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Kelsey enjoys art that incorporates words.  I like almost all art.  I love taking my kids to exhibits, far more than they like going.  I knew as soon as a Ruscha exhibit was in the area, Kelsey would enjoy it.  He’s the consummate manipulator of words and landscape.  I never tire of wondering about the connection between his visuals and choice of text, sometimes I come up with something that feels enlightening and sometimes I come up empty.  Either way, the thought process is fun.

This week we visited Ed Ruscha: On the Road at the Hammer Museum, a series of paintings and photographs inspired by Kerouac’s On the Road.  The first room of the exhibit contains paintings of the tops of Ruscha’s signature mountain ranges with selected phrases from the book.  My favorite was the green “greatest seventy-yard passer in the history of New Mexico state reformatory.”  I chuckle every time I think of it. It describes a characteristic that isn’t quite resume material, but everyone should be great at something, I guess.  Neither Kelsey or I have read On the Road, but you don’t need to know too much about the book to enjoy the exhibit.   I read The Grapes of Wrath last spring, and scenes from that book resonated with me through out our visit.  Smaller paintings in the room contained phrases over a splattered background, while not quite as monumental, they’re still interesting.

I interpreted a bit of a biting tone in the art.  I saw a commentary on America that included an element of snarky in it.  Then Tany Ling started to sing.  We chose our visit to coincide with an ongoing event called “Sing Your Favorite Book.”  Several times throughout the run of the show, a performer is in the gallery singing his or her favorite book.  During our visit, Tany Ling, a contemporary and experimental music singer who performs all genres, sang from The Yiddish Policeman’s Union by Michael Chabon.  She performed excerpts as if they were a Gregorian chant.  It was beautiful to listen to and brought an entirely different mindset to the work.  The paintings felt more majestic, the words took on greater import, the entire exhibit was recast in a new light.  Changing one sense, hearing, deeply affected the viewing experience.  Kelsey came away enthralled by the music, I left intrigued by how my perception of the art changed.

The second room displayed an illustrated On the Road compiled by Ruscha.  A combination novel and artist’s book, Ruscha illustrated the novel with photos he either took, appropriated, or commissioned.  It’s amazing.

The exhibit it up until October 2nd.  Sing Your Favorite Book performances are scheduled for August 11, August 19 and October 1.

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I have received several suggestions to visit and review BookBuyers; its customers love it!  I’m so glad my girlfriend,  Frances McClellan, visited and reported back:

Entering the spacious store from Castro Street in down town Mountain View, California one can quickly get lost sifting through the first rack one encounters on the right which is full of music CD’s.  Yes, music in an antiquarian bookstore.

BookBuyers Used Books and Media is not only an antiquarian bookseller and used bookstore, but also a deep catalogue music store as well. This is the place I travel too when I’m looking for a certain music title or paperback travel book at a reasonable price. The travel section not only has titles by recognized authors such as Bill Bryson and Tim Cahill, but also books written by the famous Jan Morris. I personally enjoy the full bookcase of travel guides where I can pick up a DK Guide to most any destination on Earth for a reasonable price.

Known for their broad Sci-fi and fantasy book collection, this store is frequented by many well-read and therefore well-entertained engineers in Silicon Valley. In addition to having readily available works by Douglas Adams of “Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy” fame they can always locate that hard to find title one may be desperate to reread.

On the antiquarian front, Read the rest of this entry »

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Three sites to brighten up your summer day:

Hot Guys Reading Books

You have to check out this website, really, go there now.  Claire sent me the link, we both love it.  If the blogger, Alli, doesn’t have a book deal, she will soon.  You can submit your own photo of your hot guy reading a book to hotguysreadingbooks@gmail.com.  Want a fun Father’s Day thank you?  Have him posted on the site.

Bookshelf Porn

When we bought our house, the first thing I wanted installed were tall, dark bookshelves.  Seven years later, my dream arrived.  I love my bookshelves.  In general, the first thing I look for in a house are bookshelves.  I’m nosey, I want to look to see which books are there.  I used to try to be subtle, but I gave that up years ago.  Invite me to your house and I’ll examine your shelves as if I’m at a bookstore trying to decide which book to buy.  Claire’s shelves are on the back wall of her dining room.  I find this terribly considerate because I can sit across from the shelves, look at the dinner guest across from me but in front of the books and scan the shelves while listening to the dinner conversation.  I’ve given myself away numerous times by saying in the middle of a conversation “what did you think of ‘insert title,’” a book that invariably has nothing to do with the conversation.

Bookshelf Porn has a variety of shelves:  invisible, vintage, overstuffed.  My favorite is the phone booth, what a hoot!  Check them out.

Lady Gaga meets the Book World

We are fans of Lady Gaga music in our household and we find her very intriguing.  We happened to turn on the TV last week when she was being interviewed by Larry King.  Despite school finals, work deadlines, kitchen timers beeping, we all stopped, fascinated by her intelligence and surprisingly warm heart.  I first saw this on Facebook, if you haven’t seen it, it’s hilarious.

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And, as usual, I haven’t read a single book on the list

I have, however, discovered that it takes an author about five minutes to get the words “Pulitzer-Prize winning” up on his or her Wikipedia entry.   What I haven’t learned is how to line up book covers all nice and pretty in an entry.  But there’ s something kind of jazzy about how I’ve done it, no?

Sigh.  Anyway, here’s the list:

Fiction – Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout (Random House).  Linked tales about a junior high school teacher and her family. 

 

 

Drama – Ruined by Lynn Nottage.    This isn’t Nottage’s first award, by any means: she’s won a Guggenheim and a MacArthur genius grant.

History – The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family by Annette Gordon-Reed (W.W. Norton & Company).  This one also won a National Book Award: see what Kim had to say about it back then.

 

Biography – American Lion: Andrew Jackson in the White House by Jon Meacham (Random House).   A biography from the editor of Newsweek.

 

Poetry – The Shadow of Sirius by W.S. Merwin (Copper Canyon Press).  Mewin also won the Pulitzer back in 1971. 

 

See full size imageNonfiction – Slavery by Another Name: The Re-Enslavement of Black Americans from the Civil War to World War II by Douglas A. Blackmon (Doubleday).  Blackmon exposes an ignominious period in our country’s history.  I mean, yet ANOTHER ignominious period.

Music – Double Sextet by Steve Reich, premiered March 26, 2008 in Richmond, VA (Boosey & Hawkes).   Since Reich’s known as a “minimalist” composer, I think I should keep any comment brief.

For more information on these prizes and how the prize works, go to the Pulitzer Prize website.

And for an entertaining blog on the subject of Pulitzer and his prizes, read this.  The sketch of the author may bear a passing resemblance to me, but it’s not me or my twin, and that’s all I’m saying.

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Giving Used Books A New Life

I felt the eclectic, cool vibe at {open} from the moment I walked in.  The front foyer holds a collection of old communication items:  typewriters (really old, the kind where the keys jammed together if you typed too fast), a dial phone (I explained to Kelsey that phone numbers with zeros were irritating because you had to wait for the dial to go all the way back to zero), real record players, and cameras that weigh more than the modern laptop.  The space opens up into bookshelves full of used books with a music section in the back and artwork along the walls.

I spent quite awhile wandering through the shelves because they were inviting.  I talked with one of the owners, Shea Gauer, about his book buying philosophy and the books on the shelves are chosen for their subject matter and their aesthetic appeal (the rest are donated to a thrift store).  It works, the look of the bookshelves pulled me in, I wanted to examine every spine on the shelf.  My  idea of a good used bookstore is one where I trip on books that surprise me.  Some books are more appealing when they’re a little worn.  For me, it was an Old Modern Library edition of The Education of Henry Adams by Henry Adams.  If I saw the same book on my grandmother’s shelves, I wonder if  I would be as interested in it?  Probably not, but that’s the beauty of a used bookstore, they make old things appealing again.  {open} has beautiful complete sets of books including Winston Churchill’s works, Balzac’s writings, and O.Henry’s stories.  There is children’s section with original Nancy Drew and Bobsey Twins books.  Unfortunately, my kids are still in the new and flashy stage, worn cozy books aren’t quite as appealing to them, yet.

{open} also recycles old books in a unique way giving then a new life.  When Shea finds a book with a nice cover and maybe an interesting illustration but really no sellling appeal onesoever, he cuts off the front and back cover, the title page, maybe a few other pages, adds blank sheets, binds them all together and the resulting journal is truly unique.  We bought one, but I think I’ll drop back there for some fun Christmas gifts.

Music the Old Fashioned Way

As I wandered through the shelves, a young couple was deciding which record albums to buy.  Not CDs, the real 33 rpm record albums.  {open} has Read the rest of this entry »

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