Category Archives: arts and culture

Bookends: Tonight and Saturday Before Brooklyn Book Festival

The Brooklyn Book Festival is on Sunday (outside, in and around Borough Hall) but there are Bookend events tonight and tomorrow, free and fun, all over Brooklyn. Tonight I’ll be going to ringShout at Littlefield at 7PM maybe I’ll go to Greenlight Bookstore and catch the Brooklyn Indie Press celebration at 7:30.

Secret History of the Dividing Line: A True Account in Nine Parts (Parts I–IV, 1999–2004). Light Industry presents a screening of David Gatten’s unfinished 16mm film cycle, a project based around the life, writing, and library of William Byrd II, a Virginia planter who owned one of the largest collections of books in colonial North America.
Location: Light Industry, 177 Livingston St.
Time: 7:30 p.m.
Price: $7

Brooklyn Indie Press Celebration! With Akashic Books, A Public Space, Archipelago Books, Armchair/Shotgun, BOMB, Electric Literature, Melville House, powerHouse Books, Tin House, and others. Brooklyn’s finest independent publishers of books and periodicals come together at Greenlight Bookstore. Mingle with writers and publishers who make Brooklyn’s literary scene, and enjoy refreshments and live DJs to kick off BKBF weekend. 
Location: Greenlight Bookstore, 686 Fulton St. (at S. Portland Ave.)
Time: 7:30 p.m.
Price: FREE

WORD Presents an Intimate Conversation with John Waters. John Waters, the iconic filmmaker, actor, and writer, comes to Greenpoint to talk about his new book Role Models with Carolyn Kellogg of the Los Angeles Times. For details, visit www.wordbrooklyn.com.
Location: Coco 66, 66 Greenpoint Ave.
Date: 8 p.m.
Price: $25 (includes copy of book)

DEBUT LIT Presents “Opening Act,” a flash reading of original work by literary rock stars. Readings will be written on a theme provided by DEBUT LIT—it’s fun and it’s fast. Readers include Aryn Kyle (The God of Animals), John Murillo (Up Jump the Boogie), Sung J. Woo (Everything Asian), Brooke Berman (No Place Like Home), Matt Stewart (French Revolution), Fiona Maazel (Last Last Chance), and Daphne Beal (In the Land of No Right Angles).
Location: powerHouse Books, 37 Main St.
Date: 7 p.m.
Price: FREE

Books to Movies: The Sweet Hereafter. In this 1997 adaptation of Russell Banks’s novel, directed by Atom Egoyan and starring Ian Holm and Sarah Polley, a big-city lawyer descends on a small Canadian town following a tragic school bus accident to organize a civil-action suit, while simultaneously mourning the loss of his own daughter to drug addiction. Atom Egoyan’s masterpiece is a sensitive examination of overcoming grief. Q&A with authorRussell Banks.
Location: BAM Rose Cinemas, 30 Lafayette Ave.
Time: 7:30 p.m.
Price: $12 (general admission) / $8 (BAM Cinema Club members)

Literary Pub Contest staged by PEN American Center at St. Ann’s Warehouse. The first-ever PEN Quiz Night. Don’t miss the chance to compete with (and against!) your favorite authors. We’ll bring the paper and the pencils; you bring your literary mettle!
Location: St. Ann’s Warehouse, 38 Water St.
Time: 7–10 p.m. (doors open at 7 p.m.)
Price: FREE

ringShout: A Place for Black Literature kicks off its new reading series. Join us for an evening of readings by four acclaimed African American writers. Featuring Ta-Nehisi Coates, Tayari Jones, Jeffery Renard Allen, and Danielle Evans. DJ sounds by Rob Fields.
Location: Littlefield, 622 Degraw St. (between 3rd and 4th Aves.)
Time: 7–9 p.m.
Price: $5 (suggested donation)

Continue reading Bookends: Tonight and Saturday Before Brooklyn Book Festival

Brooklyn Reading Works 2010-2011 Schedule: It’s Here!

As most of you know Brooklyn Reading Works is a monthly reading series at the Old Stone House in Park Slope, Brooklyn produced by me and curated by talented writers and editors.  All the readings are at 8PM. Suggested donation of $5 includes wine and snacks. Books are usually sold and there is often a Q&A after the reading.

I’ve updated the BRW website and there’s a Facebook page as well.

