Count Me As One Of Those Folks Who Think It Sucks


I am, of course, referring to Amazon’s purchase of Goodreads.

I enjoyed Goodreads. It had an excellent recommendation engine that suggested some excellent stuff for me. But now, it’s part of the evil empire.

I can only assume that where it now directs you to a number of different venues for buying recommended books, with brick and mortar based Barnes and Noble featured prominently, it will soon only take you to Amazon… or else hide other options so that finding anything but Amazon is counterintuitive.

Ugh.

Book Vending Machines Through The Years


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Sunday Paper – Cascading Lines


Leave B&N alone!

Poetry mapping.

X-raying Iraq through poetry.

Not every change in the publishing of books is towards more digital technology.

Anne Carson Profile In The NYT


I still love Anne Carson. Not as much as I used to, though. Her work has been getting less compelling for me in recent years, but she’s still one of the most fascinating and interesting literary figures out there.

So check out this long profile of her in the New York Times.

Union Station


I had a $25 gift card and a 20% coupon burning holes in my pockets, so I made the trek up to a Barnes and Noble. On my walk, I stopped at Union Station to see if it was still there. I knew they were closing it down (a dispute over rent increases) but thought I would support it while I could in hopes they might decide to stay (futile, I know). I was also thinking they might have a nice sale to clear out the stock.

But when I arrived, the windows were papered over and this enormous, lovely public space was gone. It had always had a surprisingly good selection , including an excellent array of periodicals. And now it’s gone.

I walked a mile further to the downtown store, where I bought Emil Cioran’s A Short History of Decay and an espresso.

While waiting for my espresso, I got an email from Barnes and Noble alerting me to the closure of the Union Station shop and offering a small discount on coffee or tea by way of consolation.

Was today the first day without it? Did it just close down? Had I happened to stop by yesterday, would it still have existed? It just seems an odd coincidence.

Weekend Reading – Reading Is Dead


Do you read more or fewer books than you did ten years ago? Fifteen years ago?

The uneasy relationship between poetry and e-readers.

What makes it a magazine?

Thursday Morning Staff Meeting – Put Down That Knife, Said The Cardinal


Richelieu’s blunt knives.

Historians are always causing trouble.

You can’t have it.

The insomniac poet.

Inkwood Books Sold!?!


The Tampa Bay area’s best indie bookstore, Inkwood Books, was sold!

Apparently, a long time customer bought the store. Hopefully, she’ll keep it well stocked with good books and keep the local flavor.

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Pre-Raphaelite Exhibit At The National Gallery Of Art


preraphaelites-fsLast Sunday, we finally made it down to the National Gallery of Art to see the exhibition, Pre-Raphaelites: Victorian Art and Design, 1848-1900.

The Pre-Raphaelites are not the sort of movement you’d normally expect me to be excited about, but a while back, I’d started reading the novel, Possession. That novel is about some literary and archival sleuthing around the relationship between two fictional poets. However, their poetry was based on the that of Robert Browning and Christina Rossetti, the latter of whom is considered a Pre-Raphaelite poet. So I got a book of Pre-Raphaelite poetry and fell in love with the poems by Christina Rossetti, so bought her collection, Goblin Market and Other Poems. Loved it. So when an exhibition about the movement came to town, I wanted to see it.

And it’s great. Really wonderful. Go see it.

First of all, it’s filled with gorgeous art. If you like avant-garde art, you can see traces of Seccessionist art in it, and also just respect it for the fact that it was avant-garde at the time it was created. If you think Kandinsky and Pollock were the worst thing that happened to art, with the possible of the academic-artistic complex conspiring to make ugly, difficult, meaningless art the only good art.. well then, this is a ton of lovely, representational art.

The curating efforts, which revolved around themes like ‘Nature’ and ‘Paradise’ (oddly enough, a room devoted to crafts and furniture), were somewhat lacking in utility, but it was just great to see so much work from this period gathered together.

Happy Birthday, Flannery O’Connor


The grand dame of Southern Gothic would have been 88 years old today.