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One Teen Story Launches Tonight at Littlefield

One Story, the sister publication of the brand new  One Teen Story, knows how to give a great party. More than once I have attended their annual debutante ball/fundraiser.

Well, the launch of the new One Teen Story, a new magazine that features one story every issue for teens is no exception. Tonight, One Teen Story is throwing a “Homecoming party” at Littlefield in Brooklyn.

There they will be celebrating their new magazine with a 21+ homecoming dance featuring drinks, a DJ, and a homecoming court including some of today’s top young adult authors: Matt de la Pena, Adele Griffin, Emmy Laybourne, Rebecca Stead, Martin Wilson, and Gayle Forman, author of One Teen Story’s inaugural issue, “The Deadline.”

So who will be the King and Queen of the ball. All ticket buyers will be entered into a royalty drawing, as will anyone who supports One Teen Story by shopping at the school store, buying a cookie at the bake sale, having a photo taken, or donating a small amount. Doors open at 8:00PM.

The King and Queen will be crowned at 10:00.

This event is a Bookend Event of The Brooklyn Book Festival. Tickets for the dance are a $25 donation and are on sale now online at Littlefield’s website. Get your tickets now, before they sell out!

 

The Hundred Story House in Washington Park

Heather O’Donnell has a sweet story on her blog Honey & Wax Booksellers about the Hundred Story House, which was in Park Slope’s Washington Park yesterday.

The Hundred Story House is the brainchild of Julie Marchesi and Leon V. Reid IV (illustration at left is a rendering) who organized a Kickstarter campaign to get the project off the ground and managed to raise an impressive $13,502 last March.

The One Hundred Story House is a miniature lending library and installation that was designed for Cobble Hill Park but is evidently going to other parks, too .

In  fact, the House opened in Washington Park in Park Slope on September 8th. I guess it’s going to be there for a while (I will check with Kim Maier at the Old Stone House for further information).

Marchesi and Reid wrote on the Kickstarter site: “Brooklyn is very bookish. If you walk the streets on a fair weathered weekend in certain neighborhoods, you will notice a system of informal and anonymous book-sharing. You will see piles of paperbacks and hardcovers lying on sidewalks or stacked on brownstone steps, available to any passersby looking for a good novel, or a cookbook from 1972.”

Ah yes, I did find Secrets of La Bonne Table a 1970’s French cookbook by Jeannette Seaver on the street once. Marchesi believes this tradition speaks to limited space in our too-small apartments ” but also to the distinctly Brooklyn spirit of small-scale community interactivity that can be possible in a huge metropolis. It also speaks to a shared love of the written word — as do our many bookstores, public libraries, and coffee shops filled with famous (or soon-to-be) writers at work.”

Lovely idea. I can’t wait to see it.

 

Anne-Katrin Titze Says: See The Master at the Ziegfeld in 70MM

And you thought Anne-Katrin Titze only wrote about West Nile Virus and endangered birds in Prospect Park. No, she’s a film critic, too. And she wrote a rave review of The Master, Paul Thomas Anderson’s tour de force starring Philip Seymour Hoffman, Joaquin Phoenix and Amy Adams, for a British website called Eye for Film.

Seconds into the film, The Master director Paul Thomas Anderson already has a firm grip on you. His tour de force picture references an entire Hollywood archive of Second World War and post-war movies without a single explicit quote, because the archive is in our common pool of war imagery, manufactured by cinema.

And then Anderson turns those expectations on their head, and gives us the private side of the coin – the memories of grandparents, the faded family photos of Aunt Doris from Norway, the representations of a presumed reality that always mingles with the shared movie memory

In the beginning, there was water. The turquoise sea crests with white foam as watched from above, from a ship, perhaps. Then we see Joaquin Phoenix’s head in a steel helmet, partly hidden, crouching in a boat. And the audience begins to anticipate. D-day? Omaha Beach? A battle at sea?

The film will be playing in 70mm at the Clearview Ziegfeld starting Friday. It’s currently playing in 70mm at the Village East Cinema in the East Village.

