Monday, December 15, 2008

Shelved @ NYC

Alex Crosier has started a library blog that is wonderful, timely and blooming.

Shelved @ NYC gathers news about New York City libraries, librarians, and library-related stuff. It is not a blog aimed specifically at metadata specialists or children’s librarians or LIS students; it’s a blog for ALL librarians working in this culturally rich—but frequently disjointed and overwhelming—city.

I stole that from the site. It is a very good place to visit.

Top Albums of My 2008 subject to change

Harvey Milk -- Life...the Best Game in Town



Electric Wizard -- Dopethrone



Steeley Dan -- Aja



Art Ensemble of Chicago -- Les Stances a Sophie



Manuel Göttsching -- E2-E4





Emerson, Lake & Palmer -- Tarkus



Gui Boratto -- Chromophobia

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Super Synesthetic Freakout.



Hello Friends!

I am playing music this Sunday with Sportsman's Paradise!

A seven-man-and-woman-strong army of guitarists will generate a
forty-minute-long blast of psychedelic blissout mash-up with Tibetan
bell interludes.

There will also be four screens of hypnotic and luminescent video
accompaniment.

How does that sound?


It's free (except it's not. You have to buy $10 in food/drink. They
have good burgers.)

It will be loud.

Monkeytown
58 N 3rd St
(btw. Kent & Wythe)
Williamsburg, Brooklyn

Sunday, December 14, 8pm

http://monkeytownhq.com/monkeytownhome.html

Please come!

Thursday, November 20, 2008

The Voice of Experience

My mother is a Senior Case Manager for the Rappahannock Rapidan Community Services Board/Area Agency on Aging in Culpeper, Virginia. She works with seniors to get them services they need, like hot meals, transportation to their appointments or fixing their leaky roof. Her article was recently published in The Voice of Experience, the Board's newspaper. I'm posting it below.


Christmas All Year?
By Toni Browning


As the holidays approach we begin to get the spirit of giving and sharing. We find ways to help the less fortunate; we seek causes to donate to, we give food to the food bank, we may belong to an organization that adopts a family for the holidays. Our children dress up as angels and the school choir they belong to sing carols in the halls of nursing homes or serenade their elderly neighbors. And of course if our elderly Mom or Dad, Aunt Susie or Uncle Bob live far away, we make plans for the yearly holiday trip.

The holiday season for many of us is a happy time, a time of excitement and joy and a time we want to do some selfless act of caring. But what happens after we’ve visited our relatives, helped the elderly neighbor trim the tree, donated all the canned good that have been unused in our pantry all year, provided Thanksgiving dinner or gave gloves to the less fortunate? Is that it? Do we wait until next year so we can get that feeling of joy and giving again?

Let me tell you a story. I used to work in a nursing home in Warrenton. Around Christmas many of the schools wanted to have their classes come to visit the residents, sing carols and give small drawings or presents to the seniors. Other organizations also wanted time to visit with the seniors during the holidays. The activities director who coordinated these events could not accommodate all the groups, clubs and schools that wanted to participate. She explained politely to several of the schools/organizations that the nursing home schedule was full and would it be possible for them to make a visit in January or February? Every one of them refused. A few were indignant that they couldn’t be accommodated. Another caller actually said, “What good would that do us?”

Although we laughed about this comment it was a sad commentary on our times. It is regretful that the spirit of giving does not last throughout the year, that when a person volunteers to help an elderly person put up Christmas lights outside his house, or decorate a tree for their aunt or uncle he or she doesn’t remember to come back a month later to take them down. It is heartbreaking when family members visit their mother or father and do not notice that he/she is depressed or mourning the loss of a good friend who died recently. Often the visiting family act as if nothing is amiss and wave “see you next year,” as they drive happily away, relieved that the visit is over and that they won’t have to do that again until next year.

For some the holiday season does not bring sentiments of joy and celebration. Many of the elderly are going through major life changes, or have health issues. They could be struggling to make ends meet but feel obligated to buy presents. These are situations that need more time to be resolved that a brief holiday visit.

Christmas is a time of giving but why does it have to stop January first? Spread out your good works during the other eleven months. Stop in on a regular basis to see a senior who is living alone. Volunteer at a food bank or nursing home a few months out of the year. Adopt a family in April or July. Sing or dance at the nursing homes in January or May. When you go shopping pick up an extra item for the food bank. Drive an elderly woman to get her hair done. Keep in touch with your relatives and notice any changes in their behavior, their mood or their lack of interest in things that use to make them happy. These are the little acts of caring that make a difference.

