Saturday, July 07, 2007

Poet & performance artist
Sandy Crimmins
has died

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Harvey Goldner,
the Bard of Belltown,”
has also died

§

Alzheimer’s kills
Philip Booth

§

Leonard Schwartz’
Cross-Cultural Poetics
radio archives

(over 100 hours
of terrific stuff)

§

Destroying books
as art

§

The San Diego Union-Tribune
folds its Sunday Book Review

§

The audience laughs
while the writer
breaks down in tears

§

Another occasion to cry:
The Last Novel

§

Or,
try it the other way:
80 pages of discussion
concerning humor & poetry

Plus
24 pages of poetry
from the HumPo
list

§

When
(if)
Shakespeare met Cervantes

§

“As a surrealist,
I quite enjoy having dementia

George Melly is dead

§

A lengthy portrait
of Mayakovsky

§

The politics
of book reviews

§

John Irving
on
Günter Grass

§

Lorraine Wild
& the design of books

§

Modest proposals
for a right-wing
English curriculum

§

Peggy Fox on
Ezra Pound, James Laughlin
& the founding of
New Directions
(PDF)

§

The New York Times
obit
for Mary Ellen Solt
tries
to demonstrate
vispo
in its text

& the Associate Press piece

§

Imagine a review
of Paul Celan translations
that alludes to the work
of Pierre Joris
as an afterthought

§

The silliest
”Great American Novel”
list
I’ve ever read

§

The slam team
from Springfield

§

Terry Eagleton’s
Mikhail Bakhtin

§

San Francisco’s
International Poetry Festival
reflect’s the city’s
beat street roots

§

A hospital
with a poet laureate

§

A profile of
Barry Spacks

§

The impact of metaphor
on scientific theory
(PDF)

§

Hypertext
on a refrigerator door

§

How
not
to start a magazine

§

Early writer’s block

§

Language, Mind & Culture
(PDF)

§

Salman Rushdie,
between East & West

§

Another review
of Carol Muske-Duke’s
prison (writing worksho) memoir

§

To whom it may concern

§

Buying David Halberstam’s
apartment

§

Foreword Magazine’s
Book of the Year Finalists,
all 699 of them

§

Who killed the novel?
Tony Soprano!

§

Is selling on the web
devaluing
used & rare books
?

§

In Canada,
fears that bookselling
may be a dying industry

§

This week’s
death-of-a-bookstore articles
come from
The OC
& West Hollywood
while in
Brentwood,
a bookstore is spared

§

But it’s
bricks & clicks
for
Detroit
booksellers

§

In Chicago,
they’re arguing
over
which bookstore
is best

§

Banning chains
to save
the independents

§

Pennsylvania libraries
may be endangered

§

If you think
bookstores are hurting . . .

§

Jazz & fiction

§

The latest lament
o’er the demise
of “classical” music

§

The architecture
of Zaha Hadid

§

Frida Kahlo
turns 100

§

Mass MoCA mayhem

§

Is Banksy
Britain’s best?

§

Busting the tag

§

The Chinese ‘Mona Lisa

§

The dealer who bought
a Raphael

for $325

§

The art bubble

§

Tales of parenting
& the circus

§

Paris Fashion Week

& here

§

Flickr’s
censorship problems
in
Germany
& elsewhere

§

Scorsese’s way