Bookend Event You Won’t Want to Miss: Pitchapalooza with The Book Doctors

This is the Brooklyn Book Festival Bookend Event you writers out there—and there are a lot of you—won’t want to miss. It’s called Pitchapalooza and it’s at the Central branch of the Brooklyn Public Library  on Wednesday from 7-9PM (in the Dr. Steven Dweck Center for Contemporary Culture). Sounds like it might be a good idea to arrive early to sign up because names will be randomly picked to participate.

The Book Doctors and a panel of publishing pundits will give aspiring writers the chance of a lifetime—one minute to pitch their book. Winners get introductions to an agent or publisher. The Book Doctors have helped hundreds of writers get published, so don’t miss this big opportunity. Brooklyn Public Library is offering the runner-up a chance to publish with its new Espresso Book Machine.

Rosh Hashanah in Park Slope 5773

Rabbi Bachman on his blog, Water Over Rocks, reflects on Rosh Hashanah, which begins today, and the beginnings of Congregation Beth Elohim 150 years ago.

At sundown this evening, Congregation Beth Elohim joins Jewish community’s world-wide in celebrating the New Year 5773.

This is a special time for our synagogue, which commemorates its 150th year since it’s founding in 1862. Our Founders journeyed to Brooklyn from Central Europe and built a beacon of Learning, Prayer and Good Deeds in the midst of a nation that was at Civil War; African Americans were enslaved; and women were denied the right to vote. Whereas one founding family made buttons for Union Army jackets, future members helped integrate the U.S. Armed Forces, integrated schools, and today we remain active, as a Jewish community, fulfilling the Prophet’s vision that “Mine House Shall Be An House of Prayer for All People.” And finally, to celebrate our 150 years in Brooklyn, we are commissioning the writing of a new Torah Scroll–the first of its kind in the history of New York City–to be written entirely by a female scribe. The year of celebration begins on October 7.

 

 

OTBKB’s Top 20 Panel Picks for the Brooklyn Book Festival

The Brooklyn Book Festival is coming to downtown Brooklyn on Sunday, September 23rd. In addition to a marketplace of publishers and booksellers, there are something like 140 panels to choose from.

I picked the following 20 that I think sound interesting. Listed by location. I put three stars next to the ones I think sound really HOT.

MAIN STAGE: Borough Hall Plaza

***1.2:00 P.M. Let’s Talk About Sex: Grappling with Gender in the 21st Century. Is biology destiny? What does it mean today to be a man, a woman, or to feel somewhere in between? Naomi Wolf (Vagina: A New Biography), Carlos Andres Gomez (Man Up: Cracking the Code of Modern Manhood) and Kate Bornstein (A Queer and Pleasant Danger) consider the role of sex and gender in culture today, how it makes us, and how we react to the trappings of gender put upon us by society at large. Moderated by Hanna Rosin (The End of Men).

 ST FRANCIS AUDITORIUM: 180 Remsen Street

2.  2:00 P.M. Secrets Secrets Are Some Fun. How does a writer decide what to keep from the characters, narrator, or audience? Elizabeth Crane (We Only Know So Much), John Burnham Schwartz (Northwest Corner) and Kurt Andersen (True Believers) discuss how they tell secrets, but they won’t tell them all! Moderated by Ben Greenman (What He’s Poised to Do).

***3.  5:00 P.M. Enduring Unlikable Women.  Elissa Schappell (Blue Print for Building Better Girls), Gilbert Hernandez(Love and Rockets) and Dana Spiotta (Stone Arabia) write difficult, complex female characters. Join these authors in a reading and discussion that looks at the bad boy and the unlikable woman in literature and how they are reviled or celebrated by their audience and creators. Moderated byMeredith Walters, Brooklyn Public Library.

 BROOKLYN HISTORICAL SOCIETY: 128 Pierrepont Street

4. 11:00 A.M. A Conversation about Conscience. Why do some people make painful and challenging decisions of conscience—and why do so many others often choose not to? Fifty years after Hannah Arendt examined the dynamics of conformity in her seminal account of the Eichmann trial, this panel will explore the flipside of the banality of evil, mapping out what impels ordinary people to defy the sway of authority and convention. Featuring E.O. Wilson(The Social Conquest of Earth), Eyal Press (Beautiful Souls) and Louisa Thomas (Conscience: Two Soldiers, Two Pacifists, One Family: A Test of Will and Faith in World War I).  Moderated by Ted Hamm.