The Old Stone House. Fifth Avenue and Third Street in JJ Byrne Park (AKA Washington Park in Park Slope. Go to the house’s website for directions.

September 23, 2010: Young Writers
Curated by Jill Eisenstadt

October 21, 2010: New Plays by Brooklyn Playwrights
Curated by Rosemary Moore

November 11, 2010: Writing War Fiction by Vets of Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan
Curated by Louise Crawford

December 16, 2010: Feast: Writers on Food

Curated by Michele Madigan Somerville (an annual benefit for the soup kitchen at St. Augustine’s Roman Catholic Church in Park Slope)

January 20, 2011: The Truth and Oral History (the double life of the interview) Curated by John Guidry

February 17, 2011: Memoirathon
Curated by Branka Ruzak

March 17, 2011: Blarneypalooza
Curated by Michele Madigan Somerville

April 14, 2011: In the Year of the Rabbit: Voices from the East
Curated by Sophia Romero

May 19, 2011: Edgy Mother’s Day
Curated by Louise Crawford and Sophia Romero

June 16, 2011: Fiction in a Blender
Curated by Martha Southgate

Tonight: RingShout Reading at Littlefield in Park Slope/Gowanus

RingShout: a Place for Black Literature kicks off its new reading series and celebrates the 2010 Brooklyn Book Festival

Tonight at Littlefield (622 DeGraw Street) from 7PM unitl 9PM, an evening of readings by four acclaimed African-American writers.

Ta-Nehisi Coates, Tayari Jones, Jeffrey Renard Allen and Danielle Evans.

Danielle Evans, author of the brand new Before You Suffocate You Damn Fool Self, read last June at Brooklyn Reading Works. Her writing is wonderful and I can’t wait to hear her again. Tonight there will be DJ Sounds by Rob Fields. The Suggested donation: $5

OTBKB Teaching a Blog Class This Monday! Come One, Come All

Hey everybody: I am teaching a class in Manhattan this Monday Night called Blogging 101.

A group called NYC Entrepreneurs contacted me and asked me to do it and I said, “Hell, yeah, I love to talk about blogging.”

Here is the class description. It only costs $10 and it would be fun if some of you were there (keep me company, put in your two cents, learn something new, teach me something new).

Entrepreneurs create and use blogs to engage their customers/readers, build their brand, position themselves as experts in their field, develop trust and create community.

There are over 100 million blogs online today and that number is growing. How does your blog stand out from the crowd and how do you increase the number of readers to your blog?

Learn how to create a great blog and increase your blogs traffic with strategies used by some of the most successful bloggers today.

In this class you will learn:

• Strategies for increasing your blog readership
• How to analyze your blog to see what works and what does not work
• How to make money with your blog
• How to create rich, relevant and engaging content
• How to use social media and guerilla marketing tactics to increase your blog traffic

Date: Monday, September 13, 2010 at 6:00 P.M.

Location: City Space Suites. 817 Broadway (b/w 11th and 12th) 10th fl
New York, NY

Agenda:
6:00 PM – 6:30 PM: Registration
6:30 PM – 8:00 PM: Presentation / Q &A
8:00 PM – 8:30 PM: Networking

Particle Collider (September 10)

Speaking of poems, my friend Michele Madigan Somerville has a poem up on her blog today called Particle Collider (September 10) for Louise Crawford.

It is dedicated to me, which is thrilling. The poem was inspired by the poet’s thoughts on the day of my father’s funeral in 2008.

The poem is also about September 11th and thoughts about leaving or staying in New York City after that day.

Michele is a Native New Yorker, who writes frequently about religion for the Huffington Post. She is the author of the book-length poem WISEGAL (Ten Pell Books 2001) and Black Irish, her first collection of verse. Her verse has appeared in many literary journals.

Somerville’s work received an Honorable Mention in Dublin’s Ireland’s Eason Books Poetry Competition in 2003, first place in the W.B. Yeats Society poetry competition in 2000, a MacArthur scholarship for poetry at Brooklyn College in 1987, and the Louise B. Goodman Award for Women-Centered writing at Brooklyn College in 1988.

She curates readings at The Old Stone House in Park Slope, including the upcoming Feast (Writers on Food) on December 16th, 2010 at 8PM and Blarneypalooza on March 17th, 2011 at 8PM and has hosted readings at Ceol Bar in Cobble Hill Brooklyn and Cornelia Street Café in Manhattan. Somerville recently completed two collections of verse: Glamorous Life, and Stations of Light. She is currently working on a novel, Sucker Punch.

