BBW : Celebrate the Freedom to Read

Banned Book Week, which runs from today through October 1st this year, celebrates the freedom to read what we choose and the essential protections offered by the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. It highlights the many benefits of free and open access to information and the deleterious impact of censorship by spotlighting attempts at banning books across the US.

BBW underscores the necessity of ensuring that open availability of challenging, unorthodox or unpopular viewpoints for all to read and access. Each year, booksellers, librarians, teachers and civil libertarians throughout the United States use the BBW events to stress the importance of the First Amendment, the power of the printed word and to draw attention to the dangers that arise when restrictions are impossed on the availability of information and ideas in a free society.

This year, Banned Book Week is officially sponsored by the American Booksellers Association, the American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression, the American Library Association, the American Society of Journalists and Authors, the Association of American Publishers, PEN AmPerica Center and the National Coalition Against Censorship.

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Can We Save the Taj Mahal by Staying Away?

Freelance journalist Jeffrey Bartholet has written a challenging piece for this month’s Smithsonian Magazine entitled “How to Save the Taj Mahal ?”. The article examines the ongoing preservation struggles that India’s most iconic tourist attraction continues to face.

With millions of visitors each year, the Taj Mahal is a victim of its fame. The impact of mass tourism, along with Agra’s horrific pollution problems, has resulted in a potential structural catastrophy for the monument. Local preservationists fear that the Taj Mahal, with massive foundations built on threatened arches, will soon collapse into the Yamuna River if tourism and pollution is not dramatically curtailed.

Is it time to put limits on mass tourism to save our cultural heritage? What do you think?

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Humans of New York

The Humans of New York Project is an admirable effort to create a photographic census of New York City. The project, brainchild of photographer Brandon Stanton, hopes to collect 10,000 street portraits and to plot them geographically on an interactive map.

This film is a moving collage of 200 portraits in 200 seconds. Be sure to check out the project website for behind the scenes stories.

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Mad for Madrid

Joanna Gniady

Olivia McDaniel

Julia Bolchakova

Nate Padavick

Natalie Shenker

Yusef Zapata

Veronica Cerri

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Solving Travel Mysteries

Crime novelist Marcus Sakey will write and host a new Travel Channel television series called Hidden City Sakey  describes of the show: “It’s sort of Anthony Bourdain‘s No Reservations meets Castle.”

Throughout the twelve-episode series, Sakey will travel to Anchorage, Atlanta, Austin, Boston, Chicago, the Florida Keys, Los Angeles, New Orleans, New York, San Francisco, Seattle and Washington, D.C.   The show debuts on December 5.

Here’s more from the press release: “Sakey travels the country, city to city, to dig up the less-than-pristine history and reveal the untold story behind each locale, serving as a personal guide to each city’s unique past. The premiere episode explores Sakey’s hometown of Chicago, the city famous for reinventing itself through its checkered history. Viewers will meet America’s first—and maybe worst—serial killer, H.H. Holmes; walk in the footsteps of legendary gangster, John Dillinger; and dig into the 1968 DNC riots, when protestors clashed with police in a battle royale broadcast live to the world.”

Sakey established his writing career by penning five crime novels: The Blade Itself, At The City’s Edge, Good People, The Amateurs and The Two Deaths of Daniel Hayes. All of his titles are set in Chicago’s blue collar society. The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (Swedish version) director Niels Arden Oplev will helm a film adaptation for Good People starring Spiderman actor Tobey Maguire.

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Oxford Inklings

Recently, while doing some research on an early edition of one of J.R.R. Tolkien’s lesser known books I ran across a brief article about the author’s life in Oxford and his social network there.

The venerable university city of Oxford has nurtured great writers for centuries and few cities can rival its literary heritage. During the 1930s and 1940s, Oxford’s superior ability to attract literary talent resulted in the creation of the Inklings – a cross between a drinking club and a writers’ group.

The Inklings membership was diverse, but included two of Britain’s most popular fiction writers – J.R.R. Tolkien and C.S. Lewis. The group is also known for gathering in a popular pub called The Eagle and Child and combining lofty literary discussion with pints of beer.

The pub, known by locals as the Bird and Baby, is still serving real ales and any booklover can share in their literary hero’s footsteps by hoisting a few pints.

Along with renowned literary legends, the Inklings also included some of the UK’s finest 20th century authors and thinkers who never achieved the success of Tolkien and Lewis. Brilliant writers such as novelist and biographer Roger Lancelyn Green, best known for books on Lewis Carroll and Robin Hood, historian David Cecil, who wrote about Jane Austen and Thomas Hardy, Charles Williams, author of the successful novels Descent Into Hell and All Hallows’ Eve and Warren Lewis, CS’s brother also were regulars at The Eagle and Child.

Some believe that the Inklings were instrumental in supporting Tolkien and Lewis in fantasy fiction. What is known for certain is that the group shared drafts of their works in progress, as well as ideas for future books. Who knows, without the Inklings we might not have had The Chronicles of Narnia or the Lord of the Rings.

 

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Paris is Haunted

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How to Get a Passport …today !

Have you ever had one of those travel anxiety dreams where you are about to leave on a trip abroad and you discover that your passport is missing ? Well today, National Passport Day, is the one day each year in the US when you can visit a passport office without an appointment and get a renewal or apply for a new passport.

If you are among the astonishing 70% of Americans who do not own a valid passport, don’t miss this opportunity. You can streamline the process by completing an online passport application form and printing it out to bring along. But don’t forget that you will need:

  • one color photo that’s 2×2″ (51×51 mm), full face, taken within 6 months
  • proof of citizenship
  • if applying for a child under 16, both parents or guardians must be present
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Crete via the Scheimpflug Principle

This clever tilt-shift video was filmed by Joerg Daiber at locations around the amazing isle of Crete.

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The East is Red (and funny too)

Dutch architecture group MVRDV has won the design competition to build the outrageous new home for Hangzhou, China’s much anticipated comic and animation museum. Composed of eight whimsical giant speech bubbles the museum will be an exciting venue uniting the evolving worlds of cartooning, comics, graphic arts and animation.

The eight balloon-like buildings will be connected for a non-stop tour, which will include an international comic book library and three cinemas. Interactive exhibits will allow visitors to create animation, try out blue sceen filmmaking and “act” with holographic characters.

The museum will become the centerpiece for a theme park and entertainment complex.

images © MVRDV

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