Dec 17-19 at The Bell House: Chip Music & Blip Festival NYC

Trash-bin
symphonies and ray-chasing pixel pushers herald the explosive return of
Blip Festival New York City. The three-day music and arts festival
returns to Brooklyn's Bell House December 17th, 18th, and 19th and is
presented by Manhattan arts organization The Tank, in partnership with
NYC artist collective 8bitpeoples.  Entering its 4th year of
celebrating the best and brightest from the realm of chipmusic and its
related disciplines, the festival showcases the use of the former
heavyweights of computing such as the Commodore 64 and Amiga, the Atari
ST and 2600, and the Nintendo Entertainment System and Game Boy to
create arresting music and visual art.  

Click here for 3-day festival pass tickets! 

http://www.ticketweb.com/t3/sale/SaleEventDetail?dispatch=loadSelectionData&eventId=3034814

Or click the link below for a single day ticket.  

http://www.thebellhouseny.com/media/buy-tickets.gif

http://blipfestival.org/2009/

333 Collaged Matchboxes By Philip Naude for Sale: Recession Friendly Gift of Art

PHILIP NAUDE MATCHBOXES
 For the last few weeks, artist Philip Naudé has been in his studio crafting
333 collaged matchboxes that will be part of his exhibition, Multum in Parvo, at the Fun Times gallery in Park Slope/Gowanus.

The matchboxes are part of a new program
called the 01.01.10 Initiative, where each matchbox is for sale for $10. It's one-of-a-kind recession friendly art! Upon purchase, the benefactor is asked to remove the matchbox from the display and then replace it with a
new one on which he or she may write their name or anything
they like.

To view the matchboxes, please visit: www.philipnaude.com/matchbox.htm

Multum in Parvo
by Philip Naudé. Opening reception: Friday, December 11, 2009, 6-9PM,
Fun Times, 257 3rd Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11215. Exhibition continues
through January 15, 2010

Canned Food Drives in Park Slope

If you know of any churches or places that need canned food let me know and I will add to list

CHIPS on 4th Avenue near Douglas Street would love donations of canned foods.

St. Francis Xavier Church on 6th Avenue and Carroll Street and St.
Augustine Church
on 6th Avenue near St. Johns Place both have food
pantries for people in need and I am sure they could use donations. 

Church of Gethsemane, 1012 Eighth Ave, Park Slope (between 10th and 11th). Food can be dropped off any time from 10:00AM-4:40PM  MONDAY-THURSDAY

 Canned and Dry Goods Can Be Left in Temple House of Congregation Beth Elohim. 

A Photograph is Worth One Thousand Gifts

Crw_3976_std_std
A friend stopped me the other day (at the PS 321 Craft Fair) and asked if Hugh was still selling prints from his beloved Trees at Night series.

And the answer is a resounding YES. You can look at them here.

He happens to have some prints that he'd be happy to sell. You might also consider prints from his recent Essence and Accident show at the Old Stone House.

A pix of Coney Island in the snow could be just the thing for a friend.

 If you'd like to come by and look at prints PLEASE let us know. Just email me: louise_crawford(at)yahoo(dot)com and we can make a plan.

This Thursday: Feast: Writers on Food & Benefit for Park Slope Food Pantry

Grocery Bag
Brooklyn Reading Works Presents:

FEAST
savory syllables on sustenance
(writers on food)
The second annual reading and benefit for Helping Hands Food Pantry at St. Augustine Church in Park Slope.

With:
Peter Catapano
Ame Gilbert
Nancy Garfinkel
Greg Fuchs Andrea Israel
Alexander Nazaryan
Sophia Romero
Michele Madigan Somerville

Thursday, December 10th, 8pm
The Old Stone House in JJ Byrne/Washington Park
Between 3rd and 4th Streets on 5th Avenue
Park Slope, Brooklyn 718-768-3195
$ 10.00 donation

Proceeds will be given to Helping Hands Food Pantry at St. Augustine Church in Park Slope.
Helping Hands distributes emergency food supplies to people living in Prospect Heights, Park Slope, and Fort Greene.

