Towse: views from the hill

May 3, 2007

[BLOG] Gastronomie

Filed under: blog,food,San Francisco — Towse @ 1:53 am

Out and about today, we were heading down Townsend and noticed DISTRICT.

“Have you heard of DISTRICT?” I asked his nibs.

“No,” he replied. “Must be new.”

Bar? Restaurant? I’d never heard of it and even if it is brand spanking new, there should’ve been some peep in someone’s “here’s what’s coming up” column. We’re talking SOMA, here. We’re talking the clubbing, see-and-be-seen set.

His nibs checked Zagat, and the place turns out to be a wine bar with bar food/tapas/small plates. He was searching for DISTRICT’s Web site but a search for /”san francisco” “district restaurant”/ kept bringing up hits for “xyz, a Mission District restaurant” and the like.

I tried /”san francisco” district winebar restaurant/ and BINGO!

I found a most excellent review at Gastronomie, a foodie blog (subtitle, “culinary adventures in San Francisco & beyond”) which comes at you with detail and a straightforward, “here’s what I thought” style.

Go read Gastronomie, Fatemeh’s blog, and tell me what you think. (That I agree with her wholeheartedly about Globe — we’ve stopped off there twice in the last month or two, on our way home from some other event — has a smidgen to do with it, but not much.)

Gastronomie’s review of DISTRICT
DISTRICT’s Web site [Caution: hip music!]
DISTRICT’s menu

I love reading words written by people who can write well about the places they go and the foods they eat.

May 2, 2007

MySpace Photo Costs Teacher Education Degree

Filed under: blog,life,social networking — Towse @ 2:34 am

Be careful what you post online.

MySpace Photo Costs Teacher Education Degree

Fair? Unfair?

The photo in question (from an article at The Smoking Gun, of course)

I think she should’ve got rid of the red-eye fer sures.

May 1, 2007

anna louise’s Journal

Filed under: blog,writing — Towse @ 7:11 pm

Update your Bloglines or whatever it is you use to track RSS feeds or whatever. Anna Louise Genovese (although still a consulting editor at Tor) has started a freelance editorial service called Aleuromancy and has transferred her blog from anna louise’s Journal to Aleuromancy.net.

Go thee thither.

March 9, 2007

[BLOG] Today in Letters

Filed under: blog,books,history,writing — Towse @ 1:04 am

Today in Letters: Letters and Diary Entries from this Day in Literary History.

Today (08 Mar) brings us

Lord Byron: March 8, 1816

A letter to Thomas Moore.

I rejoice in your promotion as Chairman and Charitable Steward, etc., etc. These be dignities which await only the virtuous. But then, recollect you are six and thirty, (I speak this enviously—not of your age, but the “honour—love—obedience—troops of friends,” which accompany it,) and I have eight years good to run before I arrive at such hoary perfection; by which time,—if I am at all,—it will probably be in a state of grace or progressing merits.

[...]

February 21, 2007

Phat Duck in The Pastry Department

Filed under: blog,food — Towse @ 5:29 pm

Dana at Phat Duck has closed her blog to join Hillel Cooperman over at Tasting Menu.

I’m hoping the Phat Duck archives hang around, because her blog was dessert-lovers’ heaven.

February 4, 2007

[WR] Asking an agent to your conference? Miss Snark ‘xplains what she needs

Filed under: blog,book promotion,writing — Towse @ 7:38 am

For those set-upon (and blessed) folks who organize writers’ conferences, Miss Snark has a most excellent post detailing the care and feeding of guest agents.

Miss Snark’s must-haves give a peek into the world of agents.

Next time you’re at a conference, take an agent to lunch or buy one a drink, just because. You may never use their services but your karma will be polished.

January 26, 2007

Ten (well, thirty) Most Harmful Books of the 19th and 20th Centuries

Filed under: blog,books,history — Towse @ 7:19 pm

from Dr. Judith Reisman’s site: Ten Most Harmful Books of the 19th and 20th Centuries (31 May 2005). Reisman lifted the article whole cloth from Human Events: the national conservative weekly.

A description of the scoring method and a list of the people on the nominating committee are given. The top ten books are described in detail.

The books?

  1. The Communist Manifesto Authors: Karl Marx and Freidrich Engels
  2. Mein Kampf Author: Adolf Hitler
  3. Quotations from Chairman Mao Author: Mao Zedong
  4. The Kinsey Report Author: Alfred Kinsey
  5. Democracy and Education Author: John Dewey
  6. Das Kapital Author: Karl Marx
  7. The Feminine Mystique Author: Betty Friedan
  8. The Course of Positive Philosophy Author: Auguste Comte
  9. Beyond Good and Evil Author: Freidrich Nietzsche
  10. General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money Author: John Maynard Keynes

    Also included on the list:

