If M.C. Escher Designed Bookstores

Situated in the southwestern Chinese city of Dujiangyan, in Sichuan province, this extraordinary new bookstore looks like it could have been designed by M.C. Escher himself. The amazing building features mirrored ceilings and extremely tall bookshelves in soaring C-shaped arches. Mirrored ceilings and lofty interiors create an otherworldly display space. Highly reflective black tile floors make furnishings appear to almost float.

One can’t help but be jealous of these astounding new bookstores that are popping up across China, while here in North America we can barely keep threadbare chain booksellers open.

 

 

Posted in Asia, Books, Bookstore Tourism | Tagged , , | 3 Comments

a novel shortcut

by Liana Finck

 

Posted in Art, Books, USA, Writing | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Tale for Tale

The Teller of Tales

Gabriela Mistral

translated by Ursula K. Le Guin

When I’m walking, everything
on earth gets up
and stops me and whispers to me,
and what they tell me is their story.

And the people walking
on the road leave me their stories,
I pick them up where they fell
in cocoons of silken thread.

Stories run through my body
or sit purring in my lap.
So many they take my breath away,
buzzing, boiling, humming.
Uncalled they come to me,
and told, they still won’t leave me.

The ones that come down through the trees
weave and unweave themselves,
and knit me up and wind me round
until the sea drives them away.

But the sea that’s always telling stories,
the wearier I am the more it tells me…

The people who cut trees,
the people who break stones,
want stories before they go to sleep.

Women looking for children
who got lost and don’t come home,
women who think they’re alive
and don’t know they’re dead,
every night they ask for stories,
and I return tale for tale.

In the middle of the road, I stand
between rivers that won’t let me go,
and the circle keeps closing
and I’m caught in the wheel.

The riverside people tell me
of the drowned woman sunk in grasses
and her gaze tells her story,
and I graft the tales into my open hands.

To the thumb come stories of animals,
to the index fingers, stories of my dead.
There are so many tales of children
they swarm on my palms like ants.

When my arms held
the one I had, the stories
all ran as a blood-gift
in my arms, all through the night.
Now, turned to the East,
I’m giving them away because I forget them.

Old folks want them to be lies.
Children want them to be true.
All of them want to hear my own story,
which, on my living tongue, is dead.

I’m seeking someone who remembers it
leaf by leaf, thread by thread.
I lend her my breath, I give her my legs,
so that hearing it may waken it for me.

 


La Contadora 

Cuando camino se levantan
todas las cosas de la tierra
y me paran y cuchichean
y es su historia lo que cuentan.

Y las gentes que caminan
en la ruta me la dejan
y la recojo caída
en capullos que son de huella.

Historias corren mi cuerpo
o en mi regazo ronronean.
Tantas son que no dan respiro,
zumban, hierven y abejean.
Sin llamada se me vienen
y contadas tampoco dejan…

Las que bajan por los árboles
se trenzan y se destrenzan,
y me tejen y me envuelvan
hasta que el mar los ahuyenta.

Pero el mar que cuenta siempre
más rendida, más me deja…

Los que están mascando bosque
y los que rompen la piedra,
al dormirse quieren historias.

Mujeres que buscan hijos
perdidos que no regresan,
y las que se creen vivas
y no saben que están muertas,
cada noche piden historias,
y yo me rindo cuenta que cuenta.

A medio camino quedo
entre ríos que no me sueltan,
el corro se va cerrando
y me atrapa en la rueda.

Los ribereños me cuentan
la ahogada sumida en hierbas,
y su mirada cuenta su historia,
y yo las tronco en mis palmas abiertas.

Al pulgar llegan las de animales,
al índice las de mis muertos.
Las de niños, de ser tantas
en las palmas me hormiguean.

Cuando tomaba así mis brazos
el que yo tuve, todas ellas
en regalo de sangre corrieron
mis brazos una noche entera.
Ahora yo, vuelta al Oriente,
se las voy dando porque no recuerdo.

Los viejos las quieren mentidas,
los niños las quieren ciertas.
Todos quieren oír la historia mía
que en mi lengua viva está muerta.

