Interview With Skylight Books


BOMB did an interview with Steve Salardino and Jenn Witte from Skylight Books. Jenn must have joined after I left LA, but I remember Salardino from when I used to visit Skylight Books at least once a month for my book fix.

It’s still my favorite bookstore in the country. The selection was always amazing, always good quality (and always with a distinct, left leaning and avant-garde bent). You could browse their philosophy section, fiction, poetry and see very little junk and tons of great books you’d never heard of, but simply had to read.

Anyway… read the interview here.

Weekend Reading – We Are Confined


painfully-blueMyself without not others does not fully exist; or, Heidegger on the prison industrial complex.

There is no progress without philosophy.

Gertrude Stein’s unofficial flak.

When poetry was a profession.

Gertrude Stein the bookmaker.

I Missed The Birthday Of ‘Lunch Poems’


Yesterday was the fiftieth birthday of Frank O’Hara’s Lunch Poemsand I missed it!

In my defense, I was at an all day retreat for work, but still… Lunch Poems! A fantastic, witty little collection of one of the New York School’s greats (second only to Ashberry, I would say, but it’s pretty close and Ashberry has benefited by a significantly longer and still vibrant career).

Frank O'Hara: 'Lunch Poems'

Midweek Staff Meeting – Et Tu?


The accelerating death spiral of university presses.

What is it like to be the merely talented child of a towering genius?

In defense of narcissism.

Not… in defense of narcissism.

‘The Masters’ By C.P. Snow


tumblr_lshgrttxXj1qatsq6o1_400I just finished The Masters by C.P. Snow. I enjoyed, I’m glad that I read, but I also can’t say that there’s a particularly good reason to read it except as an artifact of mid-century England.

The story is all about the election of a new Master at a(n apparently minor) college of Cambridge. The current Master is slowly dying and Fellows of the college strategize and campaign for their chosen candidate.

The narrator teaches law, but it’s not consistent narration. When he speaks in his own voice, he’s a little dense, but when (and it’s still, technically first person) the account switches to a more fly on the wall view, he’s surprisingly perceptive.

The events begin in 1937, but with one exception, there is little recognition that incredibly important stuff is happening in Europe.

The two candidates are someone who does something in the humanities named Jago and a scientist named Crawford. The narrator is a supporter of Jago.

The key here is that Snow delivered a famous lecture called the ‘Two Cultures’ where he laments the state of science education in England, which he feels has been neglected in favor of pointlessly old fashioned humanities. Crawford is Snow’s vision of the future.

I’m not really on Snow’s side here, as you might imagine. Check out this article about the dust up surrounding the lecture and guess who best represents my view.

On another note, I found this book at the annual Flower Mart at the National Cathedral. They always have a tent with books for sale that are cheap and they always have some great, under appreciated classics. I will probably sell this book, though – see what the owner of Capitol Hill Books will give me in terms of credit. It’s a good book. It’s not exactly a classic, but it is something to have read and perhaps even to own, but I’ve got to make space and decisions. I mean, let’s be honest – when would I read The Masters again?

‘The Stranger’ Was Published On This Day In 1942


Camus23

Monday Morning Staff Meeting – New Media, The Internet, Crowdfunding, Etc, Are Not A Replacement For Existing Cultural Institutions, But Are Add-Ons, At Best


1-prehistoric-code

The history of Historical Materialism.

This is what a clay envelope looks like.

This sucks. Is this true? Does no one read Henry Miller anymore? Seriously? Why not?

Let’s not overstate the promise of participatory democracy to drive, direct, and fund our culture.

Art in the service of labor.