  11. The Population Bomb by Paul Ehrlich
  12. What Is To Be Done by V.I. Lenin
  13. Authoritarian Personality by Theodor Adorno
  14. On Liberty by John Stuart Mill
  15. Beyond Freedom and Dignity by B.F. Skinner
  16. Reflections on Violence by Georges Sorel
  17. The Promise of American Life by Herbert Croly
  18. Origin of the Species by Charles Darwin
  19. Madness and Civilization by Michel Foucault
  20. Soviet Communism: A New Civilization by Sidney and Beatrice Webb
  21. Coming of Age in Samoa by Margaret Mead
  22. Unsafe at Any Speed by Ralph Nader
  23. Second Sex by Simone de Beauvoir
  24. Prison Notebooks by Antonio Gramsci
  25. Silent Spring by Rachel Carson
  26. Wretched of the Earth by Frantz Fanon
  27. Introduction to Psychoanalysis by Sigmund Freud
  28. The Greening of America by Charles Reich
  29. The Limits to Growth by Club of Rome
  30. Descent of Man by Charles Darwin

Six of these titles I’ve never heard of: Gramsci, Webb, Croly, Sorel, Adorno, Comte. (Yes, I’m sure not knowing Comte brands me jejune. Alas, that I am.) Five I read as part of the two-year Humanities series in college: Nietzsche, Fanon, JSM, Marx and Marx & Engels. Others I read on my own, including Carson, Skinner, Ehrlich, Reich.

Of the thirty titles listed, I’ve read (if memory serves) twelve, maybe thirteen. Those unread? Well, doesn’t this list make you want to go out and read those you’ve missed, and reread those you have only a hazy memory of?

I came across this list today from a mention in John Baker’s blog where he adds the comment, They turn out to be books that have a point of view different to the panel of conservatives who selected them. No surprises.

If I were to list what I thought were the “most harmful” books, of course the “most harmful” books would be those written by people with a viewpoint that I find poisonous. No surprises indeed.

My list of books would differ in many respects.

I’m having a problem coming up with a list of “harmful” books. Yes, millions of copies of Mein Kampf were published in Hitler’s Germany, but was the book itself the cause of Hitler’s Germany? How closely did the Soviet Union apparatchiks adhere to the dictums of Marx and Engels and Lenin? Would Communist China have never existed if the little red book had not been published?

My list of harmful books would include:

  • [FICTION] The Turner Diaries by Dr. William Luther Pierce (under the pseudonym Andrew Macdonald). Pierce is a white supremacist. This is his ode to the fictional day in the glorious future when the white race will exterminate the vermin who are not white and will rule the world. Yippy ky yay.
  • [FICTION] The Protocols of the Meetings of the Learned Elders of Zion — purported to be true, btw, by not just a few folks.
  • [FICTION] The Left Behind series by Jerry B Jenkins/Tim LaHaye

What books do you think are “harmful”? Besides the Tom Swift series, I mean.

[note: I wandered over to John Baker’s blog from a post at This Thing Of Ours. Thanks for the headsup!]

January 18, 2007

[BLOG] This Thing of Ours and THE TOP TEN: Writers Pick Their Favorite Books

Filed under: blog,books — Towse @ 2:24 am

For those of you who don’t read This Thing of Ours, you should! you should! The blog is subtitled: The reading community is small, despised by all, and ever threatened with extinction. New members always welcome!

A post today begins,

What do you get when 125 of today’s writers are asked to nominate their best books of all time? The answer is, something like the unwieldy 544-title list included in The Top Ten: Writers Pick Their Favorite Books, on sale now.

I took a stab at my Top Ten and came up with

ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT = Erich Maria Remarque
REBECCA = Daphne DuMaurier
THE BIG SLEEP and/or THE LONG GOODBYE = Raymond Chandler
TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD = Harper Lee
SCARAMOUCHE = Rafael Sabatini
CATCH-22 = Joseph Heller
DARKNESS VISIBLE = William Styron
SIDDHARTHA = Hermann Hesse
THE BRIDGE OF SAN LUIS REY = Thornton Wilder
ETHAN FROME = Edith Wharton

… and then I had to stop because I ran out of slots. But what about PRIDE AND PREJUDICE or COUNT OF MONTE CRISTO? JANE EYRE? WUTHERING HEIGHTS? THE PRINCESS AND THE GOBLIN/THE PRINCESS AND CURDIE? BLACK BEAUTY? (the first “real” book I ever read, so dear to my heart.) some Wodehouse, some Ngaio Marsh, some Josephine Tey (DAUGHTER OF TIME would make the list.)

There’s a bit more to the comments I left there, but that’s enough for here and now.

January 17, 2007

[BLOG] THE INSIDE PITCH

Filed under: blog,URL,writing — Towse @ 6:05 am

Christopher Lockhart, Executive Story Editor at ICM has a blog called THE INSIDE PITCH: a Hollywood Executive answers questions from screenwriters.

What applies to screenwriters can also apply to writers.

Take a look-see, if screenwriting or fiction writing be your smack.

January 14, 2007

Geoffrey Chaucer Hath a Blog

Filed under: blog,wordstuff — Towse @ 8:46 am

Geoffrey Chaucer Hath a Blog

[via tnh at Making Light]

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