Apparently (at least, according to someone I don’t know on twitter), it’s Indie Thursday, when we’re all supposed to go shopping at local, independently owned bookstores. I don’t actually have time today, but here are some recommendations of where to go in various locales:
Regrets
Do you think the Florida GOP is having some regrets about how quickly they rallied ’round Connie Mack? Or that there was a rush to judgment? I mean, it wasn’t exactly a secret that Mack little more was an overgrown frat boy with a golden name.
And what does this say about the bench in Florida? Though, to be fair, it’s a little weak on both sides, as least insofar as strong statewide candidates go. I guess they’re just not making state legislators like they used to. Or, more likely, term limits make it tough to build the name recognition – as Mike Haridopolos found out when he discovered that nobody who actually votes knows or cares about the Senate President.
When Do They Give Up On Cornelius Harvey McGillicuddy The Fourth?
Cornelius Harvey McGillicuddy The Fourth, otherwise known as Connie Mack, otherwise known as a remarkably hapless candidate for US Senate.
Really, that man should have stayed in the House.
So the polls all show him trailing, his fundraising is lacking, and Obama looks like a narrow favorite to win Florida at the presidential level. This, friends, is a recipe for outside spending to dry up.
Outside groups might easily spend another $10-15 million trying to take down the broadly (though not deeply) liked Bill Nelson, but it’s more likely that number will be much, much less. Still a lot in comparison to my own, meagre bank account. But in this situation, little more than a sop to Mack’s supporters, so no one will say too loudly the hated words, that ‘they’ have given up on Mack.
Nelson was always going to run 5-8 points ahead of the president and Mack needs Romney to win an absolutely resounding victory in the Sunshine State and if you still think that’s going happen, then please contact me about some spectacular investments in mortgage-back securities available from a Pasco County condo developer.
Zima Junction
Once a month, Capitol Hill Books hosts ‘First Saturdays,’ setting out wine (chardonnay and merlot), cheese, and crackers and giving customers ten percent off. The other week, I went in to browse about and maybe use the last three dollars of store credit remaining on the index card with my name on it that the owner kept under the counter.
What I bought was an old copy (1963) of Yevtushenko: Selected Poems (I can’t imagine this volume from the old Penguin Modern European Poets series, is still in print). One of the great experiences of my high school years was getting to hear Yevgeny Yevtushenko read in front of a sadly thin crowd at the University of South Florida. He was as enthusiastic and ebullient as one would expect of a Russian poet (Russian novelists may be thought of as a little taciturn, but I think Pushkin set the more extravagant tone for what the expectations are for one of that country’s poets).
So I was prompted by the good memories of seeing and hearing him read, as well as a price that was just $1 more than more store credit (and the owner actually just scratched out the last of my store credit and said he’d just call it even). There was also an inscription inside the book and I always like finding one of those inside a nice used book.
This intro to this book is rather oddly lukewarm towards Yevtushenko’s poetry. But it comes from a time when poets could still be notable figures, when books were a larger portion of the national discourse, and when a knowledge of the ‘enemy’s’ culture was considered important. Consequently, a poetry collect about which one might have mixed feelings was still felt to be worth publishing and commenting on.
The centerpiece of the book is a long poem entitled Zima Junction. It’s about a Moscow based poet returning home to the community in Siberia where he grew up.
Firstly, as a historical document, it’s a reminder that Soviet-era Russia was not so monolithically oppressive as conservative fire brands might have wanted us to believe (check out Gao Xinjiang’s Soul Mountain for a similarly eye opening look at China).
But also, it’s about the college kid from the small town coming back. While he hasn’t been gone long, those years of early adulthood are very formative, so he’s caught between the worlds of Moscow literary culture and the rituals and rhythms of rural Siberia. The narrator is shown off to family, taken to events believed befitting an educated local boy done good, and fed great quantities of home cooked food to compensate for the presumed failings of the capital’s kitchens. The wistfulness of the poem is exactly right and fully captures that feeling of ‘you can’t go home again’ (and in just twenty odd pages, as compared to voluminous text required by hypothetical other writers one might name). The spare language captures elegantly those rhythms and rituals, I mentioned, and by capturing them through an eye that is both distant from and familiar with them, the detail and distance is just right from the reader who is not from Siberia, but does know the feeling of coming back to a place one used to belong to (but doesn’t anymore).
So if all you know of Yevtushenko is Babi Yar from the choral section of Shostakovic’s 13th, than Zima Junction is a good way to see another, less political side.
Weekend Reading – Sunday In The Park

Bookstores Are A Public Good
This article talks about various ways of protecting bookstores, with American versions being mostly ad hoc strategies that frequently fail and also fail to say: Bookstores are a public good and the public good has a price.
The anti-tax extremists have so commandeered the national conversation that we cannot admit aloud that there is a price to be paid (usually in the form of taxes) for the kind of society we truly want (in the broad strokes, Americans may sketch out a Randian dystopia, but once one drills down into the details, the picture is far more New Deal-esque).
Just to bring attention to a particular line in the article about the French law that helps secure the future of literary culture in France:
We have failed to properly explain how it is that something can ‘transcend market value.’ Though the right wing may have cornered the conversation of religious principles, it is the right wing’s rapacious economic arguments that have blinded us to the truth of things greater than monetary self-interest and bookstores are just one casualty.
Midweek Staff Meeting – Downtown Tampa
Shame On You, Clearwater
NO PLACE TO PEE IN CLEARWATER
How cities should handle homeless people camping in public restrooms is an enduring urban question. In Clearwater, Florida, officials think they’ve found a solution: Just weld the all the bathroom doors shut. Faced with vagrants loitering around Crest Lake Park, the city sent crews out to seal off all the restrooms in a strike mission that’s baffled even non-homeless park-goers. One father told ABC News that he now had no place to potty-train his child, and wondered ominously where the loiterers were peeing now. A homeless man complained, “They’re trying to make it as inconvenient as possible, to get you out of town.”
But the authorities are sticking to their guns, reasoning that the parks restrooms were perpetuating the problem of homelessness. For that reason, they also cut off the power to a park in downtown Clearwater, because disheveled-looking people were charging their phones there.
From The Atlantic Cities

I notice that this list of fast changing neighborhoods includes downtown Tampa and the neighborhood just east of Logan Circle in DC.