 BROOKLYN LAW SCHOOL

5.  3:00 P.M. Fright Write. Instead of heart throb vampires and werewolves, J.R. Angelella(Zombie), Victor LaValle (The Devil in Silver), and Chase Novak (Breed) bring you heart pounding unconventional horror stories. Join us as the three discuss their thrilling new novels! Moderated by Sarah Weinman.

***6.  5:00 P.M. Inventions of Adolescence.  Novelists Kurt Andersen (True Believers), Danielle Evans (Before You Suffocate Your Own Fool Self) and Karen Thompson Walker (The Age of Miracles) read from their work and discuss the experiences of youth. Moderated by Kevin Holohan.

  Continue reading OTBKB’s Top 20 Panel Picks for the Brooklyn Book Festival

OTBKB’s Top Ten Brooklyn Book Fest Bookend Events

There are SO many  Brooklyn Book Festival Bookend Events September 17-22 and so many of them sound interesting. How to choose? Author? Location? Venue? I just looked through the list and picked out ten that I think sound really interesting. In chronological order:

1. On Monday, September 17 at 7PM: I’m definitely taking the G-train to Williamsburg for the Free Opening Night Party for Brooklyn Book Festival Bookends. Three top literary web-based publications (and Tumblr super-users) invite you to meet your Internet friends in person for chatting, drinking, and dancing to kick off the most bookish week in Brooklyn. Guest DJs and free drink specials enhance the East Coast vs. West Coast faceoff, and everybody wins! Location: Public Assembly, 70 North 6th Street (between Wythe and Kent Avenues).

2. On Tuesday September 18 from 8-11PM: I’m psyched for the One Teen Story Launch Party and Homecoming Dance at Littlefield (622 Degraw Street between 3rd and 4th Avenues). Relive your teenage days with a homecoming court of YA authors, photographs, and a homecoming king/queen raffle. Take part in the festivities—which include dancing and homemade desserts—with the One Story staff! Price: $25, selling tickets in advance.

3. On Wednesday, September 19: I hope I can make it out to Fort Hamilton Parkway for this.  A Photographic Journey of Brooklyn. Photographic books by Israelowitz Publishing on Brooklyn’s history including author Leslie Arlette Boyce (The Glory of Brooklyn’s Gowanus) with special guest Ron Schweiger, Brooklyn Borough Historian. Location: Fort Hamilton Senior Recreation Center (Ball Room), 9941 Fort Hamilton Parkway (100th Street and Fort Hamilton Parkway) Time: 1:30 pm – 3:00 pm

4. Wednesday, September 19, 7-9PM: This is definitely the A-list event of the Bookends. powerHouse Arena presents a book launch for Salman Rushdie. Rushdie will discuss Joseph Anton, his memoir about life as a writer forced underground. Fans of the famed novelist will not want to miss this exciting event. Ticketholders receive a signed copy of the new memoir. Location: powerHouse Arena, 37 Main Street (at Water Street). $35.

5. Wednesday, September 19 from 7-9PM: This actually sounds really useful. How to Publish Book Reviews & Features moderated by Susan Shapiro. A lively, informative talk features book editors John Reed (Brooklyn Rail), Monica de la Torre (Bomb), David Propson (WSJ Book Section) and Rob Spillman (Tin House) spilling the secrets of how to break into book reviewing, profiling authors and discussing the future of book criticism. Moderated by NBCC board member Susan Shapiro. Location: Park Slope Barnes & Noble, 267 7th Avenue (at 6th Street)

Continue reading OTBKB’s Top Ten Brooklyn Book Fest Bookend Events

My Schedule: Young Writers, Bookends, Einstein, Brooklyn Book Festival

It’s a busy week. There are things to do, people to see, High Holy Days to celebrate, as well as Brooklyn Book Festival Book End events to attend all week.  For a full schedule go here.

On Thursday, September 20, at 7PM, Brooklyn Reading Works is hosting Young Writers Night, a Brooklyn Book Festival Bookend Event presenting fiction, poetry and song by teenage writers. The event was curated by high school senior Hannah Frishberg who will be introduced by Brooklyn Poet Laureate Tina Chang. One Teen Story will also be on hand to distribute free copies of that new magazine.

