What Do We Have in Our Pockets

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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 2012 collection Suddenly, A Knock On The Door.

If you haven’t read any of Keret’s mind-bending short fiction, start with his early collections The Nimrod Flipout or The Girl on the Fridge. But for now, you can read “What Do We Have in Our Pockets ?” at failbetter.com .

According to Keret:

“In this project, Dov Alfon and I are trying to do something that’s supposed to be the literary version of the music video. Basically we’re trying to get filmmakers to express reading. We believe that it’s a new kind of storytelling that can bring people who are not natural readers closer to literature, and advance the idea that stories are there, waiting to be read, and don’t necessarily have to be threatening.

People relate to literature like it is castor oil for bones, like music and cinema are fun, and literature strengthens your bones. We’re trying to say that it isn’t so,” said Keret.

“Goran Dukic worked my book ‘Kneller’s Happy Campers,’ into a feature with Tom Waits. We approached him about it, and he made a video called ‘What do we have in our pockets,’ and in the meantime, we’re very happy that it has received almost 150,000 views in just a few days, and we are getting lots of tweets expressing support from literary magazines. The movie will also compete at Sundance,” continued Keret.

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Inherent Vice Indeed

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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 “like a Cheech and Chong movie”.

I wish that I could muster some enthusiasm for the film, and for Pynchon’s forthcoming novel, but after Inherent Vice it’s doubtful. I mean, have you read Inherent Vice ? What a disenchanting book. Take a look at the original book trailer for Inherent Vice, reportedly narrated by the reclusive author, and you’ll get some sense of my dismay.

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The Free Book Incident

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Seattle, Washington’s Wessel & Lieberman Booksellers has partnered with Olson Kundig Architects to create the Free Book Incident. This project “is not a book store (there is nothing for sale); it is not a library (there is nothing to return)”. Operating from a Pioneer Square storefront, the FBI project has been stocked with an initial donation of 2,500 books, but will be accepting donations until mid-February when the project ends.

According to bookseller Michael Lieberman, “there is more value in releasing the books into the community then offering them for sale”.

Sounds like Amazon and eBay are about to shut down another indie bookstore.

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Free is the way to travel

Rental car and camper companies need to move their vehicles between branches all of the time. In the U.S. we call them driveaway cars, but in Australia and New Zealand they call them relocation vehicles. The guest post below is from Robert Reeve on the numerous free car and camper opportunities that Transfercar offers.

Transfercar: Delivering a Win-Win Solution for Businesses and Consumers

Win-win situations tend to fall under the category of being ‘too good to be true,’ especially in the business world. However, Australian firm Transfercar have managed to deliver that very scenario, offering a leading service to their business partners as well as their clients.

Who are Transfercar?

Transfercar are an Australian based business that is able to offer free car hire to travellers that are looking to explore the majesty of the country. All that someone needs to do is to head onto the Transfercar website, check the current availability of free rental cars and campervans, and make a booking.

Okay, so this probably is still sounding a little bit ‘yeah, right,’ so let us explain how this works.

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Facilitating Free Vehicle Hire

Transfercar aren’t a company that owns a lot of vehicles and gives out free hire just because they are a nice bunch of people (although they are that, too).

What Transfercar do, is work with many of the leading vehicle hire firms around Australia that need to have vehicles returned to a specific location. The rise in popularity of one way car hire means that rental firms in certain towns and cities will perennially find themselves with a lot of vehicles, while stations in other locations are under stocked.

Car hire firms now have a problem, in that they have customers kicking their door in for a vehicle in Brisbane, but all of their fleet is in Perth, for example. Their options are then to sit and wait for customers travelling from Perth to Brisbane, pay a high fee to a transportation firm to move the vehicles back, or talk to Transfercar.

Transfercar offers these companies a much more competitive rate than a transport firm would. Transfercar then advertises the cars that need to be relocated, and hires them out free of charge to anyone who is happy to take the car from A to B. This is where the win-win situation comes in.

