Showing posts with label Passings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Passings. Show all posts

Saturday, November 10, 2007

Thursday, November 01, 2007

Perfection & Ed Baker

§

Post-avant women

Plus
talking with
Cynthia Hogue
& Elizabeth Frost

§

Adrienne Rich
reading
in
Chile

§

30 years of
Anglo-Québec
poetry

§

Orhan Pamuk:
Evoking the Other
is a
political act

§

A review of
Grand Piano 3

§

A poetry of muscle

§

Reading
Eric Mottram
on Robert Duncan

§

Robert Hass,
time traveler

§

Fear & loathing
& the
Poet Laureate
(No, not that one)

§

Bush poets
(No, not that Bush)

§

Curtis Faville
on
Aram Saroyan &
Robert Grenier

§

Belles with Balls” –
Niama Leslie Williams
interviewed by
Tuck Self

§

Forrest Gander
on
John Ashbery

§

Jon Anderson
has died

§

Fup,
the dean of bookstore cats,
has died

§

Talking with
Bob Arnold

§

Rumi’s
ambiguous legacy
in the west

§

Talking with
Shanxing Wang

§

Mark Strand,
alone at 73,
starting over

§

On Gael Turnbull’s
Collected Poems

§

Another poet
back from Iraq

§

Jennifer Moxley
on
John Wieners
& Arthur Rimbaud

Plus John Temple
on Wieners

§

The persistence of
the printed page

§

The Atlantic
at 150 –
the senility
is complete

§

Save a magazine:
reverse
the postal rate hikes!

§

On Ted Berrigan’s
Collected Poems

§

Cut-Up
Poetry Scrabble

§

Saving a bookstore
in Park Slope,
Brooklyn

§

Congressman Braley
opens
Pandora’s Box

§

A European
bookstore blog

§

Pissed-Off Zombies” –
Linh Dinh
on the state of the nation

§

Another poet
who died too young

§

Zuckerman’s
(Roth’s)
aesthetic:
George Plimpton
as literary giant

§

A piece
on the letters
of Ted Hughes

with links
to large excerpts

§

More on
poetry & cricket

§

A.E. Stallings
here in
Chester County

§

P.B. Shelley,
the poet as stud

§

Performa 07
is under way!

§

Banksy in action

§

Schwabsky
on
Picabia

§

Schjeldahl
on
Frida Kahlo

§

The “newPrado

§

Evaluating
Philip Glass

§

Aesthetics
&
information

§

Special thanks
to John Tranter
& Pam Brown
for making
Jacket
the best zine
on the web

Thursday, October 25, 2007

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

You read it here first:
The Boston Red Sox
will win
the World Series

(The last thing
you want to give a team
that has been playing
way over its head
for a month
is a week off
to think….)

§

Writing vs. editing vs. tenure

§

An account of the conference
on
Christopher Okigbo

§

Sargon Boulus,
Iraqi poet
& translator
of Pound, Williams, Shakespeare,
Duncan & Ginsberg,
has died

§

Doris Lessing:
9/11 was
not that bad

& offers
a reading list

§

The House of Anansi
celebrates
40 years
of independent publishing

§

The business of poetry

§

The horror of cheap books

§

The
”Why Indie Bookstores Matter”
Tour

§

This week’s
death-of-a-bookstore
tale
is of the last major indie
in the
Toledo metro

§

The School of Quietude:
a literal perspective

§

The latest in library services:
Dance Dance Revolution

§

Libraries, content & copyright

§

A new Pound bio

§

The Fog Index

§

A profile of
Sam Hunt

§

The Governor General’s
shortlist

§

Why you should read poetry

§

Words To Be Looked At

§

Stephen King:
why short stories suck

§

Reviewer stops writing
about himself
long enough
to notice
two new books
of Canadian poetry

§

Portrait
of a drop-in
writers’ workshop

§

This poetry contest
sounds mawkish
until you realize
how it’s promoting
Scottish nationalism

§

Poet of the Year

§

The Christian right’s
”worst nightmare”:
Dumbledore & sex

§

A Salmon Press
anthology

§

Inside manga

§

A reading group
in
Jackson Heights, NY
devoted to
the poetry of
India, Pakistan & Bangladesh

§

Remembering
Kwesi Brew

§

The slam scene
at
Palo Alto High

§

A mixed review
of
Jean Sprackland

§

War over
War and Peace

§

Reading
Howard’s Baudelaire

§

Maya Angelou
on
The Early Show

§

Teacher faces charges
over reading list

§

The son also rises

§

Boston’s ICA
is a hit

§

MassMOCA demonstrates
how not
to show contemporary art

§

Baryshnikov
facing foreclosure

§

NMFG?

(no money from the government)

§

TMI
(too much information)

§

Anita Allen
on
philosophy, law & race

§

A profile
of the great song writer
Lee Hays

§

Yesterday’s
number of visits
to this blog,
1,733,
surpassed
the previous record
by 74.