On Friday, September 21, I will be at BAM for Einstein on the Beach, an opera created by Philip Glass, Robert Wilson and Lucinda Childs. This will be the third production of Einstein at the Beach I’ve seen at BAM, the first without choreographer Lucinda Childs dancing.

 

 

On Sunday, September 23, I will be at the Brooklyn Book Festival with Honey & Wax Booksellers. I will also be talking up Peter Matthiessen Wheelwright’s “gorgeous debut novel” As It Is On Earth (Fomite).

 

 

Nice Profile of Park Slope’s Honey & Wax Booksellers

Leslie Albrecht, a reporter for DNA Info, wrote a lovely profile (with a great slide show) of Park Slope’s Heather O’Donnell, who runs Honey & Wax Booksellers. Albrecht sure knows a good lede when she sees it.

“Heather O’Donnell isn’t the type of rare book dealer who puts on white cotton gloves before she handles her precious volumes. She’s fine with plopping an 1881 edition of Henry James’ “Washington Square” — which sells for $2,000 — on the kitchen counter next to a plate of marinating chicken.”

Okay, let’s not get carried away. I’m sure O’Donnell doesn’t often leave her rare and valuable books in the kitchen. But she does, for the moment, run her business out of the attractive dining room of her historically detailed Park Slope apartment.

O’Donnell is a true book lover who believes books should be well loved and well used. She is also a client of my new company Brooklyn Social Media. Full disclosure there.

“She launched her rare book business Honey & Wax Booksellers in that spirit earlier this year. To her, rare books shouldn’t be locked away in cabinets like specimens. She likes that books can be used to form relationships when they’re passed between people. Her favorite part of the business is uniting appreciative collectors with long-sought books.” writes Albrecht in her DNA Info piece.

Next week Honey & Wax will be the first rare bookseller at the Brooklyn Book Festival, an open-air celebration of, well, books. In fact, it is the largest literary event in New York City. This year there are more than 280 authors, more than 104 panels confirmed and something like 45,000  visitors expected.

Wowza.

O’Donnell will be there with an astonishing selection of rare books, first editions and special signed copies. She’ll also be giving out tasty honey sticks. She is excited to showcase some of her best stock, and to field questions from festival attendees about the books they have and the books they want.

O’Donnell is uniquely qualified to answer those questions.  A lifelong book lover, she moved to NYC in 1989 to study English at Columbia. She received a doctorate from the Yale English department and worked as a curatorial assistant at the Beinecke Library, where she developed an eye for rare books. For seven years, she was a bookseller in the flagship New York gallery of Bauman Rare Books, dealing in a wide range of material, from Shakespeare to Audubon to Churchill. O’Donnell’s desire to make her mark in the borough she calls home inspired her to launch Honey & Wax Booksellers earlier this year, and she’s eager to make her Brooklyn festival debut on September 23.

Photos by Leslie Albrecht of DNA Info

 

G is for Gertler: The Universal Thump

File this under: I happen to love Greta Ghertler’s music, ambition and energy but I also love that we have the same last name except for an H. My maiden name was Ghertler.

More than a year ago, I raved about The Universal Thump’s concert of the entire All Things Must Pass. It was a night to savor and enjoy the song craft of George Harrison, the sometimes neglected Beatle as his songs were performed by some of the best and brightest of Brooklyn’s indie music scene.

The inspiration for the Thump’s latest album is Moby Dick. Pause. See what I mean about ambitious? I can’t wait to hear it and them.

Says the New Yorker Magazine: “The Universal Thump, a Brooklyn-based orchestral-pop band that is the brainchild of the Australian singer-songwriter and pianist Greta Gertler and the drummer Adam D Gold, swelled at times to sixty members over the four years it took to record its début release. The eponymous double album was inspired by “Moby-Dick,” and it comes out Oct. 2. The band marks the occasion with a residency at the Living Room on most Mondays in October. Guests from the recording sessions are expected.”

There you have it—and in the New Yorker, too.

 

The Park Slope Library Last Night

I loved the tower of green, yellow and blue balloons outside the library, signifying the grand reopening of the Park Slope Branch of the Brooklyn Public Library.

