Sync Weekly

Archive for the ‘Reading’ Category

help! I lost my page.

Monday, January 11th, 2010

help! bookmark, $19 for 5 clips.  Available at designboom.com

help! bookmark, $19 for 5 clips. Available at designboom.com Photo courtesy of designboom.com

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Click on the photo to get yourself the most desparately adorable bookmark out there. Photo courtesy of designboom.com

I remember in elementary school when the Scholastic Book Fair would come to town.  The library would be abuzz with eager students, wadded up dollar bills in hand.  Buying books is just so much more fun than borrowing them I guess.

I’d get ultra excited looking through the preview brochure until it was our class’s turn to visit the pop-up store. Sometimes I would buy a book because of the cover like No Flying in the House by Betty Brock or I’d buy a cute puppy poster because I was an 8 year old girl.  But every time, without fail, I’d be sure to get a bookmark.  Even though most of my reading was comprised of R.L. Stine Fear Street books where teenagers were murdered one by one mostly by friends, I purchased Garfield bookmarks with silly sayings and brightly colored tassels.  Now, had this help! bookmark been available, I’m sure my sick childhood brain would have been all over it.

Each stainless steel paper clip measures 45×12mm and features little arms and hands on one end that make your book appear to have flat silvery people drowning in its pages.

book fairbanner

Sense and Sensibility and Sea Monsters.

Wednesday, December 9th, 2009
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Sense and Sensibility and Sea Monsters by Jane Austen and Ben H. Winters. $12.95, available at most bookstores. Click on the image for insight from Winters on the process of writing this book.

While in New York this past week, I had the pleasure of attending a reading of Sense and Sensibility and Sea Monsters, the latest Jane Austen mash-up from Quirk Classics which first produced the bestseller, Pride and Prejudice and Zombies. Sea Monsters is rumored to be funnier as well as more heavily decorated with unsavory creatures than Zombies.

The reading was at Bluestockings, a progressive bookstore located in the Lower East Side.  The crowd was timely, attentive and eager.  When we arrived slightly after 7 p.m., which was the event’s start time on Facebook, all the seats available were occupied.  We stood there weighing our standing-room-only options with hands full of delicious, hot coffee from the bookstore’s cafe when employees began shoving chairs in small empty spaces for our sitting pleasure.  Shortly thereafter the reading began with authors Ben Winters and “Jane Austen” reading three passages from the book.  My favorite part being the words, “fishy face fingers,” to describe the guy on the cover’s mug.

I included audio recorded with my iPhone below; one passage is awkwardly split in two sound bits.  Enjoy.

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MSeaMonsters2

Co-authors Jane Austen and Ben Winters with Athgard Claw-Fangler, a sea monster at a reading in Blue Stockings bookstore in the Lower East Side.

Co-authors Jane Austen and Ben Winters with Athgard Claw-Fangler, a sea monster at the Sense and Sensibility and Sea Monsters reading in Bluestockings bookstore, Manhattan.

Webcomic xkcd releases its first BOOK

Wednesday, September 16th, 2009
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xkcd: volume 0

For those of you familiar with xkcd.com, a self proclaimed “webcomic of romance, sarcasm, math and language” then this headline means a lot to you.  If you are not familiar with xkcd.com then hurry up, click here, get obsessed and come back to see me.  xkcd: volume 0 is available for purchase at the xkcd store for a mere $18 and includes selections from the first 600 comics published.  For those nerds–like someone I know who I’ll refer to as Kyle–who would be thrilled to know, the mouse-over text revealing hidden jokes within the comics are included in the book.

Cover-Up

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Dazzling, ubiquitous Twilight series spawns supplement to vocabulary study

Friday, August 21st, 2009
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Available on Amazon.com for $9.99

The title pretty much says it all but to clarify this is a workbook used in conjunction with the book Twilight to learn useful vocabulary words that come up in standardized tests.  Each chapter lists a group of related vocabulary words from Twilight along with corresponding page numbers for you to read the context in which each word was used.  Then you are asked to guess at the word’s meaning, which is later defined on another page along with some multiple choice questions like you’d see in the ACT or SAT.

