracious”.


POETRY

Celerina Patricia Sánchez Santiago in Mixteco, Spanish & English


ARS NOTORIA

July Issue


Ars notoria

June Issue


  • Photo Essay: Biharis in Geneva Camp, Dhaka

    Photo Essay: Biharis in Geneva Camp, Dhaka

    10th April 2026

    •

    Ars Notoria

    Photograph Inge Colijn by Inge Colijn Geneva Camp in Dhaka, Bangladesh, is an old urban refugee camp. With the 1947 partition of India many Urdu speaking Biharis moved to then East-Pakistan. Those who supported the West Pakistan army during the 1971 Liberation War remained stranded here as stateless communities when East-Pakistan became Bangladesh. Between…

  • Tarot Reading for the Future of the World

    Tarot Reading for the Future of the World

    8th April 2026

    •

    Ars Notoria

    Courage. Prompted by Phil Hall X by Phil Hall I have always loved the Tarot since the age of 17, when I bought a pack in a Brighton New Age shop in 1977, and I can throw a pretty good set of cards. After use comes understanding. The set I used to scry the…

  • 17 Cleopatra On Denial

    17 Cleopatra On Denial

    7th April 2026

    •

    Ars Notoria

    Darryl F. Zanuck. J. (1943) Willis Sayre Collection of Theatrical Photographs, Public Domain Darryl Zanuck and Fox by Norman B. Schwartz Thomas Alva Edison (1847–1931) was not only the Wizard of Menlo Park, the inventor supreme of the incandescent light bulb and the phonograph. He was also the quintessential capitalist. Not only could he…

  • A Rogue’s Gallery of Edible Reputations

    A Rogue’s Gallery of Edible Reputations

    7th April 2026

    •

    Ars Notoria

    Spam has a reputation so durable it can survive a frying pan, a joke, a war and a supermarket aisle without so much as loosening its tie. Photograph Kent Ng Pexels Sweet and savoury hallucinations people mock, fear, hide, inherit, sneer at and eat anyway by Arun Kapil Some foods never enter the kitchen…

  • Hold on to your Hats: Reimagining the Future in 2026

    Hold on to your Hats: Reimagining the Future in 2026

    4th April 2026

    •

    Ars Notoria

    My Hat. Photograph Phil Hall by Phil Hall We’re talking about religion and the imagination. Some of the wildest thoughts human beings have ever had have been religious thoughts. Some of the most extravagant love stories, like the Song of Solomon—are religious. Some of the most apocalyptic science fiction ever written came from religious…

  • Scorched Earth: The Policy of the USA in the Middle East & Central Asia

    Scorched Earth: The Policy of the USA in the Middle East & Central Asia

    31st March 2026

    •

    Ars Notoria

    Oil wealth in the Gulf represents hope for the developing world. Photograph Tom Fisk. Destroying and killing nationalist, sovereign opposition to imperialism is the métier of capitalism by Phil Hall The destruction of alternative sources of energy, and of infrastructure in Central Asia, the Gulf and the Middle East represents the logical conclusion of…

  • Zack Polanski and Zohran Mamdani are the Hollow Men

    Zack Polanski and Zohran Mamdani are the Hollow Men

    28th March 2026

    •

    Ars Notoria

    Photograph Dmitryshein and Bristol Greens, Wikimedia Commons Polanski and Mamdani are no counterbalance to a monstrous system of global wealth extraction by Richard Steinhardt Zohran Mamdani and Zack Polanski are trying to get into your knickers. In the 1980s, something called “The New Man” emerged as a cultural phenomenon. Born partly in response to…

  • The Dzerzhinsky Solution for Ukraine: Identify, Neutralise, Integrate

    The Dzerzhinsky Solution for Ukraine: Identify, Neutralise, Integrate

    26th March 2026

    •

    Ars Notoria

    “The word Chechnya alone was enough to provoke despair.” By Richard Steinhardt Parallels are often drawn between Napoleon’s invasion of Tsarist Russia and Hitler’s invasion of the USSR when the point is made that the results of invading Russia through the Ukraine, directly or through proxies, are disastrous. However, the correct analogy to be…

  • Angelology: Reasoning with Abaddon

    Angelology: Reasoning with Abaddon

    24th March 2026

    •

    Ars Notoria

    Photograph Francesco Ungaro by Phil Hall The Enochian tradition is based on the 16th-century works of Dr. John Dee (1527–1608) and his Irish scryer, Edward Kelley. It is named after the biblical patriarch Enoch, who “walked with God.” Dee and Kelley claimed to have been given a language and an outlook by angels. Dr.…