The branch has been closed for renovations since 2009.

Three years is a long time for a neighborhood to go without a local library and judging from the crowd of  people who were pouring in last night to get a look at all the improvements, the library has been missed. There was lots of oohing and ahing at the beautifully restored, cleaned-up and modernized library.

Everything looked bigger, cleaner, better laid out and fresh. A huge crowd gathered on the first floor to hear Pete Hamill read from his memoir A Drinking Life. Frankly, it was impossible to hear him. I took a look at the second floor shelves and reading area.

It’s a small, cozy library: a perfect neighborhood library with a great kid’s section and a small and genralist’s selection of books. They also have CDs and DVDs. It’s not a hush hush type of library—it does have a large children’s section on the first floor—but it’s a wonderful place to read, to browse, do research, write and think.

Famous Accordion Orchestra to Play Bob Marley Tonight at Dixon Place

One of the perks of living on Third Street is the chance to overhear a practice session of the Famous Accordion Orchestra out in front of one of the Limestone buildings between Sixth and Seventh Avenues.

The Famous is not your typical accordion band. They do their fair share of polkas, tangos and the like, but their repetoire ranges from Stephen Foster, Rossini, Bach, Offenbach, Guy Klucevsek, Lars Hollmer, Paolo Conte, Duke Ellington and Kraftwerk, waltzes, marches, and sound environments.

Tonight at 7:30 PM they will be returning to the Lounge at Dixon Place (161A Chrystie Street, between Rivington and Delancey). Admission is five dollars and the drinks are very reasonably prices. FAO member Bob Goldberg tells me that the group has been playing  Bob Marley lately. He urges everyone to “Come on down! Tell your friends! And your casual acquaintances…

 

Today is a Primary Election in Some Districts. Really. Check to See…

Today is Election Day and City Council Member Brad Lander has already heard from several constituents who have had difficulty voting.

For many people in our district, polling places have changed since the last election. Before you go to vote, confirm your voting location here.

At that same site, you should also download a sample ballot to see what races you can vote for. Because this is a primary and not a general election, in some parts of the district, there are no races to vote on. But if you do live in an area with a contested primary, do get out and vote.

Polls are open today until 9 PM. If you have any problems today, you can contact the Board of Elections at 866-VOTE-NYC or Brad Lander’s office: 718-499-1090 (Lander’s closes at 6:00 PM).

 

Park Slope Library Reopens Today (Ribbons and Pete Hamill)

Today there will be lots of pomp and ceremony as the Park Slope Branch of the Brooklyn Public Library reopens. Closed since 2009, the newly renovated library should be a sight to  behold. New lighting, new seating, new technology including iPad check-outs and computers for kids.

Check it out for yourself. It’s a new day for the Park Slope  branch of the BPL.

At noon today, Brooklyn Public Library President and CEO Linda E. Johnson, Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz, Assembly Member James Brennan, City Councilmember Brad Lander, Commissioner of the Department of Design and Construction David Burney, Park Slope residents and local students will be at the library for a ribbon-cutting ceremony.

And at 6:30 p.m., Pete Hamill, who grew up in these parts (and probably studied and checked books out of that library) will be on hand to read some of his work.

The Brooklyn-born author, former columnist and editor for The New York Post and New York Daily News and renowned author is something of a hero around here.

Brooklyn Book Festival Begins with Bookends (Starting Sept 17)

My new friends over at Brooklyn Exposed have coverage of the upcoming Brooklyn Book Festival which really begins next week with a long list of Bookend events.

The one-day festival itself happens on Sunday, September 23rd. It’s an all-day, open-air event at Brooklyn Borough Hall in beautiful downtown Brooklyn (I’m not kidding).

The BBF is the largest literary gathering in New York City and reminds me of New York Is Book Country, an annual fair that used to be on Fifth Avenue in Manhattan.

Well, this is now and Brooklyn is IT. And the Book Festival positions itself as “a hip, smart diverse gathering that attracts thousands of book lovers of all ages to enjoy authors and the festival’s lively literary marketplace.” Think  street fair with booths of books instead of socks and zeppoles.