The first word listed in Group 1, “Noble Death?” is “noble.”  The definition defining Twilight provides for this vocabulary word is:

1. Noble (p.1) means dignified or honorable, like a king… or a “vegetarian” vampire.”

There. Education. Done.

For reference, some of the other Group names are:

• Desolation
• Abstinence?
• His Topaz Eyes
• A Dazzling Rescuer
• Tousled Hair

Brian Leaf has authored several test prep books, but this seems to be his only movie-themed work.  He has his own web page selling these books along with several videos including this one that explains why he was inspired to put together this workbook for students.

Oh and don’t worry there’s one for New Moon and surely there’ll be one from each of the series.

defining New Moon

Available on Amazon.com for $9.99

Michael Inscoe/Poet/Who Cares/Just Kidding

Wednesday, August 12th, 2009

“i am trying to please you because i care about you”

Michael Inscoe

The chapbook is available for purchase at The House for $5. Last I heard there were 7 copies left so get on it.

Local poet/whatever, Michael Inscoe published the chapbook, “i am trying to please you because i care about you” this past July.  Inscoe filled the chapbook with poems, blog posts and short stories from his website entitled quickly; this is like leaving.  Kissing/not kissing girls, Otis Redding and nonchalant self deprecating humor are some common themes in his writing.

I attended the chapbook’s release which was held at a poetry reading on the patio of The House in Hillcrest, July 15.  It was a sticky, hot evening for sure.  Not a seat was vacant leaving people to stand with their beers clenched in hand, sweat dripping from the insides of their elbows.

Inscoe read his poems in near darkness. At one point, he unsuccessfully tried to light his notes with a cell phone.  This failed attempt only made him say something like, “Nevermind.  That was a dumb idea.”  Which is precisely the kind of material he can use for his next poem.

Michael Inscoe

Inscoe reading at The House.

i’m not sorry

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the song made me think of missing a ‘girl that is now getting married’

I walked into the bathroom and dramatically/ angrily kicked the air

I sat down at my computer

I ‘dramatically/ angrily sipped my coffee’ and some went into my nose

I changed the song to something else

I made you a copy of one of my favorite poems by one of my ‘favorite contemporary poets’

I changed the ‘copy size’ to ‘30%’

It was hard to read but the poem was still really good

I was carrying a copy of another one of my favorite poems by a contemporary poet I like a lot in my pocket all week

folded in my pocket it was still a really good poem

I unfolded it and made a ‘55% copy’ of it

you could see the folds in the paper on the copy and you could read the writing better than the ‘30% copy’ of the other poem

both poems were really good and “made me think of missing” a ‘girl that now lives in Minnesota’ and “a ‘girl that is now getting married’”

I changed the ‘copy size’ to ‘20%’ and copied the ‘30% poem’

the poem was tiny and ‘illegible but I could still make out the shape of it’ and it still “made me think of missing a ‘girl that now lives in Minnesota’”

a new song came on

I felt numb

I felt ‘like I never wanted to feel human emotions or anything ever again’

I felt dramatic/ angry and thought: “oh yeah, those are human emotions or something just kidding”

I felt stupid and alone and kind of numb but now in a calming way

the windows were open and it was warm outside and I thought about riding my bike to go get coffee somewhere

iattpybicay is available at The House for $5.  Last I heard there were 7 copies left so get on it.

A portrayal of Inscoe by Phillip Huddleston from the back cover of iattpybicay.

Moon Landing ≤ My Birthday

Monday, July 20th, 2009

MOON

Look, I’m just saying.

My Dad was there for both the moon landing and my birth and he told me that my birthday was, “…much much more significant…”

Logic prevails.

I also share a birthday with the incredible Cormac McCarthy so I’ll thinly veil this as a shopping post by recommending you buy this book and read it immediately if you haven’t already.

the road