29th Apr2010

This One’s a Classic – Paul M. Davis

by Janina

For this week’s books in motion we bring you a reading from Paul M. Davis. Paul lives in Chicago, but spent many of his formative years here in Santa Cruz. So many, in fact, that we still like to claim him as our own.

From his site:

Last night I performed a new short story, “This One’s A Classic”, for 2nd Story at Morseland in Rogers Park, with musical accompaniment by Elvis Bride. A hilarious tale of personal failure, about the ill-fated Mule Train Pacific Northwest tour of 2005, which ended in a Wal-Mart parking-lot in Yreka, CA. Due to technical difficulties with the video-camera, this was shot on an iPhone, so it’s not the best-quality video or sound but still comes across quite well. Enjoy!

(Note: the first line of my performance was cut off in this video; so just imagine me yelling “This One’s A Classic!” in boastful old man voice before watching.)



“This One’s a Classic” at 2nd Story – Morseland 4/28/10 from Paul M Davis on Vimeo.

Paul M Davis is a writer of articles, essays and fiction, a musician, and a web tinkerer based in Chicago, IL who is obsessed with the media, class and arcade-style video golf. His writing and other work can be found at www.paulmdavis.com.

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28th Apr2010

City of Thieves – David Benioff

by Janina

City of Thieves is a retelling of David Benioff’s grandfather’s experiences in Russia during WWII. The story follows his grandfather as he and a young soldier, Kolya, undertake an impossible errand for an army offical. Benioff’s narrative is immediately gripping, funny, tragic and beautiful.

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24th Apr2010

News This Week (April 24)

by Janina

Every week Logos employees collect the most interesting news bits from the book and music world…

Chicago’s Book Bike.

George Washington has some extremely overdue books.

Death Metal Lyric or William Blake Quote?

Read an E. L. Doctorow short story.

Penguin Australia makes a very unfortunate typo.

Orbit books seeks to give new life to the short story.

Mark Twain’s book collection, notes and all.

Amazon takes North Carolina to court.

Listen to music from Record Store Day releases.

What they are reading at Riker’s Island.

Paul Yamazaki celebrates 40 years at City Lights Bookstore.

Brittan’s best independent bookshops.

The best books for the 4:20 dude…

What Don Draper and William S. Burroughs have in common.

Lethem goes to Inland Empire.

Poet Peter Porter dies at 81, read a poem here.

Joni Mitchell call’s Bob Dylan a fake.

Top 10 visions of hell.

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22nd Apr2010

The City & The City – China Miéville

by Janina

Out next week is China Miéville’s The City & The City in paperback. A dystopian noir, this novel is one of Mieville’s finest.  If you missed this in its hardcover release, come pick the paperback up on April 27th, and listen to Miéville talk about his novel below.

Available April 27th
The City & The City
$15.00 Paperback
China Miéville

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20th Apr2010

For Jane – Charles Bukowski

by Rare Books

In celebration of  National Poetry Month, here is one of my personal favorites (both the poem and the author!).

225 days under grass
and you know more than I.
they have long taken your blood,
you are a dry stick in a basket.
is this how it works?
in this room
the hours of love
still make shadows.

when you left
you took almost
everything.
I kneel in the nights
before tigers
that will not let me be.

what you were
will not happen again.
the tigers have found me
and I do not care.

- Charles Bukowski

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17th Apr2010

News This Week (April 17th)

by Janina

Every week Logos employees collect the most interesting news bits from the book and music world…

Read a short story from Roberto Bolaño.

The traditions of Isabelle Allende.

Librarians find a copy of The Jungle Book inscribed by Kipling to his daughter.

Shakespeare joins Twitter.

Read an excerpt from Paul Harding’s Pulitzer winner novel Tinkers.

A non-profit organization that gives books to needy children may lose funding.

Read a Robert Bly poem.

Richard Dawkins calls for the arrest of the Pope.

Visionary publishing executive Nina Bourne dies at 93.

Writers and their addictions.

The Guardian UK takes on the exquisite corpse.

Hungarian graphic artist and book illustrator János Kass dies at 82.

The original Alice manuscript.

Top 10 seafaring tales.

What David Foster Wallace circled in his dictionary.

Is Cormac McCarthy the voice of the South-West, or not?

Listen to Silvia Plath and Ted Hughes.

Turn an old book into an iPad cover.

A new photograph of Arthur Rimbaud is revealed.

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15th Apr2010

How Books Are Made (then and now)

by Janina

A several weeks ago we linked to the Seattle Pi blog postHow to Make a Book which featured the Encyclopedia Brittanica educational film Making Books from 1947.  We like this film so much, that we’ve decided to feature it on our site as well.  Compare it to the recent film from Alfred A. Knopf / Double Day on the making of Dan Brown’s Lost Symbol.

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12th Apr2010

Instantes – Jorge Luis Borges

by HK

Instantes (Instants)

If I were able to live my life anew,
In the next I would try to commit more errors.
I would not try to be so perfect, I would relax more.
I would be more foolish than I’ve been,
In fact, I would take few things seriously.
I would be less hygienic.
I would run more risks,
take more vacations,
contemplate more sunsets,
climb more mountains, swim more rivers.
I would go to more places where I’ve never been,
I would eat more ice cream and fewer beans,
I would have more real problems and less imaginary ones.

I was one of those people that lived sensibly
and prolifically each minute of his life;
Of course I had moments of happiness.
If I could go back I would try
to have only good moments.

Because if you didn’t know, of that is life made:
only of moments; Don’t lose the now.

I was one of those that never
went anywhere without a thermometer,
a hot-water bottle,
an umbrella, and a parachute;
If I could live again, I would travel lighter.

If I could live again,
I would begin to walk barefoot from the beginning of spring
and I would continue barefoot until autumn ends.
I would take more cart rides,
contemplate more dawns,
and play with more children,
If I had another life ahead of me.

But already you see, I am 85,
and I know that I am dying.

(translation from here)

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11th Apr2010

Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening – Robert Frost

by Janina

For National Poetry Month, we’d like to share some of our favorite poems with you. Below is my favorite from Robert Frost.

Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening

Whose woods these are I think I know.
His house is in the village though;
He will not see me stopping here
To watch his woods fill up with snow.

My little horse must think it queer
To stop without a farmhouse near
Between the woods and frozen lake
The darkest evening of the year.

He gives his harness bells a shake
To ask if there is some mistake.
The only other sound’s the sweep
Of easy wind and downy flake.

The woods are lovely, dark and deep.
But I have promises to keep,
And miles to go before I sleep,
And miles to go before I sleep.

Robert Frost
New Hampshire
1923

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10th Apr2010

News This Week (April 11th)

by Janina

Every week Logos employees collect the most interesting news bits from the book and music world…

China Miéville wins the British Science Fiction Award for his novel The City and the City.

After much panic, Proper nouns will not make it into Scrabble after all.

Alec Baldwin buys a bookmobile.

Keith Richards and his secret longing to be a librarian.

The Crafty Chambermaid’s Garland, an erotic pamphlet from the 1800′s, is on display.

Five essential books on video games.

Stars talk about their favorite children’s books.

Emma sells for $500k.

Visual artists join the fight against the Google Book Deal.

Lunch with Philip Pullman.

Models make books fashionable in China.

Marian Schwartz on faithful not literal translations.

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