The Bookend events take place the Monday through Saturday before Sunday’s Book Festival on September 23rd. For a full listing of events go here. Here’s a short list of some of the venues that are readings, panels, and performances: Public Assembly, Franklin Park, The Old Stone House, Greenlight Books, Bookcourt, The Bell House, BAM, Littlefield, JACK!, Fort Hamilton Senior Recreation Center, powerHouse, Park Slope Barnes and Noble, the Brooklyn Public Library and on and on.

Wow.

It’s way ambitious. Just about every literary and or music venue in Brooklyn is taking part. I am so proud to be included on Thursday, September 20th at 7PM with Brooklyn Reading Works Presents Young Writers Night at The Old Stone House.

September 20 at 7PM: Expressions of Youth (Young Writers Night)


Brooklyn Reading Works hosts Young Writers Night at the Old Stone House on Thursday, September 20 at 7PM. The two-hour program, a Brooklyn Book Festival Bookend event, will showcase up-and-coming teen authors from across five boroughs as they present everything from fiction to song.

And maybe the coolest part? The whole thing’s curated by Hannah Frishberg, herself a high school senior. This is an all-ages event.

The idea for this annual event started with novelist Jill Eisenstadt in 2009, who proposed it as a great way to celebrate young writers.

This year’s event is curated by Hannah Frishberg, a senior at Bard High School Early College and a poet herself. She asked a friend to design a poster and that’s what you see to the left. She’s also selected some wonderful writers and musicians, including two teenagers who are part of the NY Writers Coalition to be part of the evening.

Young Writers is a Brooklyn Book Festival Bookend event. Brooklyn Poet Laureate Tina Chang will introduce and will also read some poetry.

Hope you’ll join us at this FREE event at the Old Stone House, 336 Third Street, between Fourth and Fifth Avenues in Park Slope, 718-768-3195 or 718-288-4290.

As It Is On Earth Launches, Brooklyn Social Media Kvells

As many of you know, I started a company called Brooklyn Social Media last Spring. The focus: social media and publicity for authors, artists, and entreprenuers. I have the good fortune to have the very smart Marian Brown PR as a partner and the two of us are quite a dynamic duo when it comes to spreading the word on behalf of our clients.

Peter Matthiessen Wheelwright is an immensely talented and intelligent writer. He also happens to be a client. I believe it is only possible to promote authors and entrepreneurs who I think are genuinely exciting and talented.

Indeed, Peter M. Wheelwright is exciting and talented.

This week marks the launch of his “gorgeous debut novel” As It Is On Earth (from Fomite Press), the story of Taylor Thatcher, a young college professor wrestling with his religious legacy and family history. Wheelwright comes from New England stock, a family of American writers descending from hardy Puritan blood. He also happens to be the nephew of the three-time American Book Award winning author Peter Matthiessen, author of At Play in the Fields of the Lord and The Snow Leopard. 

He was interviewed in The Brooklyn Rail by journalist Scott Cheshire, who found the book to be “lovely, meditative, and thoughtful.”

Peter Wheelwright is now officially a Renaissance man, a real triple threat. This is not to say he’s a song-and-dance man. Then again it seems there is nothing the man cannot do. Wheelwright is an accomplished architect, and an Associate Professor at Parsons the New School for Design, who also happens to have work in the Collection of Architecture and Design at the Museum of Modern Art.

He is tall, affable, and the sort of guy who wears his intellect well, like an old denim shirt, comfortably, with a cool and unassuming style. We talked over coffee at the Housing Works Bookstore Café about his love of philosophy, Walker Percy, Deep Time, the power of stories, and how designing a building is not so unlike writing a novel.

Wheelwright will be reading in Park Slope with novelist Leora Skolkin-Smith on Tuesday, October 23rd at Two Moon Art House & Cafe at 7PM. Prior to that , on October 4th, he will be reading at Parsons New School of Design, where he is an associate professor. You can find more information about these readings here. 

His first novel has already gotten a great response; it was even blurbed by Meryl Streep (yes, that Meryl Streep) who wrote,

“With a Yankee tap root breaking thorugh layers of granite guilt and miscengentaion , Taylor Thatcher’s family tree is a challenging climb…author Peter Wheelwright peers compassionately at a world inhabited by young survivors of extinct tribes and inherited griefs. Fascinating and absorbing and forgiving.”

