Blogging Against Cyberspace

First, let me say that I appreciate the irony of this post. Having said that, I want to share an article I read in the February 5, 2012 New York Times, “Facebook Is Using You.” The article includes some distressing information: that one’s health insurance rates could be affected by the diagnoses a person might search on the web—whether that search was born of idle curiosity or real need. Or…that a person might be offered a credit card with a worse interest rate than he/she might actually qualify for, again, based on the sites perused.  As a self-employed freelance writer, I’m on the web A LOT…and I frequent sites that help me in my work with clients—not sites that necessarily reflect my own interests or leanings. Still…the web’s shadowing of my choices might affect my real life in ways that are not at all good for me—or that even reflect the reality of my existence away from the computer. So if it seems ironic that I complain about the Internet on the Internet, consider this: the seemingly limitless possibilities of the net are actually boxing us in. All it takes, is for a computer to mine the data you create with every click. Take a look at the article in the Times at the link below. And check out the other articles in this issue, under the umbrella “Digital Dominance.”

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Is There A Message Here?

I’m in the midst of a number of demanding writing projects this month, but I did sneak in a matinee of the latest “Mission Impossible” installment after Christmas. Although I found the end blighted with expository dialog, I was enthralled with the high-tension adventure overall. But here’s an odd note: At several points during the film, the team’s very high-tech gadgetry failed them. And then (remember, I said it was expository dialog) at the close, Tom Cruise’s character held forth about how technology failed, but the people of his team still prevailed.

So…..as millions of Americans are firing up their Nooks, Kindles, iPads, smart phones and   other instrumentation, I wonder….is the tide about to turn?

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Give Books This Christmas

 

The St. Louis Post-Dispatch published its Best Books 2011 list this past weekend.  I’m honored that Dancing With Gravity leads the category of titles with a St. Louis connection. Check out the list of standout titles for 2011–then buy a book for yourself and someone you love.

Click on the link or copy and paste the address into your internet browser window.

 

http://www.stltoday.com/entertainment/books-and-literature/post-dispatch-rounds-up-favorite-books-of/article_7cf29dcd-898b-5896-99da-326c27c26b72.html

 


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In The Eye of the Storm

Ours is a culture that takes both comfort and alarm from numbers.  The tour guide who uses the earth’s circumference to reflect the total number of bricks used to contain the visitors.  The newscaster who leads with a massacre’s totals, like a carney barker.

On May 22, an E5 tornado a mile wide roared into the town of Joplin, Missouri. One hundred and sixty one people were killed, 990 were injured. Some 7,000 homes were destroyed, another 850 damaged. Adding to the calamity, lead contamination has emerged as a significant issue—it’s estimated that some 1,500 structures are affected, adding 7.5 million dollars to already staggering reconstruction costs.  Those are the numbers—some of them, at least. But so much associated with that storm defies the neat summing up.

A Sunday. Never a day that should reflect the rigors of the week past, or to come.

Every week should have two Sundays. For some, a day for church or relaxation. Visits with family, mowing springtime lawns, or running errands before the start of the week’s work demands. But for Joplin, it was a day that changed almost everything.

Does terror have a value? A depth comparable to an abyss? What about the death of a friend? Shredded heirlooms? Missing mementos from a life? What formula explains courage, or kindness? What number explains the desire to rebuild rather than leave? What numbers reflect the resignation to fate followed by a deep sigh, and then the orderly sifting of the past to make way for the future? These are the unknown and unknowable depths of the human heart and spirit. These are the gifts that define the very best of us.

Countless stories of heroism and kindness have emerged in the 26 weeks since that storm. Organizations and individuals have opened their homes and donated resources to help Joplin recover.  People gave what they could. Carpenters and cooks and nurses and volunteers all gave their skills to help this town heal. The effort continued last night at the Regional Arts Commission in St. Louis. Several dozen people came together on an unseasonably warm November evening to celebrate the launch of Storm Country: The Anthology. The book is a collaborative effort between the Missouri Writers Guild and the Joplin Writers Guild chapter, the Missouri Humanities Council and Mozark Press. Writers throughout the region submitted more than 337 essays, poems and short stories for consideration. All proceeds from the sale of the book will go toward books and learning materials for the Joplin School Libraries and Teacher Resource Center.

A handful of writers at the event stood at the podium to read from their work: stories of their own encounters with storms….stories of friends who faced the F5 in Joplin. It was an evening of generosity…and good will. Of acknowledging the suffering and frailty of our human condition. Of bearing witness. Offering hope. We are the stories we tell…the history we endure and remember. This anthology is a testament to memory. And the sale of these books will help equip a library. There is hope in that. Resilience. Courage.

You can help support this effort by purchasing copies of Storm Country: The Anthology. It’s available for $10 and you can find it on Amazon Books, The Missouri Writers Guild and it’s chapters, and other outlets.

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Imagine A Different World…Then Make It Happen!

For those of you who are disheartened by news of the poor economy, the demise of books, the decline of publishing and the all-around death of the arts…I offer good news. Some among us are not only imaging a different world, they’re making it happen. I’m speaking now of Architrave Press, an independent literary press specializing in poetry.  I had the good fortune earlier this week of attending the launch of Architrave’s first edition at the wonderful Tavern of Fine Arts in midtown St. Louis. (More about that in a moment).

Architrave Press is the work of Jennifer Tappenden, a graduate student in the Creative Writing program at the University of Missouri—St. Louis (UMSL). Although her day job deals in the world of computers and data, she is first and foremost a writer who wants to share her love of poetry with the world.

As Tappenden explains on the Press website, she founded Architrave Press to offer a new kind of periodical literature: poems printed as individual pages that allow readers to curate their own collection in the same way that music lovers create playlists.

It’s an approach that has the potential to place poems in the midst of everyday life: tacked onto a bulletin board, mailed as a postcard to a friend, utilized as a bookmark, or whatever one’s imagination allows. The poems in the first edition are whimsical and serious and thought provoking. But they’re beautiful as objects too. The poems are printed on 5 ½” x 8″ archival card stock using an antique Vandercook letterpress (from those great folks at All Along Press in St. Louis). It’s the old way of doing things that—while labor intensive—makes all a difference. (I confess I took special delight in running my fingers over the lines and feeling the paper raised by the metal type.)

And the launch party at the Tavern of Fine Arts? It was packed with a lively mix of people who—whether in their 20s or 70s—came to support the Press. A few poets featured in the first collection read from work that was by turns moving, thought-provoking and made the audience laugh out loud.  All in all, it was a celebration of vision and work…of respect for the written word and its possibilities—culminating in beautiful presentation.

Which brings me to Tavern of Fine Arts. It’s a find. The tavern— located at 313 Belt Ave., in DeBaliviere Place—consists of two lovely rooms and (my favorite) a shelf of used books for browsing. The Tavern offers seasonal small plates and classic cocktails. I also learned that co-owners Mathew Daniels and Aaron Johnson are both musicians who offer a venue for live classical chamber music from area musicians. (A chamber quartet was on tap for the next night.)

So do your part to support the arts! Order a copy of Edition One from Architrave Press (http://architravepress.com).

Then, stop by Tavern of Fine Arts for a glass of wine and a slice of their delicious flourless chocolate cake. Believe me, you’ll see the world differently if you do.

 

 

 

 

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