Here are this year's Feast writers:

–Peter
Catapano has written about music, books, art and food for several
publications, including Wired, Salon, ARTNews and The New York Times.
His most recent piece, about a love affair — with a pizzeria — gone
wrong, appeared in the Times Dining blog.

–Greg Fuchs is the
author of Board of Education, Came Like It Went, Metropolitan Transit,
New Orleans Xmas, Rolling Papers, and Temporary. He is a member of
Subpress publishing collective. He is co-editor of Open 24 Hours, which
publishes poetry in the spirit of the mimeo-revolution of the 1960s.
Fuchs serves as the President of the Board of Directors of the Poetry
Project.

–Nancy Garfinkel is co-author of The Recipe Club ,The
Wine Lover’s Guide to the Wine Country: The Best of Napa, Sonoma, and
Mendocino. A writer, design consultant, creative strategist, and editor
for a wide range of magazine, corporate, and non-profit clients, she
has won a host of graphic arts and editorial merit awards. She has
written extensively about food and graphic arts.

–Ame Gilbert is
an art and food person with fingers in many pots. She’s Curator for the
Umami: food and art festival, a biennial performance festival coming up
in early March. She teaches Culinary Arts to Bronx youth, paid for by a
foundation whose mission is literacy. She has a small catering company,
is chef for a monthly salon called poetrysciencetalks and is a partner
in a company called Communal Table: art shops with supper and a poetry
slam. In between multiple online Scrabble games, she writes an
occasional poem.

–Andrea Israel is a co-author of The Recipe Club
, and a producer/writer for ABC’s Focus Earth. She was a
producer/writer for Anderson Cooper 360, Dateline, and Good Morning
America (which garnered her an Emmy Award). Her story, “In Donald’s
Eyes,” was optioned for a film. She is the author of Taking Tea, a
guide to the history and ceremony of the drink. Her writing has
appeared in many publications
Alexander Nazaryan is an English
teacher in Brooklyn. He has written for the Village Voice, New
Criterion and other publications, and is working on his first novel,
"Golden Youth," about Russian organized crime in Brooklyn.

–Sophia
Romero is the author of ALWAYS HIDING a novel about illegal immigration
and published by William Morrow. Born and raised in Manila, Sophia is a
former hotel PR executive and journalist, who writes the SHIKSA FROM
MANILA, a blog based on the imaginary life of Amapola Gold, as she
romps through life as the other half of an interfaith, intercultural
marriage."

–Poet Michele Madigan Somerville is the author of Black Irish and WISEGAL.

Does Brooklyn Have the Best Indie Bookstores in the City?

I'm just saying. The four I'm most familiar with seem to be full of energy and excitement. There's the Community Bookstore in Park Slope, Bookcourt in Cobble Hill, which recently enlarged and is packed with books and events, Greenlight Bookstore, the brand new exciting bookstore in Fort Greene and Word Books in Greenpoint, which is also a very happening place.

Books make great books dontcha think?

BAX Online Auction/Fundraiser is in Full Swing

BAX where I teach my How To Blog class (which started last Wednesday and continues for two more) is having its annual auction. Great prizes for a great arts organization in Park Slope.

Just in time for your holiday shopping, the BAX Holiday Online
Auction is open! The auction will close on Friday, December 18th at
11PM.

From an Apple iPod Touch to 4 VIP tickets to the Daily Show with Jon Stewart, we have some amazing items and deals. From the simple to extravagant, our catalogue is sure to fit every budget and gift list.

Please note there are some special "Buy Now" deals including tickets to Gotham Comedy Club and Chunky Moves
at BAM on December 11th. If you choose the Buy Now option, you will
receive these tickets immediately to take full advantage of the offer.

Have fun bidding while knowing you are supporting arts and artists in progress. Don't forget to tell your friends,

Lethem Finishes Reading Chronic City Aloud in 9-Hour Marathon at Bookcourt

The Brooklyn Paper has the story of Lethem's final reading of his new book, Chronic City, which was selected by the NY Times as one of the ten best books of the year. Here's an excerpt (from the BP story not from Chornic City).

Only 13 were left — and certainly not standing — when the all-out
war between Jonathan Lethem and his new novel ended at 4:11 am on
Saturday.