 

That’s Some Gorgeous Library: Park Slope Branch Reopens on 9/13

Three years and an extensive renovation later, the Park Slope Library is set to reopen on Thursday, Sept. 13!

Closed since 2009, the neighborhood is hungry for books and a library space in which to read, work, and research (and so much more). Come see the new and improved branch of the Brooklyn Public Library, at 431 Sixth Ave. between Eighth and Ninth Streets!

What to expect? New and improved reading and public spaces for children, teens, and adults. New equipment and technological enhancements like iPads to self-checkout machines.

Foodie Fundraiser for Park Slope Civic Council

The Park Slope Civic Council is throwing its first fundraiser at the Prospect Park Picnic House on Wednesday, October 10th from 6:30 to 9:30.

In recent years, the Civic Council, like so many other organizations, has been affected by the economic downturn. To make sure that this lack of funding doesn’t stop them from supporting many meaningful projects and initiatives throughout the community, they are reaching out to the neighborhood for help.

A donation of $75 will allow you to participate in what promises to be a fun and tasty night out. You’ll be able to sample an array of delicacies and beverages from popular local restaurants like Stone Park Cafe, Palo Santo, Al Di La and more, while mingling with neighbors and learning about the Civic Council’s many contributions to the community.

In addition to the food tastings, there will be short presentations made by top chefs, food critics, writers, and movers and shakers in the local farm-to-table food movement. If you appreciate fine food, fine dining, and are passionate about supporting your community, this is the event for you.

Learn more here. 

 

ArtObama: Artists to Auction Work on October 3

They raised $54,000 in 2008, and the team that brought you ArtObama is doing it again.

On October 1, ArtObama will auction works by 120 American artists to support the re-election of Barack Obama as President of the United States. Auction proceeds will benefit the Obama Victory Fund 2012 as well as ActBlue, a political action committee that aids progressive House and Senate candidates nationwide. Space is limited, and preregistration for this event is strongly recommended. In 2008, ArtObama raised more than $54,000. Their ambition is to greatly surpass that contribution in 2012

 

The 11th Anniversary

“I can’t believe it’s been ten years” was probably the most common sentiment leading up to and during last year’s 9/11 anniversary.

“In some ways it feels like it just happened but in many ways it just feels like it was a bad dream so far in the past,” wrote my friend Pat Tambour, a NYC performer now living in Nashville. “Witnessing the whole event outside my apartment window has made it difficult in terms of not dwelling on it too much.”

Today is the 11th anniversary and I felt no dread anticipating the day. I am relieved that the ten year milestone is behind us. I wasn’t even sure I was going to watch the annual recitation of the names at Ground Zero.

Well, of course I am listening to the names. I will listen to each and every one because on this day eleven years ago New York City suffered great losses and we will never be the  same.

11 years ago in Park Slope, many watched the towers fall from the rooftops. Dust, ash and debris from the fallen buildings floated over the neighborhood. People lined up to give blood at Methodist Hospital when they still thought there would be wounded survivors from the towers.

The local public schools stayed open until early evening refusing to close until every child had been picked up by parents or guardians, who were stranded in Manhattan.

Some parents arrived with thick white ash on their shoes. Some parents didn’t arrive at all.

By evening there was a growing list of missing Park Slopers including 12 firefighters from Squad 1, but there was still hope that they would surface. In the days that followed those hopes were dashed.

In my building on Third Street, many of us gathered in a neighbor’s first floor apartment to watch television while our young children played. We were desperate to follow the news of the day but also mindful (even in our hysteria) that the images were disturbing and confusing to our children.

During the afternoon, a woman on my block set up a folding table on the sidewalk covered with yellow pads and pens. “It’s for people who want to write down what they are feeling,” she told me.

I spent that evening and many days after in the apartment of a friend who’s husband, a Squad 1 firefighter, was missing. We called hospitals in New Jersey hoping that he had somehow ended up there. At midnight, two firefighters, their skin bright red, reeking of smoke and covered in ash and debris, arrived to assure my friend that there was still hope. “There are voids where the guys might be,” they told us.

