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West Nile Virus Giving Me Nightmares

Last night I couldn’t sleep because I was thinking about the mosquitoes with West Nile Virus (WNV) that have been detected in our  zip code and in the zip codes of Prospect Heights and Prospect Park.

I even checked the symptoms on the Center for Disease Control website. I don’t want to freak anyone out but here goes: “It is estimated that about 20% of people who become infected with WNV will develop West Nile fever. Symptoms include fever, headache, tiredness, and body aches, occasionally with a skin rash (on the trunk of the body) and swollen lymph glands. While the illness can be as short as a few days, even healthy people have reported being sick for several weeks.”

Sometimes it’s  asymptomatic.

I was also stressing about the fact that my son’s window was open. What if a WNV mosquito happens in and stings him? Panic…

We’d had the windows open all day because the temperature was so much lower than it’s been and there was a nice breeze and cross-ventilation.

Now I’m officially freaked out about WNV. No open windows today. Which is sad, because it feels like a nice day for open windows.

Go here to see what the CDC suggests to prevent mosquito bites.

 

Outpost of Powerhouse Books Coming to Park Slope

My friend Peggy Coon posted on Facebook that there’s a new bookstore coming to Park Slope in the space formerly occupied by Reel Life on Eighth Avenue between 11th and 12th Streets. That video store closed last March.

A new bookstore? A new bookstore? A new bookstore? Can you tell I’m excited??

Peggy  linked to a post on Here’s Park Slope about some cryptic signage that went up last week in the front window of of the video store that closed last March.

Apparently, an off-shoot of Powerhouse Books, publishers of photography and specialty books and a bookstore in DUMBO is going in. I am very fond of that bookstore. In fact, the Brooklyn Blogfest was held at Powerhouse Books back in 2009.

According to Here’s Park Slope the message said: “Hi there! We’re going to be a brand new bookstore, reading club, mini-gallery, and community space opening in October. Our mothership is in Dumbo, and we’ll be bringing the best stationery, kids, YA, novelty, cooking, decorating, and style books we have there and more…Maybe some wonderful coffee, hard candy…and other items one might find in a general store (that was also a mini gallery and reading space!)

“We can’t wait; we hope you are as excited as we are!

Dan & Suzanne

(proud PS 107 parents!)”

I am so psyched.

 

 

What Not to Say to a Teacher

 This video was made by an educator who used to teach first grade at PS 321. It was sent to me by educator Renee Dinnerstein, who writes: “Kathy Collins was a much-loved first grade teacher. Now she’s an educational consultant. She’s written some pretty important professional books about teaching reading.

“Now that people are getting their kids ready for school and teacher-bashing is at an all-time high, I think that this might be something you might want to post on your blog.”

 




Before the Summer Ends Visit Brooklyn Bridge Park

If you haven’t explored Brooklyn Bridge Park this summer you really should.

Put it on your summer  “TO DO” List.

The Park is definitely Brooklyn’s newest tourist and native attraction—something to show the out-of-towners and something to enjoy on your own.

There’s lots to see. Take a walk from DUMBO and check out the fabulous carousel and then walk or bike towards Atlantic Avenue along the river. Or you can do what I just described in reverse starting on Atlantic Avenue and going towards DUMBO.

During the week, check the events schedule because there’s Jazzmobile, free fitness activities like Pilates and more.

As for the movies al fresco, there are only two screenings left this summer at Brooklyn Bridge Park. It’s a remarkable spot to watch a movie.

On Thursday, August 23, they’re showing Unforgiven [R] directed by Clint Eastwood with Morgan Freeman and Gene Hackman with a short, The Hunter by Marieka Walsh. DJ Emch Subatomic (of Subatomic Sound System) will be on h and supplying the grooves.

On Thursday, August 30, the final movie of the summer is selected by public vote! DJ Geko Jones (of Que Bajo) will be on hand playing music.