  • Legalising Euthanasia Under Capitalism Is Mass Murder

    Legalising Euthanasia Under Capitalism Is Mass Murder

    19th March 2026

    •

    Ars Notoria

    The legalisation of euthanasia under capitalism is not an act of compassion. It is a logical extension of a system that values profit over human life, death instead of care. Image X A Humane Socialist View I do not like thee, Doctor Fell, The reason why, I cannot tell; But this I know, and…

  • MARCH ISSUE

    MARCH ISSUE

    17th March 2026

    •

    Ars Notoria

    Close up of Hari, Solaris. Screen capture Mosfilm, Fair Use It leaves you almost speechless. Certainly readers have been bombarded. Every article, interview, story, every exhibition of paintings is worthy of being examined with close attention. In particular, we had wonderful contributions from the Art Editor, Paul Halas; the Food Editor, Arun Kapil; the…

  • New Malden Writers in March

    New Malden Writers in March

    16th March 2026

    •

    Ars Notoria

    Photograph by Pixabay The New Malden Writers’ Group was set up in 2023. If you want to join, come along to Wesley’s Café at the Methodist Church in New Malden on Fridays at 11am. The group meets for two hours. We take it in turns to read things to each other and share our thoughts.…

  • Óscar de la Borbolla: Notes on Language

    Óscar de la Borbolla: Notes on Language

    14th March 2026

    •

    Ars Notoria

    Óscar de la Borbolla. Courtesy of Óscar de la Borbolla Óscar de la Borbolla, writer and philosopher, was born in Mexico City in 1949, although, as the poet Fargue said: he has dreamed so much! He has dreamed so much that he no longer belongs here. Among his notable books are: Las vocales malditas (The Accursed…

  • Two Short Stories by Beatriz Escalante

    Two Short Stories by Beatriz Escalante

    14th March 2026

    •

    Ars Notoria

    Beatriz Escalante. Photograph courtesy of Beatriz Escalante We are delighted to present two captivating short stories by the acclaimed Mexican writer, Beatriz Escalante. A prolific author of over thirty books, Escalante’s work has been recognised and celebrated internationally. Noteworthy books include: Fábula de la inmortalidad and Cómo ser mujer y no vivir en el infierno. They have been…

  • Ecological Destruction is Class War

    Ecological Destruction is Class War

    13th March 2026

    •

    Ars Notoria

    The Jevons Paradox from Gaia, Sixth Extinction Series by Gordon Lidl The Jevons Paradox, Marx, the Modern Left, Deep Greens, AI and Collapse. by Gordon Lidl I want to tell you a story about a painting, a large painting I finished two years ago as part of a series of works called Gaia, Sixth…

  • 7. Never Again!

    7. Never Again!

    12th March 2026

    •

    Ars Notoria

    by David Yip At home, my younger sister, Diane, is working in Leeds and spends a lot of time there, staying in hotels. She tells me that she will be moving there as it makes more sense, but she needs to sell her houses. She asks if I will buy the one I live…

  • ANANYA VAJPEYI

    ANANYA VAJPEYI

    12th March 2026

    •

    Ars Notoria

    Ananya Vajpeyi. Original photograph Gautam Menon From Place: Intimate Encounters with Cities Ananya Vajpeyi is a Professor at the Centre for the Study of Developing Societies, New Delhi. An intellectual historian, political theorist and writer, she was educated in Delhi, Oxford, and Chicago. Her book, Righteous Republic: The Political Foundations of Modern India, won…

  • Geo Milev: PROSE POEMS

    Geo Milev: PROSE POEMS

    12th March 2026

    •

    Ars Notoria

    Bulgarian poet Geo Milev (1895-1925). Photographer unknown Introduced & Translated from the Bulgarian into English by Tom Phillips Geo Milev (1895-1925) was a poet, translator, critic, editor and activist who introduced a radical modernist strain into Bulgarian literature. Equally radical in his politics, he was extra-judicially executed during a round-up of communist and anarchist revolutionaries that…