Read more to see my favorite section of her poem…

Continue reading Particle Collider (September 10)

OTBKB Music: 14 Song Freebie and Photos from The Rockwood Music Hall

I haven’t posted a Friday Freebie for a while, but here’s a pretty nice one.  Last night The Americana Music Association had their awards show in Nashville.  In recognition of that event, Amazon is offering a 14 song sampler from 14 artists.  The link to download the sample is here at Now I’ve Heard Everything.

I spent three hours Monday night at The Rockwood Music Hall Stage 2 listening to Nick Africano, Misty Boyce and Chris Cubeta and The Liars Club.  Wonderful music all around.  You’ll find some photos from that night at Now I’ve Heard Everything by clicking here.

–Eliot Wagner

The Weekend List: And What a Weekend!

It’s Friday and there’s is so much to do this weekend: it’s actually ridiculous.

On Monday I want a full report on how much of it you actually did, okay? I know I’m going to be busy (Brooklyn Book Festival, Bergen Street Lot Party, Zora Space, BAM). Heck, I just spent the last two hours scouring the listings for the best and brightest things to do this weekend. This is for you, OTBKB readers. Enjoy! And keep reading…

Continue reading The Weekend List: And What a Weekend!

The Thursday List: Craig Harris’ Birthday, Bergen Street Lot Party, Mesrine: Killer Instinct

There is so much to do this weekend: it’s actually ridiculous: On Monday I want a report on how much of it you actually did, okay? I know I’m going to be busy (Brooklyn Book Festival, Bergen Street, Zora Space, BAM). Heck, I just spent the last two hours scouring the listings for the best and brightest things to do this weekend. This is for you, OTBKB readers. Enjoy! And keep reading…

Continue reading The Thursday List: Craig Harris’ Birthday, Bergen Street Lot Party, Mesrine: Killer Instinct

Park Slope Photographer Snaps Great Shot of Obama on the Vineyard

Gabriela Herman, a professional photographer, who resides in Park Slope some of the time, took a great shot of President Obama on Martha’s Vineyard this summer.

Herman came to my attention when she asked if she could take a picture of me for her Bloggers at Home series (a work in progress).

We had a delightful photo shoot in my dining room and I now get her occasional emails and know about her wonderful blog featuring her own work and the work of other contemporary photographers. I urge you to take a look at her high energy photographs!

What a summer she had; what a great shot of our president. Read more for the details of getting the shot of Barack…

Continue reading Park Slope Photographer Snaps Great Shot of Obama on the Vineyard

Marketa Irglová and Jake Clemons to Appear at Zora Space in Park Slope

On September 18th at 8PM, Marketa Irglová will be appearing at Park Slope’s new Zora Space on Fourth Avenue near Third Street. The artist, who is one half of Swell Season, recently performed at Celebrate Brooklyn with her musical partner Glenn Hansard.

But at Zora Space, she’ll be performing her delicate, melodic music with Jake Clemons,

Irglová began playing music at age 7, and began playing piano at the age of 8 when her parents bought her a piano and sent her to lessons. When she was 9, her father bought her a guitar and she immediately began playing and learning songs by ear. Her mother insisted Markéta learn piano because, as a child, her mother’s family could never afford a piano even though she loved it so much.

Jake Clemons has been performing his whole life.  As a child his family traveled cross-country singing and performing musical theater. He is the son of a former Marine Corps band director and nephew of an international rock and roll icon, Clarence Clemons.

Irglová and Hansard appeared in the Irish film, Once. Among the songs Irglová wrote with Hansard for Once was “Falling Slowly,” which received an Academy Award for Best Original Song. Irglová became the first Czech woman to win an Oscar, and at age 19 she was the youngest person to win an Oscar in a musical category. Hansard and Irglová performed the song live on the Oscar broadcast at Los Angeles.

This should be an amazing night at the very intimate Zora Space.

Ghost Bookstores of NYC

Yesterday Boldtype ran a round up of the 10 best bookstores in the US. I hungrily searched the list for familiar and/or local names. The intro blurb lamented the demise of the bookstore and the book business.