I am in no way criticizing all of the good and charitable works done during the holidays. They are generous and most times heart felt. But the let-down many seniors feel after their family drives away, or when they look out the window in June with their Christmas tree lights still winking off and on hoping the neighbor will return, can be devastating.

Small acts of kindness can make a tremendous difference in the lives of some of our seniors; please find the time to accomplish a few of them all through the year.

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Trouble With Mapping by Brett Price

Trouble With Mapping is ready for you.




Tony and I worked all night (10 pm) to nearly, just about, pretty much finish em.





Brett's poems are great.



Every copy has a unique cover.




Get one at Flying Guillotine.

Thursday, November 13, 2008

Just Go Eat a Doughnut

AND listen to me read poems this Wednesday, November 19th, with the amazing Timothy Donnelly, Thomas Hummel, and Nancy Kuhl.





The 2nd Draft Reading Series
7:30 pm at The Roots & Vines Cafe in the Lower East Side

409 Grand Street (at Clinton)

This cafe is very very near the Doughnut Plant, which has the best doughnuts you've ever put into your face. They close at 6:30, so get your doughnuts early and bring me one. I'd like a vanilla bean.

Thursday, November 06, 2008

Recentings

Tony and I are working on Trouble With Mapping.



There's a Multifarious Array tomorrow night. I will see people from most of the parts of my life.

I missed the WEC on Wednesday, but mk kindly DVR'd it for me.




Before, it was Halloween. Alison and I turned these guys



into these guys.

Thursday, October 23, 2008

They Are Letting Me Read Poems

They are quite nice.



So are these.




This Friday!


Why didn't I tell you sooner?

October 24th @ 7 p.m. - Stain Bar - Williamsburg, Brooklyn

with Julia Cohen, Mathias Svalina, Patrick Herron, Brian Howe & Ken Rumble


Click on this for details on the poets.


stain

766 grand street
brooklyn, ny 11211

(L train to Grand Street, 1 block west)
718.387.7840


Hosted by two lovelies: Amy King and Ana Bozicevic!!

That's So Ancient Greece #3 -- ALL NEW

Check it out.

Sunday, October 19, 2008

Mildred Pierce Interview!




Valuable blackmail details revealed! Tidbits that, brought up in the wrong company, will make me feel ashamed!

My friend Leeyanne Moore interviewed me for the zine Mildred Pierce. Check it out.

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Tonight at Keyfood

I was happy to see tonight that the Keyfood near my house has started stocking experimental fiction. William Gass’s Omensetter’s Luck, David Markson’s Wittgenstein’s Mistress. There was some Ducornet. I even saw a couple of copies of How It Is. The selection isn’t picked through at all. I talked to the manager and he said they would try to keep most of the seminal titles in stock, but you should probably get there soon. I bought their only copy of Nadja, I nearly bought Ubu Roi but I think I have it somewhere.

Monday, October 13, 2008

Saturday, October 11, 2008

Jahns, Jackson Heights, Queens



You must go to Jahns.
Photo by Matt Koroghlian. Watch his movies. Do Aerobics.

Thursday, October 09, 2008

Another Comic Up at The Foghorn!

You may have seen it before, but not in this particular swath of cyberspace.

Saturday, September 27, 2008

Rope-a-Dope!


Rope-a-Dope Collective did a lovely yellowy wistful silkscreen print in honor of our August So & So Reading in Boston! And by our I mean Hazel McClure, Aaron Tieger, and me. Listen close to it. There is an ocean breathing in it.

Thursday, September 25, 2008

New Comix Up at The Foghorn

Check out this magazine called The Foghorn.

They just took my That's So Ancient Greece Series!

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Friday, September 19, 2008

New Poems In Past Simple (Includes Progenitor)

Hello Friends! Please enjoy the new issue of Past Simple. Inside are two poems Brandon Shimoda and I wrote, read by my mother, Toni Browning!

Saturday, September 06, 2008

Mini-Comic



This is a cute little number. Upsetting comix you may have seen before collected in a small book made from paper bags and boiled sinew. About 20 pages. Yours for $3 (includes shipping). Let me know if you want one! It seems silly to Paypal it, but there's the option below. Otherwise, just email me your address and I'll mail you one in your mailbox!

sommerbrowning [at] hotmail [dot] com