So Glad That Politics & Prose Is Getting Some Love


Salon put up a post about DC’s own Politics & Prose.

Among other things, the bookstore was asked to create a list of recommended books that fit the arbitrary theme of ‘American Spring.’

Well, at least their list looked pretty good.

Ill Fares the Land by Tony Judt

Debt: The First 5,000 Years by David Graeber

The Price of Civilization: Reawakening American Virtue and Prosperity by Jeffrey D. Sachs

Death of the Liberal Class by Chris Hedges

The Change I Believe In by Katrina Vanden Heuvel

Winner-Take-All Politics: How Washington Made the Rich Richer – And Turned Its Back on the Middle Class by Jacob S. Hacker & Paul Pierson

Were You Born on the Wrong Continent? How the European Model Can Help You Get a Life by Thomas Geoghegan

The Enigma of Capital And the Crises of Capitalism by David Harvey

I can definitely vouch for Ill Fares the Land as being an amazing, though heartbreaking book.

 

Freud The Artist?


Were Sigmund Freud and William James artists rather than scientists?

What Would Make You Miss The Tampa Bay Area?


Yes, these things would make me miss it more.

But I still miss two bookstores, Small Adventures and Inkwood. And the quiet beach in Gulfport. Yabba Dews Beach Bar. Cool Beanz Coffee. The Globe Coffeehouse. Monday night at the Castle.

The Record, Book & Comic Store Clerk


Salon.com, that online epitome of what Dwight McDonald referred to as ‘midcult,’ had a nice little fluff piece on the death of the clerk. Specifically, those record, comic, and book store clerks who were the gatekeepers and guides to the worlds of literature, ‘zines, small presses, alternative music, and jazz.

I wasn’t much into comics when I was in high school and I never went to the clerks at RTO for musical advice. I was too much of a quiet browser and have always hated sales pitches.

Later though, I became friends with a couple of clerks at a Barnes and Noble in Montgomery, Alabama (that store is apparently gone now, by the way). One was a bit of an expert in southern literature and hosted occasional poetry groups in the store and also collected ‘found poetry’ with a southern gothic tinge. The other was closeted anarchist with a taste for political lit.

These two probably were the clerks who influenced me the most.

A third was the owner of the used bookstore in Clearwater, Florida, A Blue Moon. He and my mother sometimes went out, so the clerk-customer relationship was a little weird. But he had a wonderfully curated store with a lot of great stuff and he wasn’t afraid to point out interesting books. He also used an old fashioned camera that took ten or twenty seconds to take a picture and required a photometer to use properly.

Better Things For Tourists To Do Than Stand Outside The White House


Take a tour of DC Writers’ Homes. There are more than you might think.

The New Inquiry


Let first note this bit of stereotyping and backward sexual politics by the gray lady: the LGBT-centric literary salon is portrayed as hotbed of raw, sexual energy and frisson, whilst the more or less straight one is comfortably asexual and strictly focused on critical theory.

But I have to say, as someone who is not in a position to personally sample the atmosphere at either group’s gatherings, that The New Inquiry is a great new literary website and you should be reading it. Really. It’s much better than mine.

As a place to start, I found this article to be of particular interest.

What Ever Happened To Modernism?


What, indeed.

I admit, I kind of miss modernism. Even if the good folks over at Scarriet keep finding silly excuses to rail against it.

Gifts For Poets And Poetry Lovers


This list actually makes sense.

The recommended gifts include subscriptions to magazines and small presses that specialize in poetry, rather than mugs and t-shirts.

On Occupy And Writers In The Depression


Someone using the occasion of the ‘people’s libraries’ in the occupy encampments to write about how writers in the thirties were helped by government programs.

Where Have All The Catholic Writers Gone?


Yikes. According this article, I became Catholic at a very bad time. A couple of decades earlier and I could have already been a successful writer (I mean, someone who writes under their own name – not on behalf of clients and employers).