It might never have come to this — a nine-hour marathon reading — had the Bard of Boerum Hill not failed so dismally in
his promise read the entirety of his new 467-page book, “Chronic City,”
on eight successive nights between Oct. 16 and Dec. 4 at BookCourt —
his home turf.

Even after adding an extra session last week at Word bookshop in Greenpoint, Lethem still had roughly half of the doorstopper to go.

Still, he started promptly at 7 pm, gleam in his eye and a few jokes
up his sleeve. He said he timed the reading himself — though he was
smart enough to not reveal the estimated time of completion.

By 7:40 pm, he was already pouring sweat like Jerry Lewis on Labor Day — and he was losing fans fast…

OTBKB Music: The Second Half of December

More advance planning, this time for the second half of December.  Some
clubs still haven't updated their schedules, some events still have details to come and some details and times might change.  We'll hit New Year's Eve later.

Thursday Dec. 17: Sister Sparrow and The Dirty Birds: the very large blues
band who packed them into The Rockwood Music Hall weekends this summer
now comes to Park Slope.  Part of Mining the
Roots, also appearing Brothers Moving and Bertha. Southpaw, 125 Fifth
Avenue (between St. Johns and Sterling Places), 8pm doors,

Thursday Dec. 17: 3rd Annual George Harrison Tribute: details to come,
Banjo Jim's, 9th
Street and Avenue C (F Train to 14th Street, transfer to the 14D bus
going east, exit at 11th Street and Avenue C).

Friday Dec. 18: The Mumbles.  I haven't seen them, but they come
recommended by a friend and I've been intrigued by the goings on at Bar
4
.  The band's website says that they are  a Brooklyn based three piece
who
blend singer-songwriter soul with avante and old time jazz. Bar 4, 444
7th Ave.(at 15th Street), 7pm

Friday Dec. 18: Brooklyn Boogaloo Blowout  Led by Tim Luntzel, this
band includes frequent special vocal guests like: Leah Siegel, Richard
Julian,
Sasha Dobson, Steve Elliot, Michael Blake, Jon Cowherd, Steve Cardenas
et all…  Two sets, The Rockwood Music Hall, 196
Allen Street (F Train to
Second Avenue, take the First Avenue exit), Midnight

Monday Dec. 21: Amy Speace and Kenny White, hosted by Judy Collins (yes, that Judy Collins). The
Bitter End
, 147 Bleecker Street between Thompson Street and LaGuardia Place (A, C, or F Trains to West 4th Street), 8pm

Tuesday Dec. 22: Charlie Faye and The Jerks.  Charlie's album Wilson
St. is one of my favorites for this year. She's based in Austin and
doesn't appear here all that often.  Need I say more?  The Living Room,
154 Ludlow Street, (F Train to Second Avenue, use the First Avenue
exit), 8pm

Wednesday Dec. 23: Milton.  One of the best live acts regularly playing
in NYC these days.  Roots, rock and a whole lot more. The Rodeo Bar, 375 Third Avenue at 27th Street (6 Train to 28th Street), 10pm

Saturday Dec. 26: Mary Lamont.  Alt country, Americana and country. Hill Country, 30 West 26th Street, between Sixth Avenue and Broadway (F Train to 23rd Street; R Train to 23rd or 28th Street), 9pm

Sunday Dec. 27: Dar Williams.  Dar has been playing Southpaw the end of December for the last few years. Southpaw, 125 Fifth
Avenue (between St. Johns and Sterling Places), 8pm, $25/$30

And we'll look at New Years Eve shortly.

 –Eliot Wagner

Thursday, Dec 10 at 8 PM: Feast at The Old Stone House

Bellini-feast-of-the-gods
Brooklyn Reading Works Presents:

FEAST
savory syllables on sustenance
(writers on food)
The second annual reading and benefit for Helping Hands Food Pantry at St. Augustine Church in Park Slope.

With:
Peter Catapano
Ame Gilbert
Nancy Garfinkel
Greg Fuchs Andrea Israel
Alexander Nazaryan
Sophia Romero
Michele Madigan Somerville

Thursday, December 10th, 8pm
The Old Stone House in JJ Byrne/Washington Park
Between 3rd and 4th Streets on 5th Avenue
Park Slope, Brooklyn 718-768-3195
$ 10.00 donation

Proceeds will be given to Helping Hands Food Pantry at St. Augustine Church in Park Slope.
Helping Hands distributes emergency food supplies to people living in Prospect Heights, Park Slope, and Fort Greene.

