Tonight: Young Rockers Rock out for Barack

Lyceum_2
Hear some of Brooklyn’s best teen bands. What a line-up, what a great cause! And at the Lyceum, Park Slope’s most unusual venue (a former bath house). And they’re all doing it for Obama. How can you NOT come out in support of this great event?

Vote Obama Benefit at the Brookyn Lyceum tonight at 7 p.m.

8 acts, $10 at the door
Lily
Calamus
Le Rug
Rainbow Party
Radiates
Psycho Thriller
Banzai
Michael Jordan


The Where and When

Brooklyn Lyceum

4th Avenue at Union StreetDoors open 6:30
Show at 7

Continue reading Tonight: Young Rockers Rock out for Barack

Much To Do at the Old Stone House: Halloween and Beyond

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Here’s the schedule at the Old Stone House for the next few weeks. The big news is the OSH benefit/costume party bash at the Brooklyn Lyceum. This is a not to be missed event. Get your tickets NOW.

Saturday, October 25

1st Annual Makin’ History Costume Party Bash

A benefit for the Old Stone House @ the Brooklyn Lyceum

8-11 pm. Tickets:  $40

Advance tickets: http://www.nycharities.org/event/event.asp?CE_ID=3129

The Where and When

Saturday, October 25

8 p.m – 11 p.m.
Brooklyn Lyceum
227 4th Avenue @ Union Street
Brooklyn

Sunday, October 19

4th Annual OSH Harvest Festival!

Pony rides, petting zoo, face painting, music & more!

Sponsored in partnership with the Park Slope Civic Council & Park Slope Parents

11 am – 4 pm

Saturday, October 25

1st Annual Makin’ History Costume Party Bash

A benefit for the Old Stone House @ the Brooklyn Lyceum

8-11 pm. Tickets:  $40

Advance tickets: http://www.nycharities.org/event/event.asp?CE_ID=3129

November & December 2008

Barbara Ensor’s Thumbelina

A story in silhouette – an OSH Great Room Exhibit

Tues/Sat/Sun 4 pm – 6 pm; Thurs. 4 pm – 8 pm or by appointment

Tuesday, November 4

Circle Singing with Ben Silver

Learn and practice this improvisational musical form taking rhythmic and melodic cues from a skilled leader.

7-9 pm. $25 suggested donation.

For more info & reservations: ben@bensilvermusic.com

Thursday, November 13

Five Dutch Days!

Edwin Burrows:  Forgotten Patriots

Join us for a book talk about the prisoners
of war who remained in Brooklyn and Manhattan during the years of the
Revolutionary War

7 pm

Friday, November 14

Five Dutch Days!

An Evening of Classical and Contemporary Dutch Compositions with Hans Pieter Herman

Presented by The New York Opera Society, the Five Dutch Days Festival and the Old Stone House

Sponsored in Part by the Netherland America Foundation

8 pm. Suggested Donation: $20 for Adults, $15 for Students/Seniors.

Advance Tickets:  https://www.nycharities.org/eve

H&M Coming to Fulton Mall

Phew. Now my son can pick up those H&M jeans he likes. But this is big news. An H&M in downtown Brooklyn. Okay. Here’s the Brooklyn Paper with the story:

Swedish cheap-chic clothing store H&M will come to Fulton Mall
by next spring — and could be one of the first tenants in a giant new
glass-walled mall at Bridge Street.

The high-fashion/low-priced
store confirmed that it would open by spring, 2009 — and a real-estate
source told The Brooklyn Paper that reclusive Fulton Mall developer Al
Laboz will be the store’s landlord.

That makes sense, given that
Laboz owns the landmark Conway building at 505 Fulton St. and plans a
glass mini-mall next door — and Laboz has said for years that H&M
is exactly the kind of retailer he wants on a diversified Fulton Mall.

