petrichor + recommended   337

Internal Memo: Snow | The New York Observer
You call us flakes. We hardly ever arrive on time. And when we do show up, we bring too many of our friends.
snow  essay  recommended  nyc  observer 
january 2011 by petrichor
Q + LA Amy Poehler - LA Times Magazine
I love, love that age when you’re right on the precipice of teenage years, before you’ve decided that everything’s lame. And we always end with “Dance Party,” which is just a stupid way of reminding kids—boys and girls—no one looks stupid when they’re having fun.
amy.poehler  interview  latimes  recommended  comedian  comedy  teevee  dance  joy  tehwin  nyc  newyorker 
january 2011 by petrichor
Allegra Goodman on the Vision of Revision - WSJ.com
As a teenager I put off revision for as long as possible. Now, I make revision part of my routine. I begin by rewriting the pages I wrote the day before. Art no longer seems like alchemy to me. Like a scientist, I test my ideas and hone the words I use as instruments. Revision is a form of experimentation, art a method for discovery.
author  writing  goodman  allegra.goodman  wsj  essay  recommended  revision 
november 2010 by petrichor
BFI | Sight & Sound | Film review: Mary and Max (2008)
Yet, for better and very often for worse, the friendship, the correspondence between them, depends on this wrong timing, depends on a fundamental wrongness that can’t be fixed.
friendship  movie  animation  claymation  austraila  Asperger's  recommended  film  tehwin  2008  Mary  Max 
october 2010 by petrichor
Technology Review: Blogs: Mims's Bits: The Death of the Book has Been Greatly Exaggerated
[...] it's just as likely that as the ranks of the early adopters get saturated, adoption of ebooks will slow. Unlike the move from CDs to MP3s, there is no easy way to convert our existing stock of books to e-readers. And unlike the move from records and tapes to CDs, it's not immediately clear that an ebook is in all respects better than what it succeeds.
So the world is left with an unconvertible stock of used books that is vast. If the bustling, recession-inspired trade in used books tells us anything, it's that old books hold value for readers in a way that not even movies and music do. That's value that no ebook reader can unlock. In fact, it remains to be seen whether legions of readers raised on 99c titles at their local used bookstore (or $4.00-$5.00 titles delivered via Amazon.com) will be so eager to start buying brand new books at $10. And then there's libraries--who gets left behind when owning an ebook reader, and not merely literacy, is a requirement to borrow a book.
book  future  concept  technology  amazon  kindle  e-book  reading  publishing  books  essay  recommended 
september 2010 by petrichor
What Are Books Good For? - The Chronicle Review - The Chronicle of Higher Education
If we can get them right, books are luminous versions of our ideas, bound by narrative structure so that others can encounter those better, smarter versions of us on the page or screen. Books make the case for us, for the identity of the individual as an embodiment of thinking in the world. The heart of what even scholars do is the endless task of making that world visible again and again by telling stories, complicated, nuanced, subtle stories that reshape us daily so that new forms of knowledge can shine out.
joy  recommended  book  books  reading  culture  history  publishing  technology  future  bookdesign  bookcovers  essay  tehwin 
september 2010 by petrichor
How to write about Pakistan | Online Only | Granta Magazine
Lying in my bed at 7.48 a.m., laptop on lap. Too much writing in this position over the years has given me neck-aches. I’d do yoga if it weren’t such a non-Pakistani sounding activity. For a Pakistani writer to do yoga feels like questioning the two-nation theory. So I complain, which brings enormous relief and a sense of oneness with my subject matter.
pakistan  granta  satire  writing  humor  literature  media  bookcovers  bookdesign  recommended  essay 
september 2010 by petrichor
moving < Killing the Buddha
I learned that a Bhakti yogi enters a room full of people and methodically moves this thing up and down—by telling stories and getting everyone to speak in unison and chant and sing—it’s like an invisible barometer he’s affecting: the quality of people’s togetherness in the room. That’s the bhav. I felt now that that was my job, to move it.

I’m also saying that a life has a bhav. A day has one. A poem is charting that. Perhaps giving the sweetest documentation of what anything is ever becoming. So a book of poems for instance over a short period of time, a year or two explains the bhav of that period and the poet approaches the explanation through form, she invents one that is most economically true to how reality occurred to her at that time.
essay  Eileen.Myles  poetry  nyc  recommended  joy  bhav  toread 
september 2010 by petrichor
Mischief & Mayhem Books › “Come on! Set Fire to the Library Shelves,” etc., etc.
Enjoy the process of book-making, which is a rather private and often unseen bit of machinery, from giddy conception to marketing meeting to pulping. It is the most important thing of all, and that is: hilarious.