Here are this year's Feast writers:

–Peter
Catapano has written about music, books, art and food for several
publications, including Wired, Salon, ARTNews and The New York Times.
His most recent piece, about a love affair — with a pizzeria — gone
wrong, appeared in the Times Dining blog.

–Greg Fuchs is the
author of Board of Education, Came Like It Went, Metropolitan Transit,
New Orleans Xmas, Rolling Papers, and Temporary. He is a member of
Subpress publishing collective. He is co-editor of Open 24 Hours, which
publishes poetry in the spirit of the mimeo-revolution of the 1960s.
Fuchs serves as the President of the Board of Directors of the Poetry
Project.

–Nancy Garfinkel is co-author of The Recipe Club ,The
Wine Lover’s Guide to the Wine Country: The Best of Napa, Sonoma, and
Mendocino. A writer, design consultant, creative strategist, and editor
for a wide range of magazine, corporate, and non-profit clients, she
has won a host of graphic arts and editorial merit awards. She has
written extensively about food and graphic arts.

–Ame Gilbert is
an art and food person with fingers in many pots. She’s Curator for the
Umami: food and art festival, a biennial performance festival coming up
in early March. She teaches Culinary Arts to Bronx youth, paid for by a
foundation whose mission is literacy. She has a small catering company,
is chef for a monthly salon called poetrysciencetalks and is a partner
in a company called Communal Table: art shops with supper and a poetry
slam. In between multiple online Scrabble games, she writes an
occasional poem.

–Andrea Israel is a co-author of The Recipe Club
, and a producer/writer for ABC’s Focus Earth. She was a
producer/writer for Anderson Cooper 360, Dateline, and Good Morning
America (which garnered her an Emmy Award). Her story, “In Donald’s
Eyes,” was optioned for a film. She is the author of Taking Tea, a
guide to the history and ceremony of the drink. Her writing has
appeared in many publications
Alexander Nazaryan is an English
teacher in Brooklyn. He has written for the Village Voice, New
Criterion and other publications, and is working on his first novel,
"Golden Youth," about Russian organized crime in Brooklyn.

–Sophia
Romero is the author of ALWAYS HIDING a novel about illegal immigration
and published by William Morrow. Born and raised in Manila, Sophia is a
former hotel PR executive and journalist, who writes the SHIKSA FROM
MANILA, a blog based on the imaginary life of Amapola Gold, as she
romps through life as the other half of an interfaith, intercultural
marriage."

–Poet Michele Madigan Somerville is the author of Black Irish and WISEGAL.

Tom Martinez, Witness: Every Happiness I Have Wished For

Barbie's Dancers II
Barbie Diewald/&co. rehearses in Washington Square Park "Every Happiness I Have Wished For" choreographed by Barbie Diewald to be performed in the Washington Square Fountain on December 12 at
11AM.

"This dance
movement was designed specifically to be performed in an empty fountain
in winter.  It explores the life of a wish after the penny is thrown,
and it brings the fountain back to life with a new kind of palpable
energy (13 beautiful dancers)." — Barbie Diewald

Vox Pop Is Sponsoring a Secret Santa Gift Drive

3786126534_622f4761d0
Vox Pop Café, the cultural hub and cafe on Cortelyou Road, is sponsoring a Secret Santa Gift Drive to benefit the residents of a local domestic violence safe house. "We would like to bring at least a small amount of joy to the approximately 27 women and 57 children who will be spending Christmas there," says the cafe's manager, Debi Ryan. She writes:

I know this year has been hard for every one of us, but we all have something so basic that we take for granted; something these families do not have this holiday- a safe place, a home, a warm and welcoming family. I cannot imagine what it is like for these families and what brought them to this situation.

We will have a jar at Vox Pop Café located at 1022 Cortelyou Road, Brooklyn, NY 11218  (718-940-2084)  filled with cards, each representing one individual with their name, age, size and wish list.  Please come, pick a card out of the jar.  You can then purchase and wrap a selected item off their list and bring it back to Vox Pop by December 22.  The gifts will be placed under shelter’s tree for Christmas morning.