Making it Work

Say Mike lives in Adelaide and wants to visit his relatives who live in Darwin, but he is short on money. Mike can log on to Transfercar’s website, see which vehicles are available on that route, and book himself a free journey to see his family. The car hire company in Darwin then looks forward to receiving the vehicle back from Adelaide, which it can then re-hire to another traveller and boost their own revenues.

It is a simple, easy to understand business model and operation, and one that will transform the Australian car rental sector, as well as attitudes towards travel, for many years to come.

This article is written by Transfercar, a car hire Australia service, providing travellers free transport for major cities in Australia.

 

 

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Better Than Streetview

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This extraordinary panoramic photograph of Manhattan by Sergey Semonov won the 2012 Epson International Photographic Pano Award in the Built Environmental catagory. Based on multiple photographs taken from a helicopter trip over NYC, the 3D panorama is an awesome stitch-up. Russian-born Semonov is part of a peripatetic group called AirPano that travels the world creating astonishing aerial images.

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BiblioTech…meh

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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 for a plan to replace the county’s library system with the BiblioTech, an entirely bookless library.kinmanhui

This electronic library will eschew all traditional paper books and instead loan county residents e-readers preloaded with their e-book selections. By sharing e-readers rather than downloading to personal devices, the BiblioTech would circumvent many copyright issues.

Cities in California and Arizon have floated similar schemes, but have withdrawn them due to public outcry. What’s your take on this elitist plan?

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Travel Can be Taxing

Travelers the world over are frequently blindsided by immoderate hotel taxes that boost the cost of overnight stays. The United States is no exception. When guests book hotels, they rarely explore the potential additional costs of local, city or state taxes on the final bill.

You probably won’t be at all surprised to learn the New York City has one of the highest lodging tax rates in the U.S., but check out this neat info graphic from the folks at away.com to see how it compares with other cities around the country.

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Free Schwabylon ?

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From the outside, we tend to view the Germans as a monolithic culture, but stories like this one demonstrate how wrong that viewpoint can be.

There is an internecine war brewing in Berlin’s trendy Prenzlauer Berg District between native Berliners and Swabian “immigrants” from southwestern Germany. The first blow in the Spätzle War was struck last week when the “Free Schwabylon” activists attacked a monument to beloved artist Käthe Kollwitz in P’berg’s Kollwitz Platz with a large pot of spätzle noodles, which is a Swabian staple. The Free Schwabylonians followed up the pasta raid with a manifesto demanding the creation of an autonomous Free Schwabylon within the very heart of hipster Prenzlauer Berg.

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Even though this seems to be a whimsical exploit by yuppies with too much time on their hands, it actually highlights the ongoing antipathy between gentrifying newcomers and locals being priced out of their own neighborhoods , as well as the continuous conflict between prosperous southerners and the dependent German northern regions.

Although the Free Schwabylon activist rallying cry, “Kollwitz Platz is our Tahrir Square”, is tongue-in-cheek, their contentious relationships with long-term residents are all too real and growing.

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The Clocks Were Striking Thirteen

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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 David Pearson.

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Some of the new covers are quite compelling, especially the Nineteen Eighty-Four with dramatic embossed titling under black foil, but others, such as the line drawn image on Homage to Catalonia seem to miss the mark.

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Is True Crime Your Genre ?

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Are you in the market for a very special book collection? Do you have an interest in True Crime ? Well, eBay seller uswego has an offer just for you. For the farcical price of $1,000 (plus $250.00 shipping) you can own a share of convicted swindler Bernie Madoff’s personal library.

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According to the eBay seller, the books, along with a variety of other Madoff property, were purchased during the U.S. Marshal seizure auction of the Madoff’s property in 2011. Highlights of the 110-book collection? The Joys of Yiddish, Billy Bathgate, The Interpreter of Maladies, The Robber Bride, a few Philip Roth titles, and The Chronicles of Narnia seven-book set.

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