  • Beena Kamlani: Excerpt from The English Problem

    Beena Kamlani: Excerpt from The English Problem

    12th March 2026

    •

    Ars Notoria

    Beena Kamlani. Photograph Beena Kalmani Beena Kamlani’s debut novel, The English Problem, was published in January 2025 in the U.S. by Penguin Random House and launched in India at the Jaipur Literary Festival in January 2026. The Indian edition has just come out from The Bombay Circle Press. Her short stories have appeared in…

  • A Letter to the Apolitical You, Rudi

    A Letter to the Apolitical You, Rudi

    11th March 2026

    •

    Ars Notoria

    Đorđe Andrejević Kun – Pasionaria speaks to the fighters before going to the front. Wikimedia Commons A response to a friend’s remark that ‘Lots of people have an aversion to politics.’ By Phil Hall First, we need to define the word politics. It is a set of activities associated with making decisions in groups, realised…

  • In Translation: TWO of Ewa Lipska’s FURTEEN TALES

    In Translation: TWO of Ewa Lipska’s FURTEEN TALES

    9th March 2026

    •

    Ars Notoria

    Illustration ©Sebastian Kudas Ewa Lipska (b. 1945) is one of Poland’s most eminent poets, a defining voice of the Polish New Wave (Generation of ’68) since her debut in 1967. Her work, translated into over a dozen languages including English, has earned her international stature and numerous awards, among them the Silesius Poetry Prize…

  • The Racial Resentment of the White Caliban

    The Racial Resentment of the White Caliban

    6th March 2026

    •

    Ars Notoria

    President Lyndon B. Johnson signing the Civil Rights Act of 1964 on July 2, 1964. Photograph Cecil Stoughton, White House Press Office. Public Domain As wicked dew as e’er my mother brush’dWith raven’s feather from unwholesome fenDrop on you both! a south-west blow on yeAnd blister you all o’er! Caliban, The Tempest by Dustin Pickering Speaking to far-right…

  • Gustavo Gac-Artigas in Translation

    Gustavo Gac-Artigas in Translation

    5th March 2026

    •

    Ars Notoria

    Gustavo and Priscilla Gac-Artigas. Credit Priscilla Gac-Artigas Born in Santiago de Chile in 1944, Gustavo Gac-Artigas is a Chilean poet, novelist, playwright, and former political prisoner whose writing has long engaged with questions of memory, exile, testimony, and the ethical responsibilities involved in using language. Following the 1973 military coup, Gac-Artigas was imprisoned and…

  • 16. Little Tramp / Rich Man

    16. Little Tramp / Rich Man

    1st March 2026

    •

    Ars Notoria

    Charles Chaplain as a young man Charlie Chaplin & Stan Laurel Norman B. Schwartz In September 1910, one of England’s most popular Music Hall acts, Fred Karno Company of Clowns, set off by ship to begin a scheduled tour of North America that would last twenty-one months. On board, there were two teenage knockabout…

  • Solaris and the Loving Sky

    Solaris and the Loving Sky

    23rd February 2026

    •

    Ars Notoria

    Hari leans over to kiss Kris Kelvin. Screen Capture Mosfilm Fair Use by Phil Hall After Jules Verne, H. P. Lovecraft, Jack London, and H. G. Wells came huge advances in science and two horrifying world wars that exceeded all imagination in technology, horror, and human beastliness. In the post-war crop of speculative science…

  • A Critique of Noam Chomsky’s Work

    A Critique of Noam Chomsky’s Work

    2nd February 2026

    •

    Ars Notoria

    Noam Chomsky. Photograph April 1961 The Technology Review, MIT, Wikimedia Commons In both areas, linguistics and politics, Chomsky’s foundational hypotheses were inadequate. by Phil Hall My perspective on Noam Chomsky is informed by my background: a life lived across multiple countries and languages, an academic grounding in Russian and Spanish politics, economics, and literature,…

  • Diesel, Chai & the Oyster Wind

    Diesel, Chai & the Oyster Wind

    22nd December 2025

    •

    Ars Notoria

    Briny oysters, shrimp curled like punctuation marks, langoustines, hunks of crab meat and claws piled high with effortless French design. Photograph by Gvantsa Gongadze A punk-masaalchi essay on time, place and the flavours we carry. By Arun Kapil Some moments arrive so clean and sharp you can still taste the light around them. Honeymoon…

