Verso
The Huntington’s blog takes you behind the scenes for a scholarly view of the collections.
Library
Requiem for a Novelist
Mon., Dec. 8, 2014 | Sue HodsonOne of the greatest rewards of my job as a literary manuscripts curator is meeting and becoming friends with the authors whose papers I collect, and one of the sweetest of these friendships has been with the American novelist Kent Haruf.
Art
Pinkie and Blue Boy, Remixed
Wed., Dec. 3, 2014 | Kate LainThere they were. Pinkie and Blue Boy all chopped up into a million little squares and reassembled into the most glorious shellacked folding screen I had ever laid eyes on. I was in love.
Audio
150 Years Later, A Massacre Still Haunts
Fri., Nov. 28, 2014 | Kevin DurkinFor author Ari Kelman, the passage of 150 years has not dulled the impact or resolved the ambiguities surrounding the Sand Creek Massacre, one of the most notorious events in U.S. history.
Herb Garden
A Thanksgiving Cornucopia
Mon., Nov. 24, 2014 | Lisa BlackburnAnyone searching for an authentic American dish to serve for Thanksgiving dinner should consider the humble succotash: it would make a hearty addition to the meal and a terrific conversation starter.
Library
Remembering Gettysburg
Wed., Nov. 19, 2014 | Diana W. ThompsonOn Nov. 19, 1863, President Abraham Lincoln delivered one of the greatest speeches in American history: the Gettysburg Address. It was a delicate moment in the young nation's identity.
Beyond The H
Making History
Fri., Nov. 14, 2014 | Susan Turner-LoweOne of the great things about working at The Huntington is that we're surrounded by all this cool stuff: on any one day, we can walk outside and see roses, orchids, cycads, bonsai, penjing and puyas.
Botanical
Harvest Time on the Ranch
Wed., Nov. 5, 2014 | Letizia RagusaTucked away in a lesser-known corner of The Huntington, on a half-acre site that once served as a gravel parking lot, sits a garden known as the Ranch. This demonstration garden is literally bursting with the sights, smells, and sounds of a mostly edible landscape
Art
A Magic Brew?
Fri., Oct. 31, 2014 | Diana W. ThompsonIt's as if Henry Fuseli (1741–1825), the Anglo-Swiss artist who created the recently acquired painting The Three Witches (1782), had concocted a magic brew to ensure his canvas would eventually end up among The Huntington's treasure trove of artworks.