I think that receiving a personalized gift this holiday season will really go a long way towards letting them know that someone cares about them as a person, an individual, and took the time to choose a gift just for them.

Thanks so much for participating in this gift drive.  This holiday season let’s make a difference one person at a time.

*Photo is of the cafe's replacement Statue of Liberty as it was being wheeled across the Brooklyn Bridge last spring. The original sculpture was stolen and decapitated.

Brooklyn Green Team Challenge: Stop Eating Meat

BGT_splat[1]
The Green Team is challenging Brooklynites (New
Yorkers, Americans) to cut back on their intake of red meet. In their own words:

"Moo-Moo
Move over red meat: we’re taking a break. (We at the Green Team take
great pride in our puns). This is not to say that we don’t love your
delicious taste or how you flavor a broth. You're the potato's other
half. But you are racking up some real carbon emissions. According to Treehugger, you, red meat, are the most resource-intensive food on the table and eating less of it can be the single most green move a person makes.

"We're
not saying there are not good farmers who raise you right, because
there are. We’re just trying to prove that we, Brooklynites (New
Yorkers, Americans)
can cut back on our intake while we reassess our participation in the
process of cow to table. We are excluding other types of meat from this
Challenge: Chicken, fish, pork, turkey, and venison all remain fair
game (again with the puns). Won't you join us?"

For more information about the Brooklyn Green Team and this challengee; BROOKLYN GREEN TEAM

–Visit their blog.

Find them on facebook.

Visit their friends at GreenEdge Collaborative NYC.

Cold Shower or What Happens When Your Apartment is Flooded and You Don’t Have Homeowners Insurance

 Huge.66.330698
This is a terrible story from a friend in Manhattan. The coop apartment that he owns and lives in was flooded when a hose sprung a leak and caused water to gush into his apartment for several hours.

 If any one has any advice for this friend please let me know. It's also a cautionary tale: make sure you have homeowners or renters insurance.

My heart goes out to this friend, who is struggling through this situation bravely and valiantly. But still. It's awful to be without a home (like a complete unknown, like a rolling stone). In his own words:

 "A couple of months
ago I went out to dinner with friends and got back kind of late. Obama was in
town and the traffic was bad. When I arrived I found that my apartment was
gone. 

"A renovation in my
upstairs neighbor's apartment had sprung a leak causing water to gush through
my ceiling for several hours.  Okay so nobody's perfect.  Take
me for example, I didn't have homeowners insurance. All right mea culpa, I
know, pretty dumb.  Let me be a cautionary tale to all the rest of you and
all that. I thought watching water pour through light sockets into my
apartment was going to be the bad part. But apparently not.

"You see I’m not a
corporation which is what the contractor's insurance company would be up
against if I had homeowners insurance: I’m just a person who would like to live
in my home.  Weeks are turning into months and nothing has happened.
Evidently the insurance company doesn’t feel the need to pay a mere person.
 They sent various adjusters to check the damage and they all agree: it’s really
bad. I guess they don't like to write big checks. I myself don't like not
having an apartment. Floods are all over this town, they tell me shaking their
heads. (There was even an NYT article about it recently.) Chill out, the
insurance company tells me, they are still investigating. Investigating? We all
know whodunnit. There is no mystery here, no controversy, just another case
of a big company getting away with what it can.

"So now I am faced
with suing the company which will cost a third of what was going to be spent
restoring the apartment, a process that will take about two years.  Next
time I go out to dinner I hope I just get mugged, they can have my whole
wallet, no problem."

Divan Intervention and The Family Adjusts To The New Couch

Smartmom_big8
The delivery of the new couch was scheduled for Saturday afternoon. In the morning, Hepcat moved the 18-year-old green leather couch against
the window to make room for the new arrival. He was adamant about
hanging onto the old couch until they were absolutely sure they wanted
to keep the new one.

Then he went to the Metropolitan Museum with his mother who was visiting from Northern California.

At 2:50, the buzzer buzzed. Smartmom went downstairs and welcomed the Room & Board delivery crew.