“Bookstores are dying. They’re dying because of jerks who are too cheap to buy a hardcover, or even a paperback, and too lazy to get a library card. Guys like the one from Julie Bosman‘s NY Times article, and this guy, and this guy. Even before we break into the eBooks discussion, think about everything else that reading is supposed to contend with these days — movies, video games, television, and the internet.”

It was nice to see their list, which included the Strand Bookstore right here in NYC, Powells in Portland, Secret Headquarters in Los Angeles and City Lights in San Francisco. It got me to thinking of the all the great bookstores that no longer exist in NYC. So here’s my roundup of the ghosts of bookstores past…

Continue reading Ghost Bookstores of NYC

New Parenting Columnist at the Brooklyn Paper

I’ve just discovered that the new parenting columnist at the Brooklyn Paper is Steph Thompson. Her blog, Gold Star for Trying, is an OTBKB fave.

Sure, she’s got big shoes to fill but I’m sure she’s got big feet (figuratively) to fill them. I met Stephane at Blogfest and I couldn’t be happier that she’s taking over the page I occupied for six years.

Good luck Steph  and you get “a gold star for trying” as you begin your reign at the Brooklyn Paper.

As for me, I am excited to be moving on. I will be doing a new column at the Brooklyn Paper as well as a bi-weekly arts and culture feature that will include interviews with notable figures in the Brooklyn cultural scene. Stay tuned for more about that in the coming weeks.

Sure, I miss Smartmom. I’ve been channeling her voice for 6 years and it’s hard to get her syntax out of my head. Rest assured, she (and Crazy Lady) have been texting, Tweeting and emailing so I’m keeping up to date on what’s been going on with the Smartmom clan now that Teen Spirit is cloistered away at a college. No doubt you’ll be hearing from her in the not so distant future on OTBKB.

In fact, if you’d like Twitter updates on Smartmom’s life sign on here.

Stay tuned.

Brooklyn Book Festival Chock Full of Events

In case you haven’t heard: the Brooklyn Book Festival on September 12th (in and around Borough Hall at venues indoors and outdoors) is a huge, free public event about books, established and emerging authors from across the national and international literary world.

The event is making a name for itself as a hip and diverse gathering, that attracts thousands of those who love books. The festival is organized around themed readings and devoted to timely and lively panel discussions with top national and international authors.

This year the Book Festival is adding what they’re calling Bookend Events all weekend, all over the borough of kings.  It now includes three days of parties, music, film screenings, children’s theatre, literary games and author appearances that “bookend” the festival—September 10th, 11th and 12th with partners like BAM Rose Cinemas, Bell House, Brooklyn Bridge Park, The Brooklyn Kitchen, Brooklyn Public Library, CoCo 66, Freebird Books & Goods, Greenlight Bookstore, Irondale Center, Light Industry, Littlefield, Pizza D’Amore, powerHouse Books, and St. Ann’s Warehouse!

Continue reading Brooklyn Book Festival Chock Full of Events

OTBKB Music: A Ticket Giveaway and A Video

Now I’ve Heard Everything is very happy to offer you yet another ticket giveaway.  This time The Rockwood Music Hall is offering a lucky reader two tickets to the September 16th performance of Sam and Ruby, with opener Dan Dyer.  This might be the show to see for those of you who like quieter, folkier stuff.  To enter, just leave a comment on the original post here at NIHE.

Also at Now I’ve Heard Everything is a video of singer-songwriter Amy Speace performing The Real Thing solo acoustic.  I’m probably posting this more for Amy’s monologue before the song, which is part diary and part stand up.  And the song itself ain’t bad either.  Click here to view the video.

–Eliot Wagner

Sign Up Now for Art Classes with Bernette Rudolph

This little red headed girl LOVES her every Tuesday afternoon art class with Bernette Rudolph and now’s the time to sign your child up for this great class.

This little red headed girl truly looks forward to this weekly class and runs from the PS 321 playground all the way to Ms. Rudolph’s on Third Street.  Alright, she walks after she’s gotten an ices or something from Mr. Softee. And when class is over, she is always very proud of her creative art project (fit to be hung on a wall or displayed in the family’s living room).

A talented Park Slope artist, Rudolph has been an art teacher and art therapist for over forty years. She offers wonderful small art classes for children ages five and up. Classes follow the school calendar and there are only five children to each class.

Basic mediums and skills are explored through varied art materials.

