PEN World Voices Festival Pt.7

A veritable United Nations of world literature will convene next week in New York City for the 7th annual PEN World Voices Festival of International Literature. Hundreds of writers from more than three dozen nations will meet in NYC to celebrate the power and vitality of the written word. Running from April 25th through May 1st, the Festival includes events at “hubs” throughout the city.

Highlights of the Festival include the PEN Speakeasy: Erotic Readings with Irvine Welsh, Yael Hedaya and more; How to Start a Revolution (in the Library); the Freedom to Write Lecture with Wole Soyinka and a Literary Safari. There will also be a “pop-up bookstore” at the Festival HQ in the Standard Hotel throughout the week offering world lit titles. Some events require ticket purchases, but at least 50 are free.

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Game of Thrones (by the numbers)

Like all good fantasy-lit geeks, we’re anticipating great things from HBO’s launch of the Game of Thrones this weekend.

Travel Between The Pages takes a look inside Game of Thrones:

$50 million-$60 million: The estimated budget for the series.

4.5 million-plus: Number of books in print in North America alone. (Once Dragons is published in July, that number will jump to more than 5 million.)

$2.5 million-plus: The amount episodes are fetching overseas. (It’s already HBO’s best-selling series abroad more than 50 percent above the international price tag for The Sopranos.)

3,188: Number of pages in the U.S. hardbacks of Books 1-4. (Swords ran longest at 973 pages.)

1,800: Rough number of vocabulary words in the Dothraki’s language. (The language of the nomadic warriors was created by Language Creation Society member David J. Peterson, who analyzed the books and drew from Russian, Turkish, Estonian, Inuktitut and Swahili.)

583: The crew at its biggest.

294: Number of weeks between the publishing of Books 4 and 5. (Crows was published Nov. 8, 2005; Dragons will be released July 12.)

250: Approximate number of extras used on the biggest day of production.

170: Total production days. (The production spent 133 days filming in Belfast and 37 in Malta. The crew shot simultaneously in Northern Ireland and Malta for six weeks. Some basic sets from the feature film Your Highness, which filmed before Thrones, were recycled from The Paint Hall Studio in Belfast, where the Titanic was originally painted.)

162: Total number of speaking roles in the series. (Seventeen cast members’ names appear during the opening credits.

150: Number of full sets of armor created for the series.

130: Number of helmets created for the series. (The wardrobe department consists of roughly 80 people, including the in-house costume design team who created the majority of the costumes.)

10: Number of days Thrones-themed food trucks stopped in New York and Los Angeles. (Menu items included lemon cake, trout, squab and pickled egg.)

7: Number of books in the series.

6: Number of family trees included in the HBO press kit.

5: Number of topless women in the pilot.

4: Number of beheadings in the pilot.

3: Number of beheadings before the opening credits.

3: Number of times “winter is coming” mentioned in the pilot (first one comes at the 11-minute mark).

2: Number of sex scenes in the pilot.

2: Number of roles recast. (Lady Catelyn Stark and Princess Daenerys Targaryen; the parts wound up going to Michelle Fairley and Emilia Clarke, respectively.)

 

 

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How to Recycle Paperbacks

New York City’s new Japanese restaurant Brushstrokes (30 Hudson Street) has cleverly recycled 12,000+ discarded paperback books by utilizing them to build the walls for its bar/lounge.

The restaurant, which opens on April 20th, is a long-delayed project from chef David Bouley. A team of chefs from Japan, including Chef Isao Yamada, will be staffing the kitchen.

Along with the recycled books, reclaimed lumber, salvaged steel and stone are used as essential design elements.

photos by Kate Sokoler

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The English Obsession

Hat-tip to Simon Wallace for the post idea.

If you’ve spent any time in England during the past decade, you will probably agree with London-based photographer Peter Dench that “the English have turned drinking into a national obsession, nearly an artform”. The English are drinking alcohol younger, longer and faster than ever before. Alcohol consumption has more than doubled in the past fifty years. Binge drinking, public intoxication and alcohol fueled violence are endemic everywhere from quaint villages to towns and cities.

Dench has documented English drinking behavior in this photo essay, Drinking of England. These occasionally humorous, but mostly grim, photographs take the viewer from local pubs, charity events, festivals and everyday social events to the hospital and the grave.

Drinking of England is the perfect antidote to all of the royal wedding hokum.

All photos © Peter Dench

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Big Brother Is Watching (the libraries)

 

Justin Richardson’s and Peter Parnell’s “And Tango Makes Three” tops the list of the American Library Association’s (ALA) Top Ten List of the Most Frequently Challenged Books of 2010.  The list was released on Monday as part of the ALA’s State of America’s Libraries Report.

“And Tango Makes Three” is an award-winning children’s book about the true story of two male Emperor Penguins hatching and parenting a baby chick at New York’s Central Park Zoo. The book has appeared on the ALA’s Top Ten List of Frequently Challenged Books for the past five years and returns to the number one slot after a brief stay at the number two position in 2009. There have been dozens of attempts to remove And Tango Makes Three from school and public library shelves. Those seeking to remove the book have described it as “unsuited for age group,” and cited “religious viewpoint” and “homosexuality” as reasons for challenging the book.

Off the list this year are such classics as Alice Walker’s “Color Purple”; “To Kill A Mockingbird” by Harper Lee; “Catcher in the Rye” by J.D. Salinger; and Robert Cormier’s “The Chocolate War.” Replacing them are books reflecting a range of themes and ideas that include “Brave New World” by Aldous Huxley; “The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian” by Sherman Alexie; “The Hunger Games” by Suzanne Collins; and Stephenie Meyer’s “Twilight.” 

The ALA Office for Intellectual Freedom (OIF) collects reports on book challenges from librarians, teachers, concerned individuals, and press reports from across the United States.  A challenge is defined as a formal, written complaint filed with a library or school requesting that a book or other material be restricted or removed because of its content or appropriateness. In 2010, OIF received 348 reports on efforts to remove or restrict materials from school curricula and library bookshelves.    

Though OIF receives reports of challenges from a variety of sources, a majority of challenges go unreported. 

The ALA’s Top Ten Most Frequently Challenged Books of 2010 include the following titles; each title is followed by the reasons given for challenging the book:

1. “And Tango Makes Three” by Peter Parnell and Justin Richardson

Reasons: Homosexuality, Religious Viewpoint, Unsuited to Age Group

2. “The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian” by Sherman Alexie

Reasons: Offensive language, Racism, Sex Education, Sexually Explicit, Unsuited to Age Group, Violence

3. “Brave New World” by Aldous Huxley

Reasons: Insensitivity, Offensive Language, Racism, Sexually Explicit

4. “Crank” by Ellen Hopkins

Reasons: Drugs, Offensive Language, Sexually Explicit

5. “The Hunger Games” by Suzanne Collins

Reasons: Sexually Explicit, Unsuited to Age Group, Violence

6. “Lush” by Natasha Friend

Reasons: Drugs, Offensive Language, Sexually Explicit, Unsuited to Age Group

7. “What My Mother Doesn’t Know” by Sonya Sones

Reasons: Sexism, Sexually Explicit, Unsuited to Age Group

8. “Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By In America” by Barbara Ehrenreich

Reasons: Drugs, Inaccurate, Offensive Language, Political Viewpoint, Religious Viewpoint

9. “Revolutionary Voices” edited by Amy Sonnie

Reasons: Homosexuality, Sexually Explicit

10. “Twilight” by  Stephenie Meyer

Reasons: Religious Viewpoint, Violence

For more information on book challenges and censorship, please visit the Office for Intellectual Freedom’s Banned Books Week Web site at www.ala.org/bbooks .

 

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How High Is Too High ?

Saudia Arabia’s Prince Al Waleed Bin Talal, the despotic nation’s construction czar, has just approved the construction of the world’s tallest building in the coastal city of Jeddah. The “Kingdom Tower”, designed by architect Adrian Smith, will be a full mile high at 5,280 feet. The skyscraper’s 12 million square feet of space will house apartments, hotels and office space.

The “Kingdom Tower” will dwarf the world’s current record holder, the “Burj Khalifa” in Dubai, by nearly half a mile.

Burj Khalifa

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It’s…National Library Week

It’s National Library Week from April 10th through April 16th. This annual event celebrates our local libraries, library workers, learning, and of course books. Begun in 1958, National Library Week is a nationwide observance sponsored by the American Library Association (ALA) and by local libraries across the USA.

This week reminds us all that libraries provide free access to everyone and that they make a real difference in the lives of millions every day.

This year’s theme is: “Create your own story @ your library”.

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Dimanche est Paresseux

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At the Intersection of Books & Art

Eugenie Torgerson is an award-winning illustrator, photographer, writer and book artist whose fantastic three-dimensional objects are based on book and box forms.

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Harry Potter : The Exhibition

New York City’s new Harry Potter: The Exhibition openen this week at the Discovery Times Square building . Featuring sets, costumes, props and memorabilia from all eight films, the exhibit offers fans a chance to walk through replications of Hogwarts classrooms, common rooms, a quidditch pitch and Hagrid’s hut. The show runs in NYC until September 5, 2011.

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