Donate to the Crandall Public Library in My Father’s Name

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Thanks to those who have donated to the Crandall Public Library in Glen Falls, NY in my father’s name. The Crandall is a small, vibrant library that my father loved; he always had loads of books out from there when he was spending extended periods of time upstate. I hope you’ll consider sending a donation in the spirit of Monte Ghertler, a man who devoured books and loved libraries. He was so pleased to have a decent library near his upstate home. A great community needs a great library. This is especially true in small town America, where resources are sometimes limited. In Glen Falls, they’ve got the Crandall.

The ‘tails

Crandall Public Library
251 Glen Street
Glens Falls, New York 12801

Death by Design: The Macabre at Urban Alchemist

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…complete with a saw player and paintings, accessories, objects and photography with a decidedly macabre and spooky vibe.

Urban Alchemist invites you to join them on Friday October 24th. Four feature artists. Paintings, accessories, objects, and photography.
~Live music at 7pm. Saw and accordion player
~Enjoy poison punch and ghoulish treats

The Where and When
Friday, October 24th
Reception 6-10pm
Death by Design: A Collection of Macabre Artists
Urban Alchemist
343 Fifth Street (just east of Fifth Avenue)

 

Bill Evans: A Poet Writes About Teaching English to 8th Graders

Poet and teacher, Bill Evans, was one of the readers last night at the Poetry Punch. I loved his poetry and wanted to read more online. Then I found this blog post he wrote for Lesson Plans, Learning to Teach in a Complicated World, a New York Times education blog. Bill teaches 8th grade English at Trevor Day School. That won my heart. The Trevor Day School is in the same building where my high school, Walden, used to be. Bill sounds like one heck of a teacher.

I’m supposed to come back to school
with a goal for the year written on an index card. I think the card
itself may even be included in one of these inspirational end-of-summer
packets that have been piling up around my writing table. This is the
kind of thing teachers do when there aren’t any kids around, and though
I’m totally a team player, teacher-training activities tend to fill me
with, shall we say, dread. Even after almost 20 years of teaching, I
hate the thought of going public with my strengths and weaknesses.
Well, actually, I don’t mind a bit of praise for the good stuff, but
I’m truly leery of excess honesty when it comes to the bad. But there is no “bad,” as teachers are aware, only “challenges” and “areas for growth.”

So I need to come up with an intellectually sound and educationally
relevant goal that doesn’t blow my cover and expose me as whatever it
is I’m afraid I am in secret (fraud? misanthropic iconoclast? big
loser?). This is pretty much what it feels like to be a kid in school
as well, as far as I can tell, and perhaps my goal should be simply to
remember that. Does that count? I just found the index card; it was included with a letter!  Already I’m making progress on this assignment.

A few days ago I went up to school — from the East Village to the
corner of West 88th Street and Central Park West — to pick up some TransitCheks,
and as I suspected the place was packed. One week before we even had to
report for teacher training and the place was already filled to the
brim with teachers skittering about. And I’m not counting
administrators; they never leave.

All the earnestness and energy left me feeling a bit stunned. What are all these people doing
here already? And am I supposed to be here doing it with them? No kids,
though. The kids are still off like Mr. Evans – poeting, swimming laps,
going to yoga class, writing blogs for The New York Times — all the
myriad social and private niceties that make up the backbone of a
Living Culture. But my teacher colleagues are serious. And
that goes for my public school colleagues, too. I happen to know
because I am in the unique position of being both an eighth grade
English teacher in a private school and the parent of an
eighth grade student in a New York City public school, so I’m rather
intimately connected to both worlds. And I tell you, both are loaded
with excellent, hard-working true believers. They’re out there, ladies
and gentlemen. The real problem is keeping them there and into it
across Time — because energy is wonderful, but being present is
everything, and truly it takes ten years to hit your stride and begin
teach really well.

