― Socrates
“pleasant weather, elegant cherry blossoms ,the tickling sound of a cat's cry, the scent of coffee and a slightly awkward conversation maybe this is how it feels like to be in twenty”
― Yohan
At the Los Angeles Review of Books Scott Timberg has A Conversation with Philip Ó Ceallaigh, Translator of “For Two Thousand Years”
The most recent addition to the complete review is a review of Imraan Coovadia's A Spy in Time, due out next month in the US from California Coldblood Books.
This is kind of a change for him -- honest to goodness science fiction -- but then he's repetedly tried new directions in his fiction. Good to see, in any case, that he has a US publisher for this: The Wedding got a US release and decent attention almost twenty years ago, and Green-Eyed Thieves was/is nominally available (from Seagull Books); High Low In-Between and The Institute for Taxi Poetry didn't make it to these shores, and Tales of the Metric System only after some delay (and then published by not-so-commercial Ohio University Press ...).
It'll be interesting to see whether the genre-embrace leads to more attention (and leads some new readers back to his backlist)..
Fyre Festival Organizer Pleads Guilty To Second Fraudulent Ticket Scheme
Kelly Osbourne attends Amy Winehouse book launch party
Kelly Osbourne, 33, co-hosted the party celebrating the launch of Blake Wood's
new book about Amy Winehouse, in Soho, in London on Friday.
new book about Amy Winehouse, in Soho, in London on Friday.
"Billy McFarland, whose efforts at running the disastrous Fyre Festival led to wire fraud charges last year, pleaded guilty on Thursday to a new set of federal charges related to a fraudulent ticket-selling scam that authorities said he operated while out on bail in the first case." … [Read More]
Another article identifies why public libraries are amazing - Current Affairs: “…It’s worth appreciating just how extraordinary libraries are, why they matter, and what they can tell us about the kinds of institutions we should build. They’re spaces of absolute equality, where anyone can come, regardless of financial resources, to study, learn, and hang out. You don’t have to purchase anything in order to get to sit in them, you don’t have to be means-tested or background-checked. They give the same things to everybody, and there’s something beautiful (and increasingly rare) about that. Privatization generally involves the elimination of that kind of place. Economist Noah Smith has explained what the results of that can be: when everything costs money, life becomes far more stressful (though that stress is distributed unequally). He discusses the situation in Japan