In the magical video below, actor/comedian/magician Michael Carbonaro demonstrates the extrordinary attributes of an amzing “Swiss Army’ backpack. I’m sure that once you see it you’ll want one too.
In the magical video below, actor/comedian/magician Michael Carbonaro demonstrates the extrordinary attributes of an amzing “Swiss Army’ backpack. I’m sure that once you see it you’ll want one too.
I recently ran across this project in Krakow, Poland known locally as Gaduławka, or happy to chat. It is an upgraded bench that encourages people to talk to each other. This simple nudge in the form of an inviting sign may help in terms of fighting loneliness and social isolation. It is also a great opportunity for travelers to meet local folks.
The first “Happy to Chat”bench in Poland was launched at the Jewish Community Center of Krakow this September. The bench has a sign in Polish, English, and Hebrew inviting passers-by to sit and strike up a conversation with a stranger.
Gaduławka is the Polish equivalent of the “Happy to Chat” benches, which have already appeared in the UK, the USA, Australia and New Zealand. The new benches bear a sign reading “sit here if you don’t mind someone stopping to say hello!”
The bench project was initially conceived by Allison Owen -Jones, the creator of the “happy to chat”benches campaign in Cardiff, Wales. While visiting a park, she noticed a man who looked depressed and lonely, but had no idea how to approach him without being awkward. at that point, she realized how difficult it is to initiate a conversation with a stranger, so she decided to take matters into her own hands. She created signs that promote and facilitate human interaction, and installed them on multiple park benches.
Allison Owen-Jones, who assisted the inauguration of the first bench in Poland, emphasized that you never know what a simple “good morning” can lead to, and expressed her hopes that the bench will encourage people in the neighborhood to talk to each other.
So here we are well into the 21st century and the reactionary book burners are at it again. Just this week, some self-appointed guardians of American Aryan youth in the state of Virginia have called for removing books from schools and burning them in a public orgy of Maga-mayhem. “The horrific history of exterminating books, sometimes exterminating the authors at the same time, is as much a part of current history as it was of earlier times,” Haig Bosmajian writes in his book, also entitled Burning Books. “Century after century, the book burners have lit the fearful, powerful, magical fire to reduce to ashes the fearful, powerful, magical books.”
I recently ran across this wonderful video below featuring images by the late Saul Leiter accompanied by the sublime music of Miles Davis. It reminded me of an exhibition of Leiter’s photographs and painting that I happened to see the year that he died. The show was at the Hundertwasser Museum in Vienna of all places.
I have stayed at some sketchy motels over the years, but nothing quite equals the bizarre Clown Motel in Tonopah, Nevada. Located adjacent to and on top of an old west cemetary, the motel/roadside attraction offers spooky, and IMHO very creepy, accomodations for the curious traveler. Don’t get me wrong, I’m not one of those clown-phobic people that are weirded-out by clowns, I just don’t find them amusing on any level. Still, if I every find myself roadtripping in western Nevada, I’d consider staying the night for the ghosts.
The entertaining video below provides a comprehensive history of the Clown Motel and a tour of the creepy hotel. I love the enthusiasm of the new owners for the place.
I was recently reminded to visit the wonderful website Neglected Books which reviews and writes up books which are, as the name says, neglected. It features authors who have fallen out of fashion, obscure imprints, anything that’s a bit musty and lost in the stacks of time. If you’re love books and literature then this is an absolute treasure trove. Within minutes, I hit on a link to Rockwell Kent’s memoir A Journal of Quiet Adventure in Alaska .The book, which the author illustrated himself, is one of those titles that this bookseller/collector kicks himself for selling and not keeeping for his personal library. You can see the full edition right here on the Internet Archive.
Neglected Books’ editor Brad Bigelow also offers some excellent long reads on writers that we all think we know, but may not really. For example, he recently posted a story titled Simenon’s romans Américains exploring the once widely popular Belgian mystery writer’s time in the United States.
“Paul Delvaux: The Village of the Mermaids”
by
Lisel Mueller
Who is that man in black, walking
away from us into the distance?
The painter, they say, took a long time
finding his vision of the world.
The mermaids, if that is what they are
under their full-length skirts,
sit facing each other
all down the street, more of an alley,
in front of their gray row houses.
They all look the same, like a fair-haired
order of nuns, or like prostitutes
with chaste, identical faces.
How calm they are, with their vacant eyes,
their hands in laps that betray nothing.
Only one has scales on her dusky dress.
It is 1942; it is Europe,
and nothing fits. The one familiar figure
is the man in black approaching the sea,
and he is small and walking away from us.