“I’m going to have to perform miracles to get that thing upstairs,” one of them said.

He walked up to the third floor and took note of the narrow stairwell. He sighed and gave her an incredulous look.

“The couch is 92 inches. I’m not sure it’s going to make it round
this bend,” he said pointing to the ceiling height at one part of the
stairwell.

“See what you can do,” Smartmom told him. But she was stressing. After all that she’d been through to get this damn couch, what if they couldn’t get it up the stairs?

Now that would be ironic.

In less than five minutes, two men carried the couch up two flights
of stairs, got it through the apartment door, through the dining room
and into the living room. These guys were good.

And then came the moment of truth. They unwrapped the couch and
placed it in its spot in the living room. Smartmom gasped inwardly.

It looked HUGE at first: like an elephant in a mouse hole. Maybe
they’d made a mistake; maybe it was the wrong couch for the wrong
space. Smartmom tried to stay calm.

“Here’s something for the miracle,” she said and handed the men a generous tip.

Once they were gone, Smartmom really looked at the couch and within
seconds she made a realization: Not only did she love her new couch,
she felt relief pulse through her and even the stirrings of pleasure
and excitement.

Smartmom had a new couch and after all was said and done it felt good; really good.

“I hate it,” Teen Spirit said (as expected).

“You’ll get used to it,” Smartmom told him.

The buzzer buzzed again. It was Diaper Diva, who works as a film and TV set decorator, and her daughter Ducky.

“I love it,” Diaper Diva said as she walked into the room. Smartmom
was relieved: she lives for Diaper Diva’s aesthetic approval. Ducky
made a beeline for the couch, which looked like a really fun thing to
climb on.

Diaper Diva, always game for redecoration, started to move the
furniture around. Ducky sat on the green leather couch as Diaper Diva
moved it across the living room on its side. The 5-year old squealed.

When Hepcat got home, he approached the new couch like it was a
dangerous animal. He moved around it and withheld comment. At one
point, he placed his hand on the old couch; a touch point, an old
friend.

She wasn’t sure what he was thinking, but he didn’t look upset or
sad. Smartmom could tell that he was going to adjust. Eventually.

Later that night, Smartmom was eager to find a new home for the old
couch. The day before, she’d put an ad on Craigslist, but an
18-year-old green leather couch from Ikea isn’t exactly a hot item.

She decided to invoke divine (or divan) intervention, and texted
Pastor Daniel Meeter of Old First Dutch Reformed Church to ask if he
wanted the extra couch.

“I already have an Ikea couch,” he responded. “What, no sale? Put it on the curb.”

Then she e-mailed her friend, Unitarian Minister Tom Martinez of the All Souls Bethlehem Church in Kensington.

“We want it, but it’s a question of room,” he wrote. “I’m all over it if I get the green light from the congregation.

Smartmom was thrilled. She immediately texted Rev. Meeter.

“I’m giving it to the Unitarians,” she wrote.

“The Unitarians?!” Meeter texted back. “They’ll put it on their altar to sit and discuss whether there might be a God!”

On Sunday after services, Martinez called to say that he “would gladly accept and pick up the couch.”

So on Monday morning, the minister came to Third Street. He and
Hepcat carried the 88-inch couch down two flights of stairs. A former
high school football player, Martinez was able to gracefully balance a
couch walking backwards down steep stairs. Impressive.

The two men loaded the couch onto the rented U-Haul pick up truck, and Martinez was on his way.

Smartmom and Hepcat watched from their stoop while he drove up Third Street with 18-years worth of memories.

Indeed, that couch has witnessed so much of their lives. Smartmom
breastfed Teen Spirit on it; they’d entertained many friends and family
on it; they’d drank wine, watched movies, read the Sunday Times and the
Friday Brooklyn Paper; ate dinner; listened to Teen Spirit’s songs;
talked on the phone; and argued, laughed, kissed, read and slept on it.

When the Oh So Feisty One was less than a year, she jumped off the
couch, fell on the floor and cut her lip. It was a toddler’s
trampoline, a bed to many of Teen Spirit’s friends, the place where
Hepcat’s mom sleeps when she visits

Smartmom napped on that couch when she was pregnant with OSFO. She
cried on it when she talked to her therapist after learning that her
father was dying of cancer.