  • 14. Peons By the Pool: Standard Hollywood Contract

    14. Peons By the Pool: Standard Hollywood Contract

    22nd December 2025

    •

    Ars Notoria

    Olivia de Havilland as Maid Marian in the Adventures of Robin Hood, (1938) Public Domain Wikimedia Commons by Norman B. Schwartz In the old days of the studio system, now long gone, the Big Five, as they were then called – MetroGoldwyn-Mayer, Fox (one day to unite with Twentieth Century Pictures), Warner Brothers, Paramount…

  • 10. Epilogue

    10. Epilogue

    22nd December 2025

    •

    Ars Notoria

    Photograph David Yip by Margaret Yip The 1980s and Thatcher years were not good for Barrow-in-Furness; it remains one of the North’s most deprived areas. Both miners and shipyard workers went on strike during this time. No social housing was being built to replace the rows of dilapidated terraced houses and flats, whose back…

  • EDITORIAL: THE NEW COMMONWEALTH

    EDITORIAL: THE NEW COMMONWEALTH

    20th December 2025

    •

    Ars Notoria

    Photograph Phil Hall A DISCUSSION DOCUMENT FOR A HUMANE SOCIALIST BRITAIN (2025-2040) Great Britain stands at a historical precipice, facing three interlocking crises that demand radical yet grounded change. This document is not a break from our history, but a conscious attempt to revive, complete, and reimagine a great, humane tradition—the progressive legacy of…

  • Con Rider on Shakespeare’s Play, Measure for Measure

    Con Rider on Shakespeare’s Play, Measure for Measure

    12th December 2025

    •

    Ars Notoria

    Isabella and Angelo (Shakespeare, Measure for Measure, Act 2, Scene 2). Illustration James Fittler, engraving William Hamilton 1994, Public Domain This is perhaps the closest Shakespeare comes to presenting a dogma: “He who the sword of heaven would bear… should be as holy as severe.” Interviewed by Phil Hall Con Rider: I think my favourite…

  • Game, Set & Match to Russia

    Game, Set & Match to Russia

    4th December 2025

    •

    Ars Notoria

    Putin, Gazprom CEO Alexey Miller, and Chinese President Xi Jinping. Photograph Kremlin Ru, Public Domain …unless NATO carries out a pre-emptive strike by Richard Steinhardt We can all agree that the political situation in the world today is grave. Has the geopolitical situation ever been more precarious? The German leader, Chancellor Mertz, says he is preparing for war…

  • The Soul of the Human in the Age of Mercury

    The Soul of the Human in the Age of Mercury

    23rd November 2025

    •

    Ars Notoria

    Statue of Mercury. Photograph by Tima Miroshnichenko on Pexels by Phil Hall In the spirit of Friedrich Schiller’s Letters on the Aesthetic Education of Man (1794) ‘At that first fair awakening of the powers of the mind, sense and intellect did not as yet rule over strictly separate domains; for no dissension had as yet provoked…

  • The Bookshop

    The Bookshop

    10th November 2025

    •

    Ars Notoria

    Immeuble à Boulogne-Billancourt. Photograph Nozav, Public Domain by Amal Chatterjee His mother has gone by the time he wakes up. Kicking the covers to the foot of the bed, he swings himself off. Even though he knows he is alone, he checks his shorts, pulls down his shirt. The habits of living in close proximity…

  • Isabel del Rio: Four Poems

    Isabel del Rio: Four Poems

    9th November 2025

    •

    Ars Notoria

    Isabel del Rio. Photograph Isabel del Rio On adoptive language speak we should but maywe be spared the blemish ofrepudiating the first syllables uttered, the familiarcooing from those closest, all those wordsthat should have been said but are nowexchanged for extraneous soundsin a separate and sometimes dissenting language, no,there are no perfect equivalents and…

  • SUDEEP SEN: FOUR GHAZALS

    SUDEEP SEN: FOUR GHAZALS

    7th November 2025

    •

    Ars Notoria

    Night Jasmine. Photograph by Kamal B Nandasena Monsoon Apertures Each drop scripts a silence I cannot explain —the monsoon writes letters across my windowpane. Your absence is not void, but a humid breath —it stains my shirt-collar like turmeric or rain. Even the wind hesitates before touching me —a lover once bold, now distant…

←Previous Page
1 … 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 … 43
Next Page→

Share this:

  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • More
  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram
  • Share on Threads (Opens in new window) Threads
  • Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp

Like this:

Like Loading...
©2026 Ars Notoria | WordPress Theme by SuperbThemes

 

Loading Comments...
 

You must be logged in to post a comment.

    %d