Sunday, October 21, 2007

The limits
of a laureate

Poetry workshop
at Buckingham Palace

§

The “alternate laureate

§

A profile of
Eleanor Wilner

§

Doris Lessing
podcast

Roger Ebert
on meeting Lessing
at Stud Terkel’s

§

One book
I’ve been wanting
for 20 years

§

Kenneth Koch’s
small-scale canonization

§

Wendell Berry’s
Window Poems

§

Sinan Antoon’s
Baghdad Blues

§

Yevtushenko
reads once more
in a stadium

§

On the road, 2007

§

On translation
&
English-as-a-second-language
as the lingua franca
of the world

§

Kim Heung-sook
on gender
& Korean modernism

§

A global archive
of recorded readings
(e.g. Michel Butor &
Jacques Roubaud
in French)

§

A poetry festival
in a department store
in
Stockholm

§

Sidney Nolan
& the problem of
the bad boy muse

§

Of a tanka
by Akio Tanigawa

§

Unabridging
Raymond Carver

Plus, a case study
(PDF)

§

Talking with
Tracy K. Smith

§

The world’s smallest
book tour

§

Collecting Burroughs
& dealing rare books
in the age of the net

§

The joy of
the Man Booker prize

§

A review of
Robert Hass,
Margaret Atwood
&
Kenneth Koch

§

Jan Wolkers
has died

§

Daily life
with the Grass family

§

Race,
Anatole Broyard
& the NY publishing scene
mid-century

(first chapter)

§

A profile of
Robert Hass

§

Talking with
Marvin Bell

§

“Prosody and its interfaces”
is the focus for
the 2008 Penn Linguistics Colloquium
(Call for papers in PDF format)

§

The end of poetry

§

The demise of
serious fiction

§

100 poets
reading on 6 CDs
(priced to rip off
school libraries)

§

The net is changing
how we read

§

The entire Booker shortlist
will be available
free online

§

Veni, Vidi, Vicipaedia

§

Poe’s brain

A Poached Poe?

§

A profile of Jim Paul

§

If only
Stalin
had been a poet

§

Tales
of the
Chelsea Hotel

§

Missouri to appoint
first laureate

§

The poet laureate of Texas
& more
silly assertions about poetry
than I’ve seen in one article
in a long time

§

Career Poet?

§

Sheep ranch
experimentalism

§

The private
Ted Hughes

§

Martin Espada
returns to
Lawrence

§

Poet in a park

§

A short profile
of Sam Hamill

§

Two new books from
Jackie Kay

§

Poetry gets fractal
in Little Rock

§

Robert Pinsky
on
Mary Kinzie

§

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Thursday, October 11, 2007

A new book
from
Robert Hass

It’s already a finalist for
the National Book Award*

§

Doris Lessing
has won
the Nobel Prize for Literature

§

Tonight at Writers House
in
Philadelphia,
Bob Cobbing’s
Suddenly Everybody Began Reading Aloud

§

Video of
Rae Armantrout
reading in Berkeley

§

Talking film
with John Ashbery

§

The autobiography
of
Christian Bök

§

Talking with
Geoffrey Gatza

§

The Colbert suffix

§

Charles Simic
on PBS

Laureate relishes
new challenge

& begins by attacking
Robert Creeley
($3 fee)

Simic to teach
at Baruch College

Simic reads
with Jack Prelutsky

If you like Simic,
you will love
Vasko Popa

§

“You don’t get
to be
poet laureate
for nothing

§

Hounding Howl:
What the FCC?
(MP3)

Meanwhile,
at the Alberto Gonzales school
of pornography prosecution

§

Kerouac’s scroll
as Oulipo constraint

§

Speaking of Oulipo:
3by3by3
21 Stars Review

§

Debating
what poetry is
in
Nairobi

§

Jennifer Moxley
&
Maggie O’Sullivan
reading
at the Bowery Poetry Club
(MP3s)

§

Talking with
Jason Christie

§

A review of
Javier O. Huerta

§

In Canada,
Indigo
is putting hotels
on Boardwalk & Park Place

While readers
come to the USA
to buy books

§

Random acts of poetry
in
Sackville, New Brunswick

§

Writing poetry in the army
in
Iraq

§

A writers’ workshop
at
Homeboy Industries

§

The return
of
Easy Rawlins

§

Reading Catullus 64

§

The only call for submissions
I know of
that quotes
Theodor Adorno,
seeking
”emergent poetry & prose”

§

More on the demise
of the hyphen

§

Putting Celan to music

§

Prizes for
the
School of Quietude

& more

Plus
the same ole same ole
in the
U.K.

§

Writing like Sean O’Brien
is, he concedes,
an affliction

§

Fondly recalling
the poetry wars
of the 1960s

§

The bio of
” a skilful, harmless,
minor writer of light verse”

§

Joyce Carol Oates:
autobiography
against the grain

§

Adam Thorpe
doesn’t think
he’s easy reading

§

An anthology
of women’s poetry
from
Minnesota

§

The future of the book
may not include
bookstores

But in Grand Rapids,
a bookstore opens

§

One use for old books

§

A new opera,
Poet Li Bai,
debuts in
Beijing

§

On the origins
of
The Life of Pi

§

The selected letters
of Ted Hughes

§

A profile
of Paul Durcan

§

High school students
producing
poetry on demand

§

100 years of MacDowell

§

Comparing Don Share
to Robert Lowell

§

Talking with
Li-Young Lee

§

Troy Jollimore’s blog
for Powell’s Books

§

A poet laureate
for Winona, Minnesota

§

An anthology
of
New York poetry

§

Frank Wilson
likes the Sony e-Book,
sorta

§

The continuing relevance
of books

§

Poet Tree
in
Victoria, BC

§

Talking with
Greil Marcus

§

A personal history
of the
Somerville News
Writers Festival

§

Violet de Cristoforo,
poet imprisoned
in
US concentration camp
during WW2,
has died

§

Interviewing
Janet Malcolm

§

The © Olympics

§

The best-selling suicide
of André & Dorine Gorsz

§

The Social and Political Views
of American Professors
(PDF)

§

Two serious views
on global warming:
pro & con

§

Appomattox

“one of the best new operas
in many years”

§

Billy Bragg
on the
power of music

§

She writes the words

§

Mallrats run wild!

§

With art
comes injury

§

Do museums matter?

If not, why
are they spreading
like kudzu?

§

Renoir
&
why the Barnes matters

§

 

* Strictly a School of Quietude affair this year.
The selection panel was chaired by
(surprise!) Charles Simic