Busco alguna que la recuerde
hoja por hoja, herbra por hebra.
Le presto mi aliento, le doy mi marcha
por si el oírla me la despierta.

From Selected Poems of Gabriela Mistral: Translated by Ursula K. Le Guin. Copyright © 2003 Ursula K. Le Guin. Courtesy of University of New Mexico Press.

 

Posted in Books, South America, USA, Writing | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Coffee Makes the World Go Round

Today is National Coffee Day here in the USA. And although my own coffee roasting machine is giving me headaches, I still love each and every cup of joe that I produce. The marvelous video below is a perfect way to celebrate the day and the magic elixir. Thomas Blanchard  directed this loving look at the heavenly beverage titled  “Oooh !! My Delicious Coffee”. This paradoxically soothing film features waves of coffee and cream washing past the camera lens in varying, equally hypnotic stages. Blanchard combined paint, oil and coffee to achieve this brilliant effect. The exceptional soundtrack is by Alexis Dehimi 

 

Posted in Animation, Art, Film, Photography | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Total Eclipse of Rationality

American Fascism Now (Rotland Press) offers a chilling look at the United States in 2020, with powerful linocut prints by Sue Coe and text by historian Stephen F. Eisenman. The frightening book chronicles a country on the verge of a political and cultural abyss. It’s no coincident that the book has the look and feel of 1920s and 30s German texts.

 

Posted in Art, Books, History, USA, Writing | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Library, Museum, Spaceship ?

Here at TBTP World HQ, we still sorely miss visiting libraries and museums. So, we are forced to live vicariously for now through virtual travel. We were intrigued to learn about this amazing new project outside of Tokyo that launched on August 1, 2020. The stunning Kadokawa Musashino Museum  is part art museum and part library inside of a monolithic granite structure that was designed by Kengo Kuma for Kadokawa, a major publisher of manga and fiction.

 

A highlight of the institution is the Bookshelf Theater Library, a dramatic space occupying sections of the 4th and 5th floor. With 26 foot floor-to-ceiling bookshelves, the soaring library will accommodate 50,000 books. Inside the imposing building there are 5 floors consisting of various sections dedicated to books, anime, art and cartoons.

 

 

 

Posted in Animation, Architecture, Art, Asia, Books, Libraries, Museums, Tourism | Tagged | 2 Comments

Magnum Opus

 

Posted in Art, Books, Writing | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Devotion is full of arrows

ON KINGDOMS

Joanna Klink

Who is ever at home in oneself.
Land without mercy. Interstates
set flickering by night. When I speak to you
I can feel a storm falling blackly to the roads,
the pelting rains the instant they
hit. Devotion is full of arrows.
Most weeks I am no more than the color of the walls
in the room where we sit, or I am blind to clocks,
restless, off-guard, accomplice to the weathers
that burn and flee, foamless, across a sky
that was my past, that is
what I was. I am always too close.
I am not sure I will ever be
wholly alive. Still—we are faithful.
Small birds hook their flights into the fog.
The heat crosses in shoals over these roads
and this evening the cottonwoods may sway
with that slow darkgold wind
beyond all urgency. I am listening to you.

Posted in USA, Writing | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Curiouser and Curiouser

London’s grand Victoria and Albert Museum has created its first-ever VR event, a marvelous little preview for its highly anticipated exhibition Alice: Curiouser and Curiouser, with special effects that bring the psychedelic wonders of the 19th century iconic novel to life. The free event will launch on October 22nd at 2pm GMT and will take place in a digital landscape inspired by the V&A’s amazing collections. Virtual visitors must enter the digital experience as avatars and will be able to interact with one another. There will also be a tour of the show by curator Kate Bailey through the exhibition’s five main sections, where objects from the show will materialize in the space, and the setting will transform with live effects. The event will also be broadcast live on the museum’s YouTube channel.

The V & A is also launching Curious Alice, a downloadable VR experience to support the exhibition. Illustrations by Icelandic artist Kristjana Williams made for the exhibition’s publication are animated and free to explore by visitors. The scenes depict Alice’s fantastic adventure, while the White Rabbit character is the visitor’s personal guide for the experience.