And I will not dare to make claims about what we are going to do, lest I jinx us to explode under our own typical collective endless email chains and wacky ideas and two-hour-long meetings and occasional fits of kumbayah singing and general good spirits.
Choire  manifesto  mischiefandmayhem  essay  publishing  future  2012  howto  joy  recommended  book  author  writing  editor  books 
september 2010 by petrichor
Knowledge vs. Pedantry by Sam Abrams | The New York Review of Books
At the “fancy school” I attended (my education cost precisely nothing from the age of five to twenty-four: what about yours?) I was taught Latin, but also how to distinguish between knowledge and pedantry. I am glad to say that forty years later I can still smell the difference at fifty yards.
judt  language  tehwin  recommended  incohate  latin  education  school  quote 
september 2010 by petrichor
n+1: This Will Kill That
We don’t know what it felt like to read before newspapers, before mass media, before printing. We don’t even know what “attention” is; one person’s rapt, deep attention is another person’s dangerous trance, while what looks like constant distraction might also be an ability to synthesize. Pragmatically, for intellectuals to stake a claim on such things as “attention” or “concentration” is an abdication of our best ground: content. There is no valid reason to think that War and Peace teaches deep attention any better than a first-person shooter game. There are plenty of reasons, enduring ones, to think that War and Peace aerates and nourishes our daily lives more fruitfully, and productively, than Call of Duty. Which is to say that staking our claims on a format (the printed book), rather than on specific, lasting artifacts of a bookish culture is a losing proposition.
books  reading  writing  attention  n+1  publishing  future  content  concept  recommended  history  book 
august 2010 by petrichor
Gaza doctor writes book of hope despite death of three daughters | World news | The Guardian
Two weeks before the war came, [the girls] wrote their names in the sand. Where are their names now? Written in stone on their tombs. But I tell you one day their names will be written in metal and stone at schools and medical institutions dedicated to their memory. Words are stronger than bullets. We have to offer a message of hope to those who believe in hate and revenge.
recommended  book  gaza  israel  palestine  peace  review  war  death  family  newspaper  guardian 
august 2010 by petrichor
The Rejectionist: What Form Rejection Means to You
Now, it's not an easy magic. In fact, it's a holy shit, I think I'm gonna die sort of magic, but it's magic nonetheless. Maybe the best sort of magic. Keep at it long enough and the world smooths out, becomes lighter and more porous. Keep at it long enough and you will simply slide through this world, your stride lengthening and becoming more perfect (no matter what it looks like). Your breathing becomes even and you forget you are even doing it. The world becomes sharper and yet more translucent - everything is clearer, and yet you see through it, too, to those meanings beyond the surface of things. It's a dream that is real. It is a place to find things.

And these things are your things.
inspiration  publishing  joy  tehwin  recommended  book  rejectionist  essay  running 
august 2010 by petrichor
Donald Glover's many identities - latimes.com
"I didn't know he was a writer until I started listening to the lyrics and he's on there rapping about Tina Fey."
DonaldGlover  comedian  music  ChildishGambino  recommended  hiphop  LaTimes 
july 2010 by petrichor
Guernica / Je Banach: What It Means to be Hungry
This problem of complicity is not tethered only to our consumption of meat. The link between our complicity and our general consumership is a grave problem that has a domino effect in the perpetuation of our worst social problems: pollution, poor health care, poverty, homelessness, unemployment. It is destroying our general welfare. This complicity - this forgetting - is the greatest and most gross symptom of our time. The messenger of this news should make no apologies.
jonathansafranfoer  foer  author  book  review  currentsituation  memory  forget  vegetarian  meat  farm  factory  recommended 
november 2009 by petrichor
finding niemann (the explicit)
although you are given a broad audience, that audience comes with new pressures and self-doubts. For me this sort of work is terrifying, and i respond with procrastination involving constant out-of-the-way walks that end up in coffee shops, far from my computer. i think it is stressful for Christoph as well, but he seemed to respond to the stress by diving deeper into the work rather than trying to escape it. he spends an amazing amount of time on the entries - disproportionate to the immediate compensation - and seems to get lost in the details. it was wonderful to watch.
zefrank  niemman  illustrator  illustration  nytimes  blog  germany  recommended 
november 2009 by petrichor
Dr. Syntax: It’s the Best of Times—No, the Worst—No, Wait, the Best
Many of these efforts will fail; if we’re lucky, some of them will succeed wildly. But they mean that publishing, in general, is going to be a more lively, more disorderly, more wide-open business than it has been in a long time—probably since the paperback revolution of the 1940s and 50s. I am sure it will offer more opportunities to smart, creative young talent, especially because it’s younger people who know more about the tools and culture of the web that is going to be the essential medium for publishers reaching readers. For a lot of big corporations, the coming years may be the worst of times: the pain of transformation may outweigh the gain of reinvention. But for the publishing personnel of the future, it could be the best of times. Especially if you like roller-coasters.
book  publishing  future  history  business  publisher  blog  recommended  inspiration 
november 2009 by petrichor
A Thought On Gay Marriage In Maine - Ta-Nehisi Coates
This is a country--like many countries--which is deeply riven by ethnic bias, and gender discrimination. And yet we don't seem to know any of the agents of that discrimination.
Maine  NoOn1  gaymarriage  gayrights  america  history  race  Coates  essay  recommended  politics 
november 2009 by petrichor
Jason Pinter: Why the Digital Revolution is Missing the Big Picture
iPods sell the experience. E-readers are selling the gadget. And that's bass-ackwards. [...] I don't want to feel like e-readers are targeting me. I'm not the one who needs to be sold on the joys of reading. So here's the challenge: with this new technology, publishing has a small, slowly closing window to do what they've struggled to for so long: show people in doubt just how cool reading is. More readers -- that's how we save publishing.
reading  ebook  e-reader  kindle  books  book  future  publishing  marketing  essay  recommended  tehwin  music  apple  amazon 
november 2009 by petrichor
Parting Glance: Roy DeCarava, 1919-2009 - Lens Blog - NYTimes.com
Smooth, silky, smoky and gentle; as formal as you might expect from the painter he once wanted to be, Roy DeCarava’s photographs speak in a language far softer than we’re accustomed to now. They are no less powerful for their subtlety. They are meant to repay close study and they do.
photography  gallery  nytimes  blog  Lens  harlem  nyc  newyorker  artist  art  2009  DeCarava  photo  recommended  light  joy 
october 2009 by petrichor
Showcase: At the City’s Edge - Lens Blog - NYTimes.com
If New York was, as Walt Whitman called it, “the heart, the brain, the focus, the main spring, the pinnacle, the extremity, the no more beyond of the New World” — then surely the waterfront was its lifeline.
nyc  lens  blog  photography  museum  photo  gallery  color  recommended  joy  statenisland  manhattan  queens  newyork  waterfront  nytimes 
october 2009 by petrichor
Continuum's masterful 33 1/3 series | Jacket Copy | Los Angeles Times
Imagine a Venn diagram with two circles: one for book nerds, one for rock geeks. At the intersection, you’ll find a lot of opinionated people with glasses, having arguments about the exact point in time when a particular author or musician ceased to be cool. You’ll find paychecks cashed and spent entirely at bookstores or record shops on the same day. You’ll find a great deal of love and devotion, and you’ll find the slim, pocket-sized volumes that make up Continuum’s album-oriented 33 1/3 imprint.
music  book  33  continuum  LATimes  jacketcopy  recommended  shiny 
september 2009 by petrichor
Three definitions of “reader” / from a working library
Instead of asking, how much can I handle? ask what am I learning? Instead of what do I have time for? ask what is the meaning of it all?

Because the meaning isn’t going to emerge on it’s own—you have to create it. The algorithms and tag searches and bookmarklets will only get you so far; afterwards, it’s work only you can do, work the machine has no need for. The reader is your own personal anthology, but you are the editor: you are the sum of its parts.
reading  essay  book  books  aworkinglibrary  recommended  rss 
september 2009 by petrichor
Stephen Colbert on Being Stephen | Stand Up with Comedian Pete Dominick on Sirius XM Radio
Host of Comedy Central’s Colbert Report interviewed by his own warm-up comedian, Pete Dominick, host of Stand Up! with Pete Dominick on Sirius XM’s POTUS Channel. Pete and Stephen talk about the Report taping in Iraq, a bunch of behind-the-scenes topics, Stephen’s opinions on a few issues of the day, and whether they should shower together. We have the exclusive, unedited audio!
Colbert  tcr  iraq  DADT  gayrights  gay  politics  america  radio  interview  colbertreport  stephencolbert  recommended  PetesBigMouth 
august 2009 by petrichor
Old L.A. Times Photos: Covering Up Celebrity Chests » Sociological Images
The Daily Mirror sent in some old images from the Times archives that show how photos of stars were touched up to show less skin.
photography  newspaper  edit  illustration  history  recommended  movie  gallery  LATimes 
august 2009 by petrichor
Gin, Television, and Social Surplus - Here Comes Everybody
So I tell her all this stuff, and I think, "Okay, we're going to have a conversation about authority or social construction or whatever." That wasn't her question. She heard this story and she shook her head and said, "Where do people find the time?" That was her question. And I just kind of snapped. And I said, "No one who works in TV gets to ask that question. You know where the time comes from. It comes from the cognitive surplus you've been masking for 50 years."
ClayShirky  essay  culture  internet  technology  media  collaboration  community  history  web2.0  teevee  future  surplus  recommended 
august 2009 by petrichor
The 3 key parts of news stories you usually don’t get at Newsless.org
WHAT WE MISS (2): How journalists know what they know

This is a component of every news story that journalists tend not to provide for two reasons: 1) explaining how we get information disrupts our institutional authority and 2) we think it makes stories less interesting.

I think both assumptions are wrongheaded. Understanding how a news story came together is often a vital part of both understanding and enjoying that story.
media  news  healthcare  reform  nytimes  journalism  transparency  future  reading  newspaper  recommended  ezraklein  newyorker 
august 2009 by petrichor
“Well, what are you doing creeping around a cow shed at two o’clock in the morning? That doesn’t sound very wise to me.” | The League of Ordinary Gentlemen
Libertarian policy criticism (by a Libertarian) with Monty Python quotes: “Listen, strange women lyin’ in ponds distributin’ swords is no basis for a system of government. Supreme executive power derives from a mandate from the masses, not from some farcical aquatic ceremony.” If Libertopia were to emerge out of nowhere tomorrow, we’d have a situation where the most powerful people, the people who really did wind up controlling people’s lives the most, would be the people who already possess the most wealth – wealth that has hardly originated in anything resembling a free market. And so without some theory of intermediate redistributive economic justice, Libertopia would quickly come to resemble the type of oligarchy that arose after the collapse of the Soviet Union.
politics  libertarianism  criticism  comedy  humor  montypython  essay  government  recommended 
august 2009 by petrichor
Schtitt on Two Worlds (vs. Buddhism) « Infinite Tasks, Infinite Summers, & Philosophy
Note the precise contrast between this view and the Gately/AA view. In both cases, repetition leads to externalization and evacuation. In the AA, quasi-Buddhist view, evacuating the self leads to an awareness of emptiness and dependent origination. In the Schtitt, post-Cartesian view, evacuating the self of its dependence on conditions does not lead to emptiness, but rather to a new fullness of being, of being a self, and rejecting a false world (of powerlessness and pleasure and horror) for a true one.
philosophy  ij  infinitejest  infinitesummer  dfw  davidfosterwallace  concept  tennis  buddhism  yawp  joy  recommended 
august 2009 by petrichor
Schrödinger's Kitten: The Fruit Is A Lie
We all know, I think, that a tomato is a fruit not a vegetable. It’s the sort of amazing fact printed on cereal boxes to amuse and entertain children with very low standards. The distinction is, so I fuzzily recall, that fruit are part of reproduction, whereas a vegetable is any other botanical bit we eat. Thus, fruit have seeds inside, veg don’t — veg can be leaves (cabbage), roots (parsnip) or buds (sprouts).

The plot, however, thickened when I was cutting up strawberries — one of the few consolations for an English ‘summer’ — and idly wondered what the hell they were, since the seeds were on the outside. Being the sort of know-it-all who watches QI1 I was also aware that many berries were not, technically and botanically speaking, berries. A blackberry, for example, is actually an aggregate fruit composed of drupelets (little flesh bits with just one seed inside). Impress your friends with that. So I was prepared for a shock, but not the magnitude of what I actually found.
fruit  science  botany  essay  humor  yawp  food  recommended 
august 2009 by petrichor
Mastering the Art of Julia Child - The New York Times
''It's been a very nice life,'' she said. And then she lay down to rest.
JuliaChild  france  history  cooking  chef  artist  essay  joy  life  career  recommended  nytimes 
august 2009 by petrichor
Harlem Program Singled Out as Standard to Improve Children's Lives
"I want my son to be perfect," said Naquell Williams, 22, who is unemployed and pregnant with a child whose father is in prison.

This is the starting point for the Harlem Children's Zone: the womb. Geoffrey Canada's nonprofit has created a web of programs that begin before birth, end with college graduation and reach almost every child growing up in 97 blocks carved out of the struggling central Harlem neighborhood.

Canada was raised poor in the South Bronx and went on to earn a graduate education degree from Harvard. Years ago, he grew frustrated that his successful after-school program was not decreasing Harlem's tally of high school dropouts, juvenile arrests and unemployed youths. He set out to devise an encompassing program to "move the needle" and improve the lives of poor children in a mass, standardized, reproducible way.
harlem  nyc  newyorker  canada  geoffreycanada  family  children  school  education  policy  government  urban  inspiration  recommended  joy 
august 2009 by petrichor
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