The class meets on Tuesdays 3:30 to 4:30 (Bernette says she will add a Wednesday class if the Tuesday class fills up). Class fee is $25 per class, which must be paid one month in advance. There is a $35 material fee paid once for the term paid the first month.

Your child is invited to a trial class for $25.  
If the child joins the class the fee will be added on to your first month. Classes meet in the Art Studio/Gallery of Bernette Rudolph in central Park Slope (very convenient).

For information and to sign up email: Bernette(at)earthlink(dot)net

Full disclosure: That is my niece Sonya pictured. But I am writing this post because I truly admire Ms. Rudolph and know that her classes are wonderful and inspiring for children!!!

Take Me Home: Paper Silhouettes by Barbara Ensor at Stigliano Gallery

A wonderful show of the work of artist Barbara Ensor opens on September 9th  (running through December 31, 2010) at the Phyllis Stigliano Gallery, a lovely space in the parlor floor of a brownstone on 8th Avenue in Park Slope (62 8th Avenue near Berkeley Place).

And who knew there was such a cool gallery in Park Slope?

Ensor, the author of Cinderella, As if You Didn’t Already Know the Story and Thumbelina, Tiny Runaway Bride is well known for her paper silhouettes. But this show takes her work to another level with brief narrative captions that are at once funny, strange, spooky and fanciful.

The above picture is from another show of Ensor’s work.

Continue reading Take Me Home: Paper Silhouettes by Barbara Ensor at Stigliano Gallery

OTBKB Music: End The Holiday Weekend with Misty Boyce, Check Out A New Song from Richard Barone and Read News and Notes from All Over

The long holiday weekend isn’t quite over.  If you’d like it to last just a little longer, head over to The Rockwood Music Hall Stage 2 tonight and see singer-songwriter Misty Boyce.  What you get is great songwriting, spirited playing and an energetic crowd and tonight, as an added bonus, Misty will be giving away a download card for “a new old song we just recorded, called Blue Like Sea.”  See Now I’ve Heard Everything for the details.

Richard Barone and his band, The Bongos, were a mainstay of the Hoboken scene in the 1980s.  Since The Bongos split in 1987, Richard has put out a few solo albums and produced other musicians, but there has been no new music from Richard for the past 15 years or so.  That changes in a bit more than a week, when Richard’s new album, Glow is issued.  A video (really just a pic of the album cover) of the first song from Glow, Gravity’s Pull is up here at Now I’ve Heard Everything.

Finally, read about the end of Paste Magazine, the music related programs at the upcoming Brooklyn Book Festival, Rosanne Cash, Steve Wynn and The Miracle 3 and Chuck Prophet and The Mission Express in News and Notes at Now I’ve Heard Everything.

–Eliot Wagner

Announcing Brooklyn Reading Works 2010-2011 Season

An inspiring and always interesting—and entertaining night out, Brooklyn Reading Works has a great schedule for you this year.

Join us one Thursday a month at Park Slope’s  The Old Stone House come to a themed reading by authors of absorbing fiction, poetry, memoir and drama curated by talented writers and editors. All readings are at 8PM. $5 donation includes wine, snacks, great writers and good company.

2010-2011 BROOKLYN READING WORKS SEASON

All readings at 8PM

September 23: Young Writers curated by Jill Eisenstadt

October 21: New Plays by Brooklyn Playwrights curated by Rosemary Moore

November 11: Writing War Fiction by Vets of Vietnam and Iraq curated by Louise Crawford

December 16: TBA

January 20: The Truth and Oral History (the double life of the interview) curated by John Guidry

February 17: Memoirathon curated by Branka Ruzak

March 17: Blarneypalooza curated by Michele Madigan Somerville

April 14: In the Year of the Rabbit: Voices from the East curated by Sophia Romero

May 19: Fifth Annual Edgy Mother’s Day curated by Louise Crawford and Sophia Romero

June 16: Fiction in a Blender curated by Martha Southhgate

OTBKB Music: The Damnwells at The Rockwood Stage 2

They took the tables out of The Rockwood Music Hall Stage 2 last night so they could fit in sold out crowds at the two shows by The Damnwells.  I was there at the early show and heard the band play their new album (which may or may not be called No One Listens to The Band Anymore) from start to finish and was able to take a nice set of photos.  You’ll find them here at Now I’ve Heard Everything.

Have a great Labor Day weekend.  Check back here on Monday if you are going to be home by Monday night. I’ll have a show at The Rockwood Music Hall Stage 2 that night to tell you about.

–Eliot Wagner

The Weekend List: Labor Day Weekend

I scour the listings to find fun, cool, interesting cultural activities for the readers of OTBKB Keep checking back I update this list Thursday through Sunday (and in this case on Monday as well).

Movies:

Soul Kitchen, The Kids are All Right, Inception, The American at BAM

The Switch, Eat Pray Love, Avatar 3D, The American, Last Exorcism at the Pavilion.

Music:

Sept 3-4, 9-10 Help Save Puppets Jazz Bar Fundraisers 5PM until 3AM at Puppets Jazz bar 481 Fifth Avenue in Park Slope.

Friday, Sept 3 at 8PM at Barbes: Oran Ektin has been described as a “great clarinet player” and “excellent improviser” by the New York Times jazz critic Ben Ratliff and a “woodwind maestro” by PRI’s internationally syndicated show, Afropop Worldwide.

Saturday, Sept 4 at 8PM: New Model Army at the Bell House

Art

Healing the Wounds of War: The Brooklyn Sanitary Fair of 1864 at the Brooklyn Museum. This exhibition presents a selection of artworks and historical objects celebrating the contributions of women to the mid-nineteenth-century Sanitary Movement, particularly the highly important Brooklyn and Long Island Sanitary Fair of 1864. The genesis of the exhibition was a rare doll from the Museum’s collection featuring an elaborate trousseau made by a woman named Eliza Lefferts and sold at the Brooklyn Sanitary Fair. During the Civil War, sanitary fairs were held to raise money for the war effort in major cities in the Northeast.

Through September 30 at the Skylight Gallery in Bed-Stuy: Eyewitness to: Beautiful Black Brooklyn Photography exhibit at the featuring dozens of rare images from the 1960s to the 1980s Tues. – Fri., 11:00am – 6:00pm; Sat., 1:00pm – 6:00pm.

Through October 15th at The Pratt Institute School of Architecture and the Pratt Library: “Le Corbusier – Miracle Boxes,” a multidisciplinary, three-part exhibition on the work of renowned Swiss-French architect, urbanist, designer, writer, and painter Le Corbusier (born Charles-Édouard Jeanneret-Gris), who is considered by many to be the most important architect of the 20th century, starting August 30, 2010. “Miracle Boxes,” the first New York exhibition dedicated entirely to the work of Le Corbusier, is curated by Ivan R. Shumkov, Ph.D., adjunct associate professor of architecture at Pratt Institute. Shumkov will deliver an opening lecture that will be followed by a reception on September 13, 2010 at 6 p.m in Higgins Hall Auditorium located at 61 St. James Place in Brooklyn. The exhibition, opening lecture, reception, and an upcoming related symposium will be free and open to the public.

More to come…

Book Fest on Sept 12: 200 Authors, 175 Publishers/Presses

200 Authors, 175 Publishers/Presses; Artisanal Food Vendors; 13 Venues, Expanded “Bookend” Events all Weekend 9/10-9/12!

It’s the Brooklyn Book Festival and it’s a little more than a week away. Now in its fifth year, the Brooklyn Book Festival is one of the top book festivals in the country.

With the extraordinary literary heritage, vibrant publishing community and international reading audience of Brooklyn and New York City as its backdrop, the Festival offers the best and brightest stars in contemporary literature. The hip, huge and free all-star literary lineup includes Salman Rushdie, Naomi Klein, Paul Auster, Venus Williams, Nelson George, Sarah Silverman, Gary Shteyngart, Mary Gaitskill, John Ashbery, Rosanne Cash, Paul Krugman, Colson Whitehead, Francine Prose, Dennis Lehane, Per Petterson, Esmeralda Santiago, Pete Hamill, Jennifer Egan, Russell Banks, Michael Connelly, John Hodgman, Kristen Schaal, Sam Lipsyte, Sloane Crosley, Maaza Mengiste, Paul Harding, Amy Goodman, Marlon James, Sarah MacLean, Jean Valentine, Elizabeth Nunez and many more, as well as children’s and young adult lit stars like Rebecca Stead, Sara Shepard, Jacqueline Woodson, Jon Scieszka, Jenny Han, Nina Crews, Mac