WHY?
Can you please explain why people liked this? BOOM!
[Paul Wright saved to Album covers
[Paul Wright saved to Album covers
The Lead And How To Swing It by Tom Jones – born of his awkward '90s stab at ‘going dance’, a luridly tanned Tom screams in obvious discomfort at having been made to wear a string-vest and egg-shell blue slacks. Meanwhile, in the background, a supermodel with pneumatic drill presumably pulverises what precious little remains of his dignity]
Wednesday's WORD
Epeolatry
“I’m a book-bosomed literarian guilty of epeolatry and bibliosmia, which means I ALWAYS have a book with me, I’m educated, and I worship words and smell books.” (Fortified By Books)
he does not believe in hashtags
Editors’ Choice: Best of Jackson Hole (Wyoming)
Best ‘grammer with Class
Tristan Greszko (@tgreszko) (instagrammer)
In an era of social media excess, things that appear to be reality may not be reality at all.
One of the larger critiques of social media begs the question: Does it come from art or ego?
Humble yet talented Tristan Greszko grams beautiful images without all the hype. Cofounder of the Teton Artlab in 2007, this adventure photographer’s accomplishments include Tiny Jackson (google it), national and international publications, completion of two Teton Picnics, and climbing El Cap. In the Insta world, he keeps the class without flaunting pictures of his chiseled body glistening in the sun or posting countless selfies of himself getting after it in the mountains; most importantly, he does not believe in hashtags.
When asked about this slight counterculture perspective, Tristan explains that while people need followers to be relevant, “hashtags just play into the rat race.”
Photography, he said, “Suits my inherent need to search for perfection – not in the universal sense, but maybe in a tiny localized sense – within an individual image, or a moment, or a person in a moment, or just the need to continually refine and improve my skills as a photographer.” Gram subjects of @tgreszko note that he does not disrupt the lifestyle while taking photographs. If anything, Tristan adds to the lifestyle with his mad skill, good attitude and great snacks. This incognito presence seems to be a rarity in the world of instantaneous self-aggrandizing, but that’s what makes this guy pretty darn classy.
– Elizabeth Koutrelakos
where am I going
hint: AC
A photo posted by Mohegan Sun (@mohegansun) on
feral poetess
No one comes to my little church
Anymore, but I’m all lit up anyway;
I don’t need parishioners to shine.
Hallelujah, I’m a seeker too, celestial
Splendour renews me, I forget the dogma
Some preacher taught here long ago;
The living life impulse—preaches here now.
read more
I like to spend Sundays thinking about nothing religion-related... BOOM!books books books
On the cover of this month's Indie Next list is
UNDERGROUND AIRLINES: A Novel, by Ben H. Winters
View this month's complete Indie Next List.
View from a bookseller
“Winters has managed to aim a giant magnifying glass at the problem of institutionalized racism in America in a way that has never been done before. This Orwellian allegory takes place in the present day but in a United States where Lincoln was assassinated before he ever became president, the Civil War never took place, and slavery still exists in four states, known as the Hard Four. In agile prose that manages to convey the darkest of humors, Winters tackles the most sensitive of issues such as the motivations of misguided white liberals involved in racial politics, the use of racial profiling, and the influence of racism on the very young. Underground Airlines is the most important book of the summer. Read it.”
"This multigenerational saga follows the fortunes of the Sel and Duke families from early Colonial days to the present, spanning centuries and continents as they make their living not only from the bounty of the land but also from the ravaging and destruction of it. As always, Proulx is brilliant at creating a story that flows impeccably, and her nature writing is some of the most beautiful and evocative to be found in modern literature. This novel is an epic work, a fictional Silent Spring that will linger with readers long after completion."Annie Proulx's Bloody New Novel 'Barkskins' Is About More Than Deforestation |
Why shop local and indie?
When you shop at a locally owned independent business, your entire community benefits:The Economy
- Spend $100 at a local and $52 of that stays in your community. Spend the same $100 at a national chain, and your community only sees $43.
- Local businesses create higher-paying jobs for our neighbors.
- More of your taxes are reinvested in your community--where they belong.
- Buying local means less packaging, less transportation, and a smaller carbon footprint.
- Shopping in a local business district means less infrastructure, less maintenance, and more money to beautify your community.
- Local retailers are your friends and neighbors—support them and they’ll support you.
- Local businesses donate to charities at more than twice the rate of national chains.
- More independents means more choice, more diversity, and a truly unique community.
Learn more at IndieBound.org/spotlightamazon.
Why sunflowers follow the sun
you wanted this, I know you did... ha ha BOOM
head wag
...a statement that was given in June by Dr. Jill Stein , an American physician, activist, and politician. She is currently the Green Party’s presumptive presidential nominee for the 2016 election. Her statement echoes the words of many others in previous years, including Theodore Roosevelt, who once told the world that “presidents are selected, not elected,” and that “behind the ostensible government sits enthroned an invisible government owing no allegiance and acknowledging no responsibility to the people.” (source)
"...If quantum mechanics hasn’t profoundly shocked you, you haven’t understood it yet. Everything we call real is made of things that cannot be regarded as real.” – Niels Bohr, a Danish Physicist"
BOOM - head wag indeed
buffalo dreams
AUGUST should be all about reading...
I'm reading this unpublished manuscript...
My friend sent me her book Buffalo Dreams... it's all about dreams... I like dreaming... BOOM
I'm reading this unpublished manuscript...
My friend sent me her book Buffalo Dreams... it's all about dreams... I like dreaming... BOOM
ARTSY US: Institutional Time
“In this characteristically tenacious book, feminist artist and educator Chicago, best known for her 1979 installation The Dinner Party, shares her struggles and successes as an art instructor—at CalArts (where she helped establish the feminist art program), Indiana University, Duke, Western Kentucky, Vanderbilt, and elsewhere—and boldly calls for a systematic restructuring of studio art programs, which she finds ‘deficient, dishonest, and lacking in standards,’ as well as androcentric. Chicago’s critiques and proposals are powerful conversation-starters, presented earnestly and without academic jargon. She contends, for example, that studio art educators should have teaching credentials; that students should be exposed to a greater variety of art practices and practitioners, such as muralists and community-based artists; women’s studies should be fully integrated into the core curriculum; and, finally, ‘artists might consider joining forces to combat an art system that is bad for art and toxic for artists.’ Disillusioned students and educators will benefit from this rousing book.”
—Publishers Weekly
—Publishers Weekly
this is true, if I had $40 I'd buy this...BOOM!
pickle ball anyone?
Hey, I have good friends who play this - have you? I'm going to google it - BOOM
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