The secret weapon in this business is consistent, long-term human
connection. That’s where values come from, and that’s where context and
meaning are imparted. Ideas and ambition are great, but absolutely
nothing beats experience, and sadly, or gladly, no one stays 24 years
old for very long. We need grownup teachers who are in it for the
duration, and to become that one has to be able to survive the job. So
we should all add survival to our personal goal anthologies. I’d like
to do my job this year with some amount of grace, skill, tact, and yes,
even joy. Oh yeah, joy is good. That definitely goes on the card.

Great Show at Brooklyn Reading Works

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You missed it. But hey, there are still a bunch more you can go to. Here’s the poster (sorry it’s impossible to read in this format).

Isn’t it cool? It was designed by Elizabeth Reagh at Good Form Design.  The next Brooklyn Reading Works is November 20th at 8 p.m.: a reading of Baby Love, a play by Michael Winks.

But about last night. This year’s Poetry Punch was curated by Michele Madigan Somerville and it packed a punch alright. And the punch. It was a tad sweet. But the spiced run was a nice addition. Michele did a great job of gathering poets you should know about. Some of them have events coming up:

Ilene Starger is reading tomorrow night, Sat. Oct. 18, 6 p.m. at the Dactyl Foundation, 66 Grand St. between Wooster and W. Broadway in Soho. She is the featured
reader and will read for about 25 minutes or so, followed by an open
mic.

Jeff Wright runs Live Mag at the Bowery Poetry Club. The next show is this Sun. October 19th. Bring your poems and be "published" in Live Mag! #6 as co-hosts
superstar Bob Holman and Gary Parrish, editor of Farfalla Press, read
poems from audience submissions. Find out who these publishers are
excited about. Plus hear spotlite poets Akilah Oliver and Edmund
Berrigan. Free copy of Live Mag!

Joanna Sit will be reading at the Dweck Center on Wednesday, October 29,  7:00 p.m. as part of the Visions Launch Party with Elizabeth
Nunez, Linda Susan Jackson, Joanna Sit and Gregory Pardlo. Medgar
Evers College creative writing students will read selections from the
premier issue of Visions, a peer-reviewed, academic journal.

Michele Madigan Somerville’s book, Black Irish, will be coming out in early 2009. We will most definitely keep you posted.

Will Nixon has a lovely new book out called, My Late Mother As A Ruffed Goose.

And Bill Evans. I don’t know where his next gig is but I want to be there. He’s terrific. Read his essay about teaching 8th grade English here on OTBKB here.

The Oh-So-Prolific-One: Leon Freilich/Verse Responder

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Tonight: Brooklyn Reading Works: Go

This should be fun! Brooklyn Reading Works presents Poetry Punch, a festive, fun,
celebratory group reading by poets curated by Michele Madigan
Somerville.

And, yes, there will be punch. Lots of it.

This year’s reading really packs a punch with Bill Evans, Jeff
Wright, Joanna Sit, Ilene Starger, Will Nixon, Louise Crawford and
Michele Madigan Somerville. Says Michele: "The poets on the bill are
all very high interest, high energy poets: juicy, libidinous, good
performers, not dry."

Yes, there are a bunch of poets (seven in all) but each one will
read for ten minutes. Meaning you won’t be there all night. Books will
be on sale.

Bill Evans: "I always think if God were a New York
poet he’d sound like Bill. Bill is funny and speechifying in a
philosophical yet embracing way," Michele writes.

Jeff Wright: "He used to call himself a "new
romantic" came up as a boy wonder among New York School and Beat
legends, edited Cover Magazine for a long time, has a bunch of books
and chap books out, and writes lush, sexy, surreal and funny — he’s a
latter day troubadour! In sillier moments I have referred to Jeff as
"The Dean Martin of the Downtown Poetry Scene" That’s Michele again.

Joanna Sit: "Chinese born Medgar Evers Professor
Joanna Sit is a middle-aged knockout who writes like an Irish woman
high on Absinthe," says Michele.