Now it was on its way to Kensington, to a new life in an intimate
house church. Sure, that was a far cry from life on Third Street, but
change was good.

Even a couch

Hope for the Holidays: A Shopping Market & Benefit for The American Cancer Society


An OTBKB reader sent me a great tip about a fun sounding shopping event for a great cause—one clse to my heart:

WHAT: HOPE for the HOLIDAYS, a holiday shopping market
benefiting the American Cancer Society of Brooklyn, is a one-stop shop
for your favorite local Brooklyn & NYC boutiques, up-and-coming
designers and artists, all for a great cause. And to keep your spirits
up, we'll be serving complimentary treats and cocktails, generously
donated by our sponsors. 


VENDORS:
Goldy & Mac, Sylvia Jewelry, Wendy Culpepper,
The FamiLee Jewels, Papi's Mami, Erica's Rugelach, Ida Clowney Dolls,
Gutsy Art, The Paz Collective, Christine Vasan Design, Kaija New York,
Marzee, POParazzi, TantraOm Designs, Playground Rockstar, COKO Jewelry,
Jesterbal, Traci Lynn Fashion Jewelry,
Usborne Books and Company,
BrooklynSoul Jewelry, Lara Kazan Designs, Molly Gee Designs, Artwork
& Photography by Eliesha Grant, Gourmet Blends, BKLYN Yard, Naked
Candles, Najeen Trans Cultural Accents, Mary Kay, plus more!

WHEN
Sunday, December 6th, from 11:00am until 7:00pm. Tickets will also be available at the door for $30.
 
TICKETS
$25 in advance, $30 at the door
Buy Your ADVANCE Ticket Today & Get 3 FREE Raffle Tickets, Plus 2 Weeks FREE at Crunch Gym, while supplies last! 
Admission includes beer, wine and finger food.
 
WHERE: 17 Eastern Parkway (3rd floor) across from the Brooklyn Public Library

Thurs, Dec 10: Feast, Writers on Food at Brooklyn Reading Works

Bellini-feast-of-the-gods
Brooklyn Reading Works Presents:

FEAST
savory syllables on sustenance
(writers on food)
The second annual reading and benefit for Helping Hands Food Pantry at St. Augustine Church in Park Slope.

With:
Peter Catapano
Ame Gilbert
Nancy Garfinkel
Greg Fuchs Andrea Israel
Alexander Nazaryan
Sophia Romero
Michele Madigan Somerville

Thursday, December 10th, 8pm
The Old Stone House in JJ Byrne/Washington Park
Between 3rd and 4th Streets on 5th Avenue
Park Slope, Brooklyn 718-768-3195
$ 10.00 donation

Proceeds will be given to Helping Hands Food Pantry at St. Augustine Church in Park Slope.
Helping Hands distributes emergency food supplies to people living in Prospect Heights, Park Slope, and Fort Greene.

Here are the Feast writers:

Peter Catapano has written about music, books, art and food for several publications, including Wired, Salon, ARTNews and The New York Times. His most recent piece, about a love affair — with a pizzeria — gone wrong, appeared in the Times Dining blog.

Greg Fuchs is the author of Board of Education, Came Like It Went, Metropolitan Transit, New Orleans Xmas, Rolling Papers, and Temporary. He is a member of Subpress publishing collective. He is co-editor of Open 24 Hours, which publishes poetry in the spirit of the mimeo-revolution of the 1960s. Fuchs serves as the President of the Board of Directors of the Poetry Project.

Nancy Garfinkel is co-author of The Recipe Club ,The Wine Lover’s Guide to the Wine Country: The Best of Napa, Sonoma, and Mendocino. A writer, design consultant, creative strategist, and editor for a wide range of magazine, corporate, and non-profit clients, she has won a host of graphic arts and editorial merit awards. She has written extensively about food and graphic arts.

Ame Gilbert is an art and food person with fingers in many pots. She’s Curator for the Umami: food and art festival, a biennial performance festival coming up in early March. She teaches Culinary Arts to Bronx youth, paid for by a foundation whose mission is literacy. She has a small catering company, is chef for a monthly salon called poetrysciencetalks and is a partner in a company called Communal Table: art shops with supper and a poetry slam. In between multiple online Scrabble games, she writes an occasional poem.