Watch This Cute Web Comedy About Brooklyn

 

Enjoy this two-minute episode of Big City, a new web comedy series by Lauren Ruff, who lives in Brooklyn (big surprise). It’s about a guy and girl who are roommates and their silly shinanigans in Brooklyn and Manhattan. Sorry, but Zooey Dechawhatever is unfortunately?? not in this series.

With the help of Robotic Raptor, the series was created out of real life and is written by Lauren Ruff, who harks from Oregon. She stars with Zane Carney of the band, Carney and Spiderman: Turn off the Dark. Episode 4 of Big City features Madeline Zima of Californication and Mat Devine of the band Kill Hannah and Spiderman: Turn off the Dark.

Paul Auster’s New Memoir Out Tuesday

Last week I reported that Amy Sohn’s new book was out in bookstores. And now for something completely different. Park Slope’s elder literary statesman has a new book coming out

Did  I just call Paul Auster an elder literary statesman?

Well, he is probably one of the best known authors in the neighborhood and certainly one of the most important in the world. Some of his books are considered the most influential books of the late 20th century. It must be said: the  man has major cred.

On Tuesday, his new memoir, Winter Journal will be coming out. Today there’s an interview in Salon Magazine where he shares his thoughts on his work, writing and the political climate in America.

He and Salon executive editor David Dailey met in Park Slope: “We met at a Park Slope cafe not far from his Brooklyn home on a recent rainy afternoon, where the conversation skipped easily from his new book to the New York Mets, and from literary politics to the presidential race,” Dailey writes.

The interview is very interesting and you should definitely read it. Auster talks  about his decision to write another memoir. He’s already written three: The Invention of Solitude, the Red Notebook and Hand to Mouth. Now this one. Auster is only 64 and he looks wonderful when I see him on Seventh Avenue. It’s hard to believe that I’ve been seeing him in the neighborhood for twenty-one years, since he was in his forties.

Sure he looks a bit older now, but very dignified. He walks with the weight and intensity of someone who writes every day. He always looks lost in thought. Deeply. Every time I see him I wonder, what has he written today in his writing studio? In the Salon interview he talks about why he felt compelled to write this book:

“I don’t know. As I’ve said, I can never answer why. I wanted to do it, so I did it. Was it the idea of, you know, reaching the age I’ve reached? I don’t know. I’m not sure. I do know that, oddly enough, all these 40th anniversaries that were taking place in the last few years have been throwing me back to the old days a lot. I’ve been speaking about things that haven’t been preoccupying me a lot, and maybe haven’t spoken about. “Invisible” really goes back to Columbia in the late 1960s.

“So, you know, I’m living in the present, thinking about the past, hoping for the future. And then too, there’s another thing I’d like to say: Most of the time, the way I seem to generate books is to bounce off the one I’ve done before, so to negate it, to do the opposite, to reinvent it. The book that came before it [“Sunset Park”] is the first book that consciously I wrote in the now, capital “N,” and it was also immediate, all so much about our present moment, that the impulse was to go back afterwards.”

Pork Slope Offers Tasty Food and Fun for Good Prices

Those are the boar’s heads that are now on the wall at Pork Slope.

Last night I ventured into Pork Slope, Top Chef Dale Talde’s new classic American restaurant on its opening night and found it to be fun, friendly and inexpensive. It’s so not kosher and it’s so not P.C. It’s actually a welcome—if  bawdy and slightly unhealthy—change from the vegan/veggie/healthy/locavore sanctimony of  many Park Slope restaurants.

Saturday night, opening night, was noisy and crowded and everyone was in a good mood. Strangers at the bar talked to each other: What do you think? Did you ever go to Aunt Susie’s? We’ve been waiting for this to open. Do you mind moving one seat so my husband, who’s waiting on line, can sit next to me?

A young woman even offered me tastes of her tater tots. Friendly!

Oh, and for the opening, you had to stand in line for twenty minutes or more to order your food.

But it was fun.

I think that was just an opening night thing. I’m guessing there will be waiter-service in the future. The man taking orders at the end of the bar was friendly and eager to explain the sandwiches like the Porky Melt, which is a pork patty with cheese on pumpernickle/rye bread.

Remember pumpernickle/rye bread?

While standing on line, the bartenders were friendly and helpful.

“Hey, can I get a drink for anyone standing on line,” I heard one of the bartenders say.

“I know you left an empty drink glass on the bar. You want something else?” a friendly bartender said to me.

“How much is a PBR,?” I asked a female bartender using the acronym for Pabst Blue Ribbon.

“Three dollars,” she said.

Sold.

Continue reading Pork Slope Offers Tasty Food and Fun for Good Prices

A Perfect Day to Open the Windows

This morning, just days after receiving a $225 dollar Con Edison bill—our penance for using the air conditioner almost constantly in July and August—I opened our windows and turned off the A.C.

Finally. A day without air conditioning. The temperature is 72 degrees. Let the cross ventilation begin.

West Nile Virus Detected in Park Slope Mosquitoes

Bad news for today: According to Prospect Heights Patch, the West Nile Virus has been found in Prospect Heights, Park Slope and Prospect Park. The Department of Health detects the disease by trapping mosquitos and testing them for the virus.

“Evidence of the virus was found on Aug. 10 in the 11238 and 11215 zip codes, although the DOH doesn’t specify which areas,” writes Patch.

Cripes.

This does not mean that any humans i these areas has been found to have West Nile but the trapped mosquitoes do. West Nile also been detected in mosquitoes in Windsor Terrace, Bushwick, Dyker Heights, Greenwood Heights, Marine Park and Starrett City.

 

 

Bike Sharing Delayed Until March

The city’s bike sharing program was supposed to start on July 31 but it didn’t happen and it ain’t gonna happen this summer. Apparently, the City ran into some computer problems and decided not to start the program until all the kinks had been worked out.

I’m all for bike sharing but I can forsee some problems with inexperienced  riders. That said, I know these program work very well in places like Berlin, Copenhagen and Munich. I hope there’s some kind of training for riders inexperienced at riding in the city.

Just so you know what to expect in March, there will be 7,000 bikes at 420 stations across Manhattan, Brooklyn and Queens. Read more.

You’ll be able to take as many trips as you want for a low price plus overtime-fees beyond the time limit.

There are a few ways that you can use City Bike:

–Annual Membership: $95 (first 45 minutes of every trip at no additional charge)

–7-Day pass: $25 (first 30 minutes of every trip at no additional charge)

–24-Hour pass: $9.95 (first 30 minutes of every trip at no additional charge)

–A special $5 one-day membership will be available for the first few weeks after launch.

Emerging and Acclaimed Writers at Ft. Greene Summer Literary Fest

Tomorrow is the 8th Annual Fort Greene Park Summer Literary Festival, an event which provides a means for self-expression and creativity for that area’s young people, and builds community through arts and literature.

The Lit Fest caps a six-week series of free Saturday creative writing workshops for young people and includes tomorrow’s end-of-summer reading featuring literary icons Jessica Hagedorn, Tayari Jones and Earl Lovelace. The host will be LC Cumbo of MoCADA. Young writers who participated in the  creative writing workshops will also be featured front and center .

The Caribbean American Sports and Cultural Youth Movement (CASYM) Steel Orchestra will be in attendance. This group has been providing academic, recreational, social, and cultural activities for young people since its incarnation in 1983.

The organization’s steel band, which can include up to 90 members, has traveled the world performing steelband music, and has taken home prizes at the world’s largest steel band

Thanks to the New York Writers Coalition, which sponsors the Lit Fest (along with a host of other organizations) this event unleashes the  power of the written word to give voice to the thoughts and experiences of everyone, not just the privileged and powerful.

The Fort Greene Park Summer Literary Festival is presented by Akashic Books, Greenlight Bookstore, NY Writers Coalition, and the Fort Greene Park Conservancy, with additional support from Amazon.com and the Walt Whitman Project.

Best Window Boxes Says Greenest Block in Brooklyn

Pop quiz: What’s the best window box in Brooklyn?

Now, that’s a tough call. There are many thousands of them. Too many. And so many pretty ones. There’s definitely an art to it. Some people have the touch (or the green thumb plus the color/design sense).

So how do you win such a contest. First, you’ve got to enter the contest to be considered. It helps to belong to a Block Association but I don’t think it’s essential. Still, it’s not like some judge-person is going to check out every window box in the borough.

These window boxes created by the Arky’s at 487 10th Street in Park Slope are very pretty indeed. Sadly, they’re trapped behind the window bars. And they tied for First Place. Check out the other winning window boxes and other categories at the Greenest Block in Brooklyn website. 

 

Brooklyn Community Foundation: Flowers, Wall Art & History

There’s a line in Amy Sohn’s new book Motherland about Park Slope purporting to be a community but it not being a community at all.

I think you have to look for community to find it sometimes.

I thought of that when I received a very exciting press release from the Brooklyn Community Foundation, reporting on some exciting community events that popped up this summer all over the borough.

This is the group that helped announce the winners of the 2012 Greenest Block in Brooklyn Contest, a gardening competition organized by the Brooklyn Botanic Garden. This year’s big winner: Lincoln Place between Bedford and Rogers Avenue (I just drove by there yesterday and saw the big green Greenest Block sign). There were many more winners,  including Eighth Street between Eighth Avenue and Prospect Park West, the Cortelyou Road Merchants Association and Newkirk Plaza. You can read about them here. 

The Brooklyn Community Fund is also responsible for funding Groundswell, a group that brings exciting wall art to the exterior walls of apartment buildings, schools, gas stations, and even at the Navy Yard.

Working with community partners at the Brownsville Community Justice Center, BCF helped sponsor a team of young men to create a mural dedicated to role models and the male identity, on a wall overlooking a new community garden.

Many of Groundswell’s participants are court involved youth fulfilling their community service requirement through the organization. As part of their research in the design process, the team went to the Brooklyn Museum to view the Question Bridge: Black Males exhibit.

Another bright spot is the I Heart East New York project where young artists—many attending Aspirations Diploma Plus High School—are developing a mural on a NYC Parks wall opposite the Broadway Junction subway station.

The project’s theme: “We Believe in and Heart East New York,” conjured the neighborhood’s past and not yet realized potential. The wall’s design depicts the history of East New York.

There was also activity at the Brooklyn Navy Yard, where artists are creating murals to illustrate the complete history of the yard, from its original Native American inhabitants, as a holder of prison ships during the Revolutionary War and as a Naval shipyard employing over 70,000 during WWII, to its modern rebirth as a sustainable small business park.

Katherine Hepburn, Spencer Tracy and Cary Grant at BAM

Just gotta say: There are some pretty wonderful films playing at BAM this weekend—and it’s so much fun to see these classics on the big screen.

I mean, who can resist: Sullivan’s Travels, His Girl Friday, or Katherine Hepburn and Cary Grant in Bringing Up Baby or George Cukor’s classic, late-Depression-era romantic comedy, Holiday. Or Pat and Mike with Spencer Tracy and Hepburn or The Palm Beach Story with Claudette Colbert.

It’s all part of BAM’s  American Gangster: Great Comedy Teams series. Check here for the full schedule at BAM. 

Pork Slope Officially Opens on Saturday

When Pork Slope officially opens on Saturday, you just might get a chance to taste what all the hype is about. Dale  Talde’s new Park Slope outpost with the truly great name is more fun and folick than Talde, his elegant, delicious and somewhat pricey “Asian-American” eatery on Seventh Avenue.

With 25 beers on tap and more than 100 whiskeys, Pork Slope is ready for the Fifth Avenue crowds. And the crowds, I’m guessing, are ready for it. There’s brisket to be had, as well as ribs, po’ boys, pulled pork sandwiches, country ham ‘n biscuits, and fried chicken.

The price point? I’m hearing that most dishes are below $15. Pork Slope is located on Fifth Avenue between Carroll Street and Garfield Place. Heck, it’s in the space that used to be Aunt Suzie’s, Park Slope’s red sauce Italian powerhouse, co-owned by Irene LoRe, president of Park Slope Fifth Avenue BID.

 

Red Hook Summer: A New Spike Lee Joint at BAM

A friend whose opinion I respect went to see Red Hook Summer, the new film by Spike Lee and says that it’s worthwhile. It’s playing at BAM. 

Here’s the premise: Flik, a young boy from middle-class Atlanta, comes to Brooklyn to spend the summer with his religious grandfather, who lives in the housing projects of Red Hook.

Between the constant preaching and the culture shock of inner-city life, Flik’s summer vacation is a washout until he meets a pretty girl his age, who shows Flik the brighter side of Brooklyn…

Aug 29 at 9PM: Benefit for The Illustrated Penguin

Coney Island Circus Sideshow cast member, The Illustrated Penguin, went to the emergency room approximately three weeks ago and has been in the hospital ever since. Turns out he is going to need major surgery.

Debi Ryan writes that Penguin loves working as a performer, but he’s been unable to do his job for almost a month now. “In addition to all of the stress this has brought on, he still has his usual bills mounting with no way to pay them. Luckily, he’s got some really talented friends, and they want to PUT ON A SHOW in order to help pay for these living expenses.”

His friends are calling this fundraiser for Penguin, Penguinpalooza! and it happens at Coney Island USA on Wednesday, August 29 at 9PM.

Penguinpalooza! will be hosted by Ray Valenz and will feature all the sideshow performers, including Adam the First Real Man, Alfie Bunz, Flesh Suspension by Baron Von Geiger, Betty Bloomerz, Lefty Lucy, Serpentina, and Mr. Coney Island himself, Dick Zigun.

If You Missed Lyle Lovett at Celebrate Brooklyn: Have a Listen

Celebrate Brooklyn is one of the rewards for those who decide to spend the summer in the city.

This summer was an especially sweet reward for those who got to hear Wilco, Jimmy Cliff and Lyle Lovett.

If you missed Lyle Lovett’s show at the Prospect Park Bandshell with his acoustic band, as I did, you can hear a little of it on this NPR podcast with photos.

He’s been touring in one way or another for thirty years and he’s really a new country institution. Heck, he was married to Julia Roberts for a few months. On the closing night of Celebrate Brooklyn he played songs from his most recent album Release Me, as well as favorites from throughout his career, including That’s Right You’re Not From Texas.

Have a listen to this. 

 

Aug 16 at 8PM: Shark Mania at The Bell House

Get your shark on and get to the Bell House early on Thursday, August 16th at 8PM.

It’s the summer shark edition of the Secret Science Club. Marine Biologist Hans Walters of the New York Aquarium discusses his work tagging and tracking sharks and curates a special live-screening of Great White Highway, a documentary debuting on the Discovery Channel’s Shark Week.

The film follows intrepid marine scientists as they pursue the mysterious migrations of great white sharks (Carcharodon carcharias).

There will be many a chance to sample the cocktail of the night, the Land Shark

Half-Way Through Motherland and Enjoying It

Many will remember that I was not a big fan of Amy Sohn’s  Prospect Park WestStill, I found myself excited about the release of the sequel. Yesterday, I downloaded Motherland, onto my Nook. It is only the second book I have read using that indispensible contraption. The first was Then Again, the very entertaining memoir by Diane Keaton. 

Guess what?

I think Motherland is better than Prospect Park West and I’m really enjoying it. A lot. While the book does a good job of satirizing Park Slope, it’s really about modern marriage and all of its travails, inherent disappointments and infidelties.

In the earlier book, I found Sohn’s disdain for Park Slope’s women to be quite gratuitous and insulting. There’s some of that in this book but it’s integrated into the fabric of the narrative and characterizations more elegantly this time around.

Motherland is a fun read as are Sohn’s references to Connecticut Muffin, PS 321, Effed in Park Slope, the Community Bookstore and the Food Coop.

But the book won my heart with a character by the name of Helene Buzzi, an old time Park Sloper. Her encounter with a mother and son playing at the train set in front of Little Things is hilarious, as is her transgressive behavior (the nature of which I won’t reveal here. In a way it’s way more shocking than any of the sex in this sex-filled book). Buzzi has watched this neighborhood go from modest oasis to high-end Yuppieville and she’s not happy about it.

“It was a strange feeling to live in a neighborhood you  could no longer afford. You were the reason values had gone up, and yet you were invisible. In the eighties, there were no lawyers or bankers in Park Slope; yuppies lived in Manhattan. Now the whole neighborhood was yuppies. And none of them had any sense of the past. They didn’t understand that Helen’s generation of Slopers had improved the schools, reduced crime, attracted small busineeses, gotten bans to lend, start block associationa, and increased property values—all things that had turned the Slope into a destination. The old stores were gone, gone so long that the numer of people who remembered them were themselves a disappearing minority. Al’s Toyland. Herzog Brothers, the German deli. Danny’s candy store. Irv’s stationery. One Smart Cookie. The Grecian Corner. A true New Yorker knew storefronts according to what used to be in them.”

Sure, Helene is a Park Slope sterotype but she’s a compelling character and her observations are cogent. An ESL teacher at a Lower East Side school, Helen lives on Sixth Street in a house she and her husband (whom she calls The Bastard) bought in 1978 for  thirty-seven thousand dollars. The following are my favorite sentences in the book:

“Sometime when they came home at night, they would find junkies on the stoop. They knew their names. Now they she knew only a handful of names on the block. The junkies had been more polite than the yuppies.”

Prospect: Fancy Burgers and More in Clinton Hill

Yet another fancy burger joint in Brooklyn? Not exactly.

Prospect, a new restaurant opening in Clinton Hill not far from BAM serving New American Cuisine and artisinal burgers, will be open by early September (if not sooner).

I got a kick out of the name because one of the first nouveau Park Slope restaurants back in the day (1980s and 1990s) was called New Prospect located on Flatbush Avenue near Grand Army Plaza. They later had a take-out/gourmet shop on Seventh Avenue. New Prospect was way ahead of its time serving organic and locally grown food with a decidedly Moosewood meets the Silver Palatte vibe.

This new restaurant called Prospect, owned by two high school friends, will feature organic and locally  grown foods in what sounds like an attractive environment.

The decor will feature reclaimed wood from the Coney Island Boardwalk. The walls of the restaurant will be adorned with early 20th century photographs from the collection of Peter Cohen.

The menu by Chef Kyle McClelland will draw from local sources, including Greenpoint’s Eagle Street Rooftop Farm, Brooklyn Grange, and Sunset Park’s Bright Farm. The restaurant’s location is 773 Fulton Street between South Portland and South Oxford.

 

Resilience: Why Things Bounce Back at BAM

BAM has just added a literary component to the 30th Next Wave Festival and is partnering with Ft. Greene’s Greenlight Bookstore with a new series:  Unbound: A Literary Series with Greenlight Bookstore

At the first Unbound event on September 18 at 7:30 PM, Andrew Zolli will be joined by  bestselling author Malcolm Gladwell, radio host Jad Abumrad, and other special guests to discuss resilience, the emerging field of study explored in Zolli’s new book, Resilience: Why Things Bounce Back.

Sounds like an optimistic way to begin the year.

Unlike Eat, Drink and Be Literary, which takes place at the BAM Cafe and includes food and drink, this event is in the Howard Gilman Opera House

Uncovering the interconnectedness of both natural and man-made failures, Zolli shares lessons in recreating stability in our increasingly volatile world.

Tue, Sep 18, 2012

LOCATION: BAM Howard Gilman Opera House

RUN TIME: 1hr 30min

ALL TICKETS: $20

Amy Sohn Reading All Over Brooklyn in September

Starting in September, Amy Sohn, who’s new book Motherland is out today, will be reading all over Brooklyn. Here’s the schedule.

Wednesday, September 5, 7 PM: Bookcourt (163 Court Street (Pacific/Dean)

Monday, September 10: Greenlight Bookstore, Brooklyn (686 Fulton Street)

Thursday, September 13 – Congregation Beth Elohim, 7:30-9 PM (274 Garfield Pl., Brooklyn, NY)

Sunday, September 23: Brooklyn Book Festival, Downtown Brooklyn, NY

 

Beacon School to Open Additional Campus on West 43rd Street in Manhattan

Things just got a little better for parents looking for a good public high school for their kids. Opening in September 2015, there’s going to be an additional campus for The Beacon School, considered one of the best public high schools in the City. That means that many more students will be able to attend that top rated school, which is currently located on West 61st Street on the Upper West Side of Manhattan.

Beacon offers a rigorous “inquiry-based” curriculum infused with technology and arts. From what I understand history and humanities are a strong suit for the school, which also has an impressive science curriculum. Each year students must present “performance-based” projects to panels of teachers, and pass New State Regents tests and community service to graduate.

On Monday, the DOE and officials from the school held a ground breaking ceremony at the new location 521 West 43rd Street,  a 200,000 square foot, former New York Public Library.

The new and larger campus, which will be in a newly modernized old building, will accommodate 1487 students and provide important new features to the Beacon School, which is currently overcrowded because it is so popular. The new building will operate in addition to the other building on West 61st Street.

 

Aug 25-26: Afro-Punk Festival at Brooklyn’s Commodore Barry Park

The Afro-punk Festival is returning to Brooklyn’s Commodore Barry Park for the 8h Annual Afro-punk Festival on August 25-26. And it’s free.

So where is Commodore Barry Park? It’s on Flushing Avenue near the Navy Yard.

And who was Commodore Barry? From Wikipedia: John Barry (March 25, 1745 – September 13, 1803) was an officer in the Continental Navy during theAmerican Revolutionary War and later in the United States Navy. He is often credited as “The Father of the American Navy.

Here’s the schedule:

August 25 – Saturday

Erykah Badu & the Cannabinoids

Spank Rock

Das Racist

Cerebal Ballzy

Ninjasonik

Toshi Reagon

Oxymoron

  Continue reading Aug 25-26: Afro-Punk Festival at Brooklyn’s Commodore Barry Park

Big Fun at Franklin Park Reading Series

Last night I decided to attend the Franklin Park Reading Series in Crown Heights and I’m glad I did. It was my very first time at this monthly event run by Brooklyn literary impresario Penina Roth at Franklin Park, a Crown Heights indoor/outdoor bar and restaurant.

Props to Penina Roth for proving that writers can be rock stars.

The Franklin Park Reading Series is by no means your typical literary reading. In fact, it has more in common with a show at a Brooklyn music club. What a scene. What a crowd. What a fun night.

More than one hundred young fiction lovers show up on a regular basis for this event (which meets on the second Monday of every month) and last night was no exception. The music blares, the crowd wallah is so intense you can barely hear yourself think and it’s a great place to mingle (and talk at the top of your lungs) to young writers and those who appreciate fiction. And then the show begins…

The show opened with three emerging writers. Caitlin Elizabeth Harper, who runs the Renegade Reading Series (also in Crown Heights), read a spooky short story about a swimming pool; Lincoln Michel, who writes for The Rumpus and Tin House read about US President John Adams and Zooey Dechanel; and Courtney Maum who writes a column for Electric Literature  read a piece about mastrubation in the voice of guitarist John Mayer.

The second half of the show offered a chance to hear acclaimed author Victor LaValle read from his highly anticipated new novel The Devil in Silver, which will be published next week. Tayari Jones read a chapter from her novel Silver Sparrow about the woman who threw a pot of beans on Al Green in 1974.

Thanks to the website Small Demons, there were drink specials, swag, and a literary mystery quiz. The series partners with BOMB Magazine on podcasts, so you can hear great lit from your favorite authors anytime.