Ilene Starger: A New York-born poet whose work has
appeared in such publications as Folio, Georgetown Review, Paper
Street, Oyez Review, Oberon and Ibbetson Street. Ilene’s brand new
chapbook Lethe, Postponed will be published in August 2008 by Finishing
Line Press. She is currently putting together her next collection of
poems.

Michele Madigan Somerville: The author of Wisegal
from Ten Pell Books: "A multilingual hardrock reverie…going upside
your head to whisper whipsmart secrets about cracked-out big-city
survival.” She runs the Ceol Poetry Series at the Ceol Pub on Smith
Street.

Louise Crawford: Louise runs OTBKB and Brooklyn Reading Works
and is the Smartmom columnist for the Brooklyn Paper. She will read
from her unpublished collections, Therapy and Anarchists Don’t Return Phone Calls.

Will Nixon: His book, My Late Mother as a Ruffed
Grouse (FootHills Publishing), offers poems inspired by his experiences
growing up in the Connecticut suburbs, then living in Hoboken and
Manhattan as a young man, and finally moving to a Catskills log cabin.
His previous chapbooks are When I Had It Made (Pudding House) and The
Fish Are Laughing (Pavement Saw). His poems have also appeared in many
journals, including Rattle, The Ledge, Slipstream, Wisconsin Review,
Tar River Poetry, and others. His work has been nominated for a
Pushcart Prize and and listed in The Best American Essays of 2004. He
now lives in Woodstock.

The Where and When

Thursday, October 16th at 8 p.m.
Brooklyn Reading Works at the Old Stone House
Fifth Avenue between 3rd and 4th Streets
It’s the stone house in JJ Byrne Park
$5 donation appreciated. Punch and light refreshments will be served

Healthy Harvest for Brooklyn High School Students

Eugene Patron, he-who-knows-all-about-Prospect-Park, sent this cool story about the students of the Brooklyn Academy of Science and the Environment, who harvested healthy food for the school cafeteria.

Who says young adults don’t like to eat their vegetables?  The “locavore” food movement doesn’t get more local than across the street!

The Sustainable Agriculture class of the Brooklyn Academy of Science and the Environment (BASE) – Brooklyn’s first environmental high school –- grew organic vegetables that were offered last week during lunch to their BASE schoolmates, along with students of three other local high schools, serving almost 1,000 enthusiastic diners in all.   All this season, BASE students grew, then harvested the vegetables in Brooklyn Botanic Garden’s (BBG) world-renowned Children’s Garden.  The special luncheon also gave members of the sustainable agriculture class the opportunity to explain to their peers about the farming techniques they used to grow the delicious, organic vegetables.

The special “Garden to Cafeteria Harvest Day” at BASE coincided with the New York State’s Department of Agriculture & Market’s “New York Harvest for New York Kids Week” (www.prideofny.com/farm_to_school.html).

The BASE Sustainable Agriculture class aims to expose students to basic agricultural topics such as soil science and botany, as well as explore issues of food production: natural versus industrial cycles, environmentally sustainable practices and perspectives, and food justice themes such as food systems and accessibility. Students receive a hands-on learning experience at BBG’s Children’s Garden where they learn agricultural skills such as how to prepare crop beds, protect their crops and use drip irrigation. The Sustainable Agriculture class is indicative of the kind of “real world” research students at BASE experience by working not only with the school’s own faculty, but also through frequent interaction with Brooklyn Botanic Garden scientists and Prospect Park naturalists.

Motorino: Pizzas Made to Order in a Wood-Fired Oven

Jessica at Motorino in Greenpoint sent this to me:

I want to make sure you were aware of Motorino, a new
pizza spot that opened on Monday in Williamsburg. Chef Mathieu
Palombino (BLT Fish, Bouley, Cafe Charbon, Cello) has created a menu that
includes a focused selection of local Brooklyn
salumi, salads, antipasti and cheeses in addition to 10 pizzas made to order in
the wood-fired oven. 