Andrea Israel is a co-author of The Recipe Club , and a producer/writer for ABC’s Focus Earth. She was a producer/writer for Anderson Cooper 360, Dateline, and Good Morning America (which garnered her an Emmy Award). Her story, “In Donald’s Eyes,” was optioned for a film. She is the author of Taking Tea, a guide to the history and ceremony of the drink. Her writing has appeared in many publications
Alexander Nazaryan is an English teacher in Brooklyn. He has written for the Village Voice, New Criterion and other publications, and is working on his first novel, "Golden Youth," about Russian organized crime in Brooklyn.

Sophia Romero is the author of ALWAYS HIDING a novel about illegal immigration and published by William Morrow. Born and raised in Manila, Sophia is a former hotel PR executive and journalist, who writes the SHIKSA FROM MANILA, a blog based on the imaginary life of Amapola Gold, as she romps through life as the other half of an interfaith, intercultural marriage."—-

Poet Michele Madigan Somerville is the author of Black Irish and WISEGAL.

The Weekend List: 3-Minute Stories, Claireware, Ingmar Bergman

Newhome4
SHOPPING:

Celebrate 20 Years of Claireware Pottery in Brooklyn. Reception Friday,
December 4th, 4-7 PM, Saturday, Dec. 5, 10-6 and Sunday, Dec. 7, 1-5
PM.

PS 321 Craft Fair Saturday, Dec 5th, 11 AM – 5 PM. 180 Seventh Avenue at 1st Street in Park Slope.

MOVIES: The LIves of Pippa Lee at Angelika Film Center New York, Up in the Air with George Clooney at Regal Union Square Stadium 14, The Passion of Anna: Fri, Dec 4 at 2, 4:30, 6:50, 9:15 PM, Cries and Whispers Sat, Dec 5 at 2, 5, 7:15, 9:30pmat  BAM!! both films with Liv Ullman, directed by Ingmar Bergman. Fantastic Mr. Fox at the Access Digital Theatres – Pavilion Cinema.


MUSIC: Guitarist Stephane Wrembel seems to have channeled both
the technique and the fire of Django Reinhardt. Barbes on Sunday, Dec 6 at 9 PM.

LITERARY OPEN MIC (3-Minute Rule): Equal parts seductive and tiny, DimeStories are funny. They're
heartwrenching. They're fictional or factual but, either way, they're
all true. California's wildly popular micro-storytelling adventure
makes its debut at Barbes with an all-star literary extravaganza and
special musical guest! Come one! Come all! Try your hand at a
DimeStory! Bring 3-minutes of prose (sorry, poets) to read to a live
audience at our open mic.
Beware: Three minute rule (500-600 words) is
strictly adhered to. Register up to one hour before each performance to
read, or just sit back and listen to New York's finest dime-sized
stories! Come hear what a difference three minutes can make! ($5.00
suggested donation.)
Barbes. Sunday Dec 6 at 7 PM.

TREE LIGHTING: Saturday, Dec. 5th, 5-6 PM in Washington/JJ Byrne Park  Corner 5th Ave & 3rd Street. Free hot chocolate and sweet.

Phyllis Salome: Longtime Park Slope Resident Dies

PhylllisOct2009 Phyllis Salome lived in Brooklyn all her
life and was a graduate of Cooper Union.  She lived on 4th street
for more than 40 years, raising two daughters, Joan and Alice. She four grandchildren Joey, Becca, JP & Claire. She was a painter, very active at the PS Senior
Center where she was board president for 4 years.

Fourth Street has been
keeping a candle vigil on her stoop every night until her burial which
will be on Monday, December 7 following Services at St. Francis Xavier
on 6th and Carroll where she was an active parishioner. 

Mass will
begin at 9:45 am. There will be a viewing at Duffy's Funeral Home on
9th street, Saturday and Sunday, 2:00-5:00 and 7:00-9:00pm.  In lieu of
flowers, the family has requested that donations be made to the Park
Slope Senior Center in her name, 463-A 7th Street, Brooklyn, NY 11215.

–Sophia Romero