In the days and weeks that followed, the neighborhood came together to mourn the dead and support the living.

The Community Bookstore became a community center, an information hub and a drop-off point for supplies needed at Ground Zero. The store’s front window was covered with supply lists, poems, hand-written notes and newspaper articles, including condolences and expressions of empathy people from all over the world. Indeed, for the first few weeks, before 9/11 was used as a reason to go to war, it felt like the whole world was in solidarity.

Across the street from the bookstore, Old First Dutch Reformed Church was kept open for prayer and reflection. One night that first week, there was a packed service for the community; everyone rose to sing, “God Bless America.”

On the Friday after that terrible Tuesday there was huge candlelight vigil on Seventh Avenue, which ended in front of Squad 1 on Union Street, where locals paid their respects to first responders who had given their lives and those who had survived. The guys at Squad 1 were our heroes and every time we saw a fire truck we waved in gratitude, a local custom that went on for at least a year if not more.

When word got out a few weeks later that the Fire Commissioner was planning, in a budget saving measure, to close Squad 1, there was a huge protest in front of the firehouse. Before the demonstration was over, his decision was reversed to the relief and jubilation of the crowd.

Eventually, Park Slope got back to a new normal. The kids returned to school and the adults got on with their lives.

The first few anniversaries were very fraught and very sad. More recently it has felt like just another day. Sort of. Those young children like my daughter who barely knew what they were seeing on the television back then, are in high school now. The middle schoolers, who watched the towers fall from the windows of MS 51 are now in college.

This morning on Facebook, I saw a status update from a young woman, now twenty years old, in memory of Dave Fontana, one of the  firefighters who died that day. Mary used to live in our building. She was only ten years old in 2001 but she was very conscious of what was going on. Her Facebook note was simple.

RIP Dave:  1963-2001.

The photograph by Greg Martin is of a modest 9/11 memorial on a fence on Sixth Avenue in Park Slope.

 

 

 

Thoughtful Ways to Remember 9/11 in Brooklyn

There are a variety of ways to thoughtfully remember 9/11 in Brooklyn. A walk in Prospect Park, Brooklyn Bridge Park or the Brooklyn Botanic Garden can be peaceful and meditative.

A stop at Squad 1 on Union Street is a vivid way to remember the terror and altruism of that day. Squad 1 lost 12 firefighters and there’s a wooden memorial sculpture where people often leave flowers and notes.

The Annual Children of Abraham Peace Walk is on 9/11 this year, which seems lovely and appropriate. This interfaith march begins at 5PM at the Kane Street Synagogue in Brooklyn Heights and includes stops at variety of houses of worship (Christian, Muslim, Buddhist, and Jewish).

At the Fulton Ferry Landing, located at the foot of Old Fulton Street, Bargemusic will play its annual tribute to the victims of 9/11 with a free concert at 8PM.

The Tribute in Light: Perhaps the most beautiful tribute to New York City and its losses, the towers of life beamed up from the Ground Zero area is powerful and artful. I love catching sight of it in the sky above the brownstones of Park Slope.

Today We Remember

September 11th is the new Labor Day. The autumn season doesn’t really begin until we have mourned our losses from 9/11.

We always remember the blueness of the sky that day.

At Ground Zero, in houses of worship, apartments, firehouses, cemeteries, gardens, and on streets throughout the city, people commemorate the loss of the nearly 3000 people who died on September 11th.

Bells toll at the exact times the planes hit, at the times the south and north towers fell. The names are read.

In the past I have gone to the Brooklyn Botanic Garden to meditate on the grass or to Old First Church to sit and listen to the church bells ring. One year I attended a dinner at Al Di La given by a friend whose husband died on that day. She wanted to thank all her friends for their support and love.

Tonight I will go to the home of that friend and toast the wonderful man we lost.

I don’t think the beginning of September will ever mean anything other than 9/11 and the dispair we felt on that day. And September 12th will always bring relief because on that day in 2001 we slowly began to put back the pieces. Through our tears, our panic, and our bewilderment,  we began the protracted healing process that continues to this day.

9/11 will always be the day we took the hit. But on the day after, we begin to begin again and celebrate the goodness that persists despite the evil we have seen.