Pizzas include the neopolitan classics: margherita,
marinara and three varieties of pizza bianca, in addition to several others
that will change seasonally.  For dessert, Motorino features over 10
flavors of house-made gelato and sorbetto to be served on house-baked
brioche.  The restaurant is located at
319 Graham Avenue near
Devoe Street.

 

October 18th: Walk Don’t Destroy

It’s not too late to participate in the Develop Don’t Destroy Brooklyn Walkathon this Saturday night. You can walk or you can sponsor a walker.

Here’s the info from Develop Don’t Destroy Website.  

Due to the brutal economy, widespread community opposition, pending lawsuits and
Ratner’s own mismanagement, the developer
cannot possibly build the project he has promised these last five years
. Still,
he continues his devastation of Prospect Heights and swallowing hundreds of millions
of public dollars in the midst of this recession. And he does this with New York
State and City’s continued irresponsible support. That is amoral, and it’s gotta
stop. If you want to walk, you can register here.

5:15 pm — 6 pm: Sign In

  Visit our tables at Bob Law’s Seafood Cafe (Near Vanderbilt and St. Marks) to pick up your registration (or to register if you haven’t already done so).

6 pm — 7:30 pm:

Join the Grand Marshall to walk to the Brooklyn Lyceum.

8:00 — 11:00 pm:

  Community party at the Brooklyn Lyceum (4th Avenue and President, Park Slope).

If you want to sponsor a walker:

That’s why we need YOU to participate in the Walkathon and or Sponsor
a walker
.

And after the walk, come to the party at the Brooklyn Lyceum, Featuring:

The global sounds of legendary New York City club and radio DJ
Delphine Blue

A live set from The Atomic Grind
Show
"mixing rock, jazz, country and other musical styles with
carny attitude" (TimeOutNY).

All walkers and donors get in free. For those not walking or sponsoring walkers,
entrance is a $20 donation.

Now for those of you who aren’t registered for the walk or haven’t yet sponsored
a walker:

If you are unable to join the Walkathon you can still show your support by sponsoring
one of the walker teams or an individual walker.
It’s quick and easy:

Just 4 Quick Steps to sponsor one of the walker teams with an online donation:
1. Click Here.
2. Select a team to sponsor.
3. Finally click "General Team Donation."
4. Make your donation.

Also, if you know somebody walking you can sponsor him or her with an online donation
by Clicking here.

Obama’s National Political Director is a Park Sloper

You never know what you’re going to learn walking down Seventh Avenue. Turns out Barack Obama’s National Political Director is a Park Sloper. His name is Patrick Gaspard and he’s a PS 321 and MS 51 dad and a familiar face on Seventh Avenue.

I kind of knew that but I keep forgetting to write about it.

The person who tipped me off explained that the political director is the one who’s working on the ground to get the vote out all over the country. It’s an important role and a busy one.

Needless to say, Gaspard probably hasn’t spent a whole lot of time on Seventh Avenue lately. Some friends saw him on TV on stage with Obama at the Democratic National Convention in Denver.

Here’s an excerpt from an article about Gaspard online.

When Patrick Gaspard was asked two years ago about his accomplishments, this is what he had to say:
What is the most important thing you have accomplished so far?
“Raising two children of color in America.” Two years from now, what do
you want to have done? “That’s the easiest question I’ve ever been asked – I want to begin to
repair the imbalance in the Supreme Court by electing a Democratic
President.”

I found this bio online at the 1199SEIU website.

Patrick Gaspard, 1199SEIU’s
Executive Vice President for politics and legislation  has been named
national political director of Sen. Barack Obama’s presidential
campaign.

The political director spearheads relationships with other elected officials, labor unions and outside political groups.

Gaspard
has led the Union’s legislative efforts in Albany, Annapolis, Boston
and Washington, DC for the past year. Since February, when the 1199SEIU
Executive Council joined with the rest of SEIU across the country to
endorse Sen. Obama, Patrick has coordinated the volunteer efforts that
sent hundreds of Union members to Wisconsin, Texas, Ohio, Pennsylvania,
Indiana and other primary election states.