E.3796-2004
Poster
Cheshire Cat; ‘Cheshire cat’, psychedelic poster by Joseph McHugh, published by East Totem West. USA, 1967
Joseph McHugh
East Totem West; Orbit Graphic Arts
California
1967

When the physical exhibition opens on March 27,2021, the museum will launch another VR experience named A Curious Game of Croquet, for use on headsets within the exhibition.

In order to participate in the free launch event on October 22nd, virtual visitors must register and create an avatar before the launch, or join the event to be broadcast on the V&A’s YouTube channel.

Posted in Animation, Art, Europe, Museums, Tech, Tourism, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , | 3 Comments

Censorship Is A Dead End

Banned Books Week is an annual event celebrating the freedom to read. Banned Books Week was launched in 1982 in response to a sudden surge in the number of challenges to books in schools, bookstores and libraries. Typically held during the last week of September, it highlights the value of free and open access to information. Banned Books Week brings together the entire book community — librarians, booksellers, publishers, journalists, teachers, and readers of all types — in shared support of the freedom to seek and to express ideas, even those some consider unorthodox or unpopular.

Banned Books Week 2020 will be held September 27 – October 3. The theme of this year’s event is “Censorship is a dead end. Find your freedom to read!”

By focusing on efforts across the country to remove or restrict access to books, Banned Books Week draws national attention to the harms of censorship. The ALA Office for Intellectual Freedom (OIF) compiles lists of challenged books as reported in the media and submitted by librarians and teachers across the country. The Top 10 Challenged Books of 2019 are:

  1. George by Alex Gino
    Reasons: challenged, banned, restricted, and hidden to avoid controversy; for LGBTQIA+ content and a transgender character; because schools and libraries should not “put books in a child’s hand that require discussion”; for sexual references; and for conflicting with a religious viewpoint and “traditional family structure”
  2. Beyond Magenta: Transgender Teens Speak Out by Susan Kuklin
    Reasons: challenged for LGBTQIA+ content, for “its effect on any young people who would read it,” and for concerns that it was sexually explicit and biased
  3. A Day in the Life of Marlon Bundo by Jill Twiss, illustrated by EG Keller
    Reasons: Challenged and vandalized for LGBTQIA+ content and political viewpoints, for concerns that it is “designed to pollute the morals of its readers,” and for not including a content warning
  4. Sex is a Funny Word by Cory Silverberg, illustrated by Fiona Smyth
    Reasons: Challenged, banned, and relocated for LGBTQIA+ content; for discussing gender identity and sex education; and for concerns that the title and illustrations were “inappropriate”
  5. Prince & Knight by Daniel Haack, illustrated by Stevie Lewis
    Reasons: Challenged and restricted for featuring a gay marriage and LGBTQIA+ content; for being “a deliberate attempt to indoctrinate young children” with the potential to cause confusion, curiosity, and gender dysphoria; and for conflicting with a religious viewpoint
  6. I Am Jazz by Jessica Herthel and Jazz Jennings, illustrated by Shelagh McNicholas
    Reasons: Challenged and relocated for LGBTQIA+ content, for a transgender character, and for confronting a topic that is “sensitive, controversial, and politically charged”
  7. The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood
    Reasons: Banned and challenged for profanity and for “vulgarity and sexual overtones”
  8. Drama written and illustrated by Raina Telgemeier
    Reasons: Challenged for LGBTQIA+ content and for concerns that it goes against “family values/morals”
  9. Harry Potter series by J. K. Rowling
    Reasons: Banned and forbidden from discussion for referring to magic and witchcraft, for containing actual curses and spells, and for characters that use “nefarious means” to attain goals
  10. And Tango Makes Three by Peter Parnell and Justin Richardson illustrated by Henry Cole
    Reason: Challenged and relocated for LGBTQIA+ content.

 

Posted in Books, Freedom of Speech, Libraries, USA, Writing | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment