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Category Archives: Writing
What Do We Have in Our Pockets
The short film below, which premieres this week at Sundance, was directed by Goran Dukic and is based on Israeli writer Etgar Keret‘s short story “What Do We Have in Our Pockets”. The tw0-page story is included in Keret’s terrific … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Film, Middle East, Writing
Tagged Dov Alfon, Etgar Keret, Goran Dukić, Sundance
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Inherent Vice Indeed
While trolling the net for more information on Thomas Pynchon‘s upcoming title The Bleeding Edge, I ran across a brief interview with director Paul Thomas Anderson regarding his work on the film version of Inherent Vice. Anderson describes his film of Pynchon’s novel as … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Film, movies, Uncategorized, USA, Writing
Tagged Bleeding Edge, Inherent Vice, Paul Thomas Anderson, Thomas Pynchon
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BiblioTech…meh
San Antonio, Texas Judge Nelson Wolff is a bibliophile with a surprising mission. Even though he owns an extensive personal library, with more than 1,000 collectible first editions, the Bevar County judge and library board chair has been the torchbearer … Continue reading
Posted in Books, ebooks, Libraries, Tech, Uncategorized, USA, Writing
Tagged BiblioTech, Digital library, E-book, San Antonio
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The Clocks Were Striking Thirteen
Penguin UK has decided to mark the sixty-third anniversary of George Orwell‘s death by launching “George Orwell Day” and by issuing a series of new paperback editions of his most beloved books. The series has all original covers designed by … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Europe, Freedom of Speech, History, Writing
Tagged Animal Farm, George Orwell, George Orwell Day, Nineteen Eighty-Four, Penguin Group
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Murder In The Library
Classic locked-room mysteries, tales of murder and mayhem in quaint villages or gritty adventures on mean city streets. You will find all of that and more at the British Library’s upcoming exhibition titled Murder in the Library: An A-Z of Crime … Continue reading
Posted in Books, ebooks, Europe, History, Libraries, Writing
Tagged British Library, crime fiction, Detective fiction, Miss Marple, Nordic Noir
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Habits Makes It Sound Disreputable
On December 20th, the Pew Research Center‘s Internet & American Life Project released a thought provoking study of “Reading habits in Different Communities” in the United States. It appears that only 78% of Americans ages 16 and older report reading … Continue reading
Posted in Books, ebooks, Libraries, USA, Writing
Tagged Comparison of e-book readers, E-book, Library, Pew Research Center
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A letter from Santa Claus
Illustration by Dave Thomson A Letter From Santa Claus My Dear Susy Clemens, I have received and read all the letters which you and your little sister have written me … I can read your and your baby sister’s jagged … Continue reading
It’s A Very Dickensian Christmas
Following an extensive eight month, £3 million restoration and redevelopment project, London’s Charles Dickens Museum reopened on December 10th just in time to celebrate a Dickens Christmas and to top-off the Dickens 2012 Bicentenary year festivities. The beloved author’s Bloomsbury … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Europe, History, Museums, Tourism, Writing
Tagged Charles Dicken, Charles Dickens Museum, London, Nicholas Nickleby, Oliver Twist
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A Christmas Miracle (almost)
The English North Yorkshire town of Malton seems a likely place to figure in a Charles Dickens tale and this year it does. When residents of the old Roman town learned that a rare specially bound and signed copy of … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Europe, Writing
Tagged Charles Dicken, Christmas Carol, Malton, North Yorkshire, Selina Scott
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The True Way Is Along A Rope
Are you a Kafka fan? Do you love animation like a kid craves Saturday morning cartoons? If you do, set aside twenty minutes to absorb this fantastic Japanese animated film version of Franz Kafka‘s cryptic story A Country Doctor directed by Koji … Continue reading
Posted in Animation, Asia, Books, Writing
Tagged A Country Doctor, Animation, Franz Kafka, Kōji Yamamura
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