“This
election offers a clear choice between John McCain’s agenda for
continuing the failed policies of George W. Bush, and Barack Obama’s
vision for change,” Gaspard said. “I am proud to be a part of this
campaign, and I look forward to working to bring people together across
the country to elect Barack Obama.”

He is taking a
partial leave of absence from the 1199SEIU to take up his new position.
After the November election, Patrick will return to help the Union
mobilize all across the country to support the Obama administration’s
push for healthcare for all, and for the Employee.

 

Crane on Seventh Avenue Today

Here’s the crane report from Craig R. Hammerman of Community Board 6.

As
you are aware the crane operation was planned for today but an
insurance issue prevented the transformer from leaving Ohio. 

The
transformer is scheduled to arrive at 7:30am Thursday.
Arrangements will be as we discussed previously but one day later.

Crane Operation Summary:

Transformer removal and installation is scheduled to take place today, on Thursday, October 16, 2008 between 7am and 4pm.

Bus stop on east side of 7th Avenue near Sterling Place (between Sterling Pl. and Park Pl.) will be discontinued for the day.

Northbound
bus will stop at the next stop on Flatbush Avenue which will still be
convenient for bus to subway transfers. Southbound bus stop on 7th Avenue between Flatbush Avenue and Park Place will remain in use.

Where Are You Watching the Final Debate?

Maybe you’ll be watching at home with family and neighbors or

–You could go to Bar Reis and view it with fun crowd; It’s located at 375 Fifth Avenue at 6th Street in Park Slope.

–Galapagos Art Space in DUMBO, Brooklyn (16 Main Street) is projecting the final Presidential Debate
on their 12’x12′ screen. They write: "The past three debates have been
much more fun in the company of 200 peers."

–Two Boots could be a fun place to watch it. Have a Cajun Martini with your John McCain. That’s Second Street just off Seventh Avenue in Park Slope.

–Commonwealth at 497 Fifth Avenue at 12th Street is sure to be packed with politically engaged bar hoppers.


Where will you be?

How Do You Feel About Term Limits?

If you’re against them, you might want to join our City Council guy Bill Di Blasio at City Hall.

The fight to stop Mayor Bloomberg from overturning the will of the
people has been gaining momentum. Make sure your voice is heard – the
voters established term limits, and should not be cut out of the
process. We need extensive public debate and discussion about this
issue before considering such fundamental changes to the government of
New York City.

JOIN BILL AT THE CITY COUNCIL HEARINGS ON TERM LIMITS TOMORROW AND FRIDAY.

Thursday, October 16 at 1:00 p.m.
Council Chambers – City Hall
AND
Friday, October 17 at 10:00 a.m.
Committee Room – City Hall

More information, including directions to City Hall and how to submit testimony can be found on NY1 at: http://www.ny1.com/content/top_stories/86874/where-they-stand–council-split-over-term-limits/Default.aspx

Eviction of Longtime Sloper: Publicity Nightmare for Berkeley Carroll.

Ella Taliercio moved into her Park Slope two-bedroom on Carroll Street in 1958, the year I was born. She’s been living in that apartment for as long as I’ve been alive and has raised three
kids there. Two of them died and are buried in Green-Wood Cemetery.

Now the Berkeley Carrol School, which bought the building a few years ago, wants Taliercio out so they can turn the building into classrooms. Why do they need classrooms so far away from the school buildings on Carroll Street and Lincoln Place? The whole things sounds fishy to me.

According to Gothamist: "The
apartment is rent-stabilized—Taliercio paid $33 a month in ’58 and
$147.08 today—but Berkeley Carroll has non-profit status, enabling the
school to evict the couple. Taliercio tells the Daily News through tears, "It’s my home. How do you just shut the door on something where you’ve been for so many years?" Don’t worry, Ella, Berkeley administrators will have the eviction marshal help you with that."

