Categories
- Africa
- Air Travel
- Animation
- apps
- Architecture
- Art
- Asia
- Books
- Bookstore Tourism
- Canada
- Car rentals
- Cartography
- Comics
- ebooks
- Europe
- Film
- Freedom of Speech
- History
- Hotels
- Libraries
- Maps
- Middle East
- movies
- Museums
- Music
- Photography
- Public Transport
- Restaurants
- South America
- Tech
- Theater
- Tourism
- Travel Writing
- Uncategorized
- USA
- Writing
Share this Blog
Translate
-
Monthly Archives: November 2015
Help Save The Wilderness
Since returning to Iceland this summer after many years away, I’ve become a little bit obsessed with the extraordinary island nation. If you have ever been there, you will understand where I’m coming from. With the largest unspoiled wilderness area in … Continue reading
Terms and Conditions
New York City-based artist and graphic novelist Robert Sikoryak has solved the dilemma that every iTunes user faces: how to slog through the deadly boring legal terms and conditions of use. He has created a comic book-style exploration of the … Continue reading
Posted in apps, Art, Tech, USA, Writing
Tagged Alison Bechdel, Apple, Chester Gould, Graphic Novels, iTunes, R.Crumb
1 Comment
Thought Crimes
The excellent TED-ED lesson below was written and narrated by Noah Tavlin. It offers a clear and succinct explanation of what the term “Orwellian” actually means. A helpful reminder to be discerning in our word choice, too.
Posted in Animation, Books, Freedom of Speech, Writing
Tagged authoritarian, Fascism, George Orwell, language, totalitarianism
Leave a comment
Just Call it MOFAD
As you might predict, New York City’s first museum dedicated to food and drink is located in Brooklyn. Launched last week in a converted garage—of course—the Museum of Food and Drink has big plans for its visitors. By 2019, MOFAD … Continue reading
Posted in Museums, Tech, Tourism, USA
Tagged beverages, Brooklyn, food, Williamsburg
Leave a comment
Lurk Late
With all of the hubbub and hullabaloo about the George Lucas Museum of Narrative Art planning to open in Chicago, last week’s announcement finalizing the plans for the American Writers Museum got lost in the media fog. The good news … Continue reading
Posted in Books, ebooks, History, Museums, USA, Writing
Tagged American Literature, Anna Quindlen, Chicago, Children's literature, Poetry
2 Comments
Ireland, 1912
Set in 1912 Ireland, “Uisce Beatha” (Gaelic for Water of Life) is based on the true tale of a feckless young Irishman who leaves his rural home with hopes of finding his fortune in America. Irish director Shaun O. Connor … Continue reading
It’s a Lonely Planet
Today, the premier issue of the new Lonely Planet magazine hits the newsstands in the United States. You may be saying to yourself: “but I’ve seen copies of the Lonely Planet magazine all over the world for years”—and you would … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Europe, Photography, Tourism, Travel Writing, USA
Tagged Cuba, Lonely Planet, Magazines, Nashville Tennessee, Rome
1 Comment
Hendrix Redux
Between July 1968 and March 1969, Jimi Hendrix shared a third floor flat in London’s Mayfair neighborhood with his girlfriend Kathy Etchingham. For years, the apartment has been used as office space and storage for the Handel House Trust, which … Continue reading
Jimi Hendrix Slept Here
If you have ever wandered around London as a tourist, I’m sure that at some point you noticed the ubiquitous blue ceramic plaques around the city noting where famous historical figures lived or worked. The iconic plaques commemorating figures as … Continue reading
Posted in Art, Europe, Film, History, Tourism
Tagged Cornwall, English Heritage, Jimi Hendrix, Keith Moon, London
1 Comment