This is a publicity nightmare for Berkeley Carroll, portrayed in various local newspapers as a fancy school that charges more than $25,000 per child a year. There must be a better way to handle this. Is Berkeley Carroll  finding Taliercio a new home in the Slope. I heard they offered her $20,000 but that doesn’t sound like enough to me.

There must be a way that Berkeley Carroll can handle this situation with grace and humanity.

Art D’Lugoff is Back

As a child, the violin ensemble I was in played a Sunday afternoon concert at the Village Gate so I’ve always had a soft spot for that Bleecker Street club. I’ve also been hearing about  Le Poisson Rouge a new club that’s been having some great shows, including a record release show for Simone Dinnerstein’s new CD back in August. Turns out it’s the Village Gate reborn. Here from the Times:

Half a century after he opened the Village Gate — and 14 years after he reluctantly closed it — Art D’Lugoff is back at the legendary club. The old sign is still there on the corner of Thompson and Bleecker Streets, even if the old club has been remade into Le Poisson Rouge.

An aquarium is suspended in front of a portrait of the composer Philip
Glass at Le Poisson Rouge, where the goal, its owners say, is the
eclecticism in music and art that was characteristic of the Village
Gate.

But Mr. D’Lugoff, 84, is very
much in the house — this time as a consultant — ready to book the kinds
of double and triple bills that made the Village Gate the site of
unforgettable performances by musicians like Gillespie and Coltrane
(and comedians like Cosby and Seinfeld, too). On Monday, he revived one
of his oldest and most popular concoctions, the Salsa Meets Jazz series, hoping to attract the kind of mix on stage and in the audience that can  happen only in New York.

“This
is what’s most needed artistically,” Mr. D’Lugoff said. “So many people
had been asking me if I would ever bring that back. I like the
crossover that happens here, and that’s crucial. It’s two great types
of music that have a lot in common and bring people together.”

Identical Strangers in Paperback!

The paperback edition of
"Identical Strangers" will be released by Random House today. It’s the story of twins separated at birth and finally reunited. The twin authors, Elyse Schein and Paula Bernstein, live in Brooklyn and have written a beautiful memoir about their separate childhoods, the experience of discovering the existence of one another in their 30’s. It’s quite a story.

FYI: my sister and I were interviewed by the twins and are featured in the book.

If you
loved the book, now’s your chance to spread the word!  Your friends can
pick up a copy at the Community Bookstore. Here’s the note I got from author Elyse Schein:

During last year’s book tour you welcomed us into your
communities and homes as we shared our story. We hope to see you again
as we travel across the country promoting the paperback.    

 
Exploring issues of family, identity and psychology, "Identical
Strangers" makes a great choice for Book Clubs.    The handy Reader’s
Guide can be found here:

http://www.randomhouse.com/catalog/display.pperl/display.pperl?isbn=9780812975659&view=rg

You can follow us at twitter:
http://twitter.com/twinstrangers

or be our facebook fan:
http://www.facebook.com/home.php#/pages/Identical-Strangers-A-Memoir-of-Twins-Separated-and-Reunited/36493912227?ref=ts

A Child Grows in Brookyn: List of Halloween Activities

Karen over at A Child Grows in Brooklyn has been working tirelessly to create a comprehensive list of Halloween events in Brooklyn. she’s got 30 so far and she’s still adding stuff. Here’s just one tip from Karen:

Halloween_flyer
PARK SLOPE: HARVEST FESTIVAL

Sunday, October 19th: 11- 4 pm
There
will be farm stands, pony rides, petting zoo, face painting and live
music by Mr. Ray & Princess Katie & Racer Steve at 1:30 pm.
Old Stone House at JJ Byrne Park (3rd Street & 5th Avenue, Brooklyn, NY)

 

Update: Seventh Avenue Crane Delay

Here’s an update from Craig Hammerman.

As
you are aware the crane operation was planned for today but an
insurance issue prevented the transformer from leaving Ohio. 

The
transformer is scheduled to arrive at 7:30am tomorrow (10/16).
Arrangements will be as we discussed previously but one day later.

Crane Operation Summary:

Transformer removal and installation is scheduled to take place on Wednesday Thursday, October 15,  16, 2008 between 7am and 4pm.

Bus stop on east side of 7th Avenue near Sterling Place (between Sterling Pl. and Park Pl.) will be discontinued for the day.

Northbound
bus will stop at the next stop on Flatbush Avenue which will still be
convenient for bus to subway transfers. Southbound bus stop on 7th Avenue between Flatbush Avenue and Park Place will remain in use.

Tomorrow Night at Brooklyn Reading Works in Park Slope

Brooklyn Reading Works presents Poetry Punch, a festive, fun,
celebratory group reading by poets curated by Michele Madigan
Somerville.

And, yes, there will be punch. Lots of it.

This year’s reading really packs a punch with Bill Evans, Jeff
Wright, Joanna Sit, Ilene Starger, Will Nixon, Louise Crawford and
Michele Madigan Somerville. Says Michele: "The poets on the bill are
all very high interest, high energy poets: juicy, libidinous, good
performers, not dry."

Yes, there are a bunch of poets (seven in all) but each one will
read for ten minutes. Meaning you won’t be there all night. Books will
be on sale.

Bill Evans: "I always think if God were a New York
poet he’d sound like Bill. Bill is funny and speechifying in a
philosophical yet embracing way," Michele writes.

Jeff Wright: "He used to call himself a "new
romantic" came up as a boy wonder among New York School and Beat
legends, edited Cover Magazine for a long time, has a bunch of books
and chap books out, and writes lush, sexy, surreal and funny — he’s a
latter day troubadour! In sillier moments I have referred to Jeff as
"The Dean Martin of the Downtown Poetry Scene" That’s Michele again.

Joanna Sit: "Chinese born Medgar Evers Professor
Joanna Sit is a middle-aged knockout who writes like an Irish woman
high on Absinthe," says Michele.

Ilene Starger: A New York-born poet whose work has
appeared in such publications as Folio, Georgetown Review, Paper
Street, Oyez Review, Oberon and Ibbetson Street. Ilene’s brand new
chapbook Lethe, Postponed will be published in August 2008 by Finishing
Line Press. She is currently putting together her next collection of
poems.

Michele Madigan Somerville: The author of Wisegal
from Ten Pell Books: "A multilingual hardrock reverie…going upside
your head to whisper whipsmart secrets about cracked-out big-city
survival.” She runs the Ceol Poetry Series at the Ceol Pub on Smith
Street.

Louise Crawford: Louise runs OTBKB and Brooklyn Reading Works
and is the Smartmom columnist for the Brooklyn Paper. She will read
from her unpublished collections, Therapy and Anarchists Don’t Return Phone Calls.

Will Nixon: His book, My Late Mother as a Ruffed
Grouse (FootHills Publishing), offers poems inspired by his experiences
growing up in the Connecticut suburbs, then living in Hoboken and
Manhattan as a young man, and finally moving to a Catskills log cabin.
His previous chapbooks are When I Had It Made (Pudding House) and The
Fish Are Laughing (Pavement Saw). His poems have also appeared in many
journals, including Rattle, The Ledge, Slipstream, Wisconsin Review,
Tar River Poetry, and others. His work has been nominated for a
Pushcart Prize and and listed in The Best American Essays of 2004. He
now lives in Woodstock.

The Where and When

Thursday, October 16th at 8 p.m.
Brooklyn Reading Works at the Old Stone House
Fifth Avenue between 3rd and 4th Streets
It’s the stone house in JJ Byrne Park
$5 donation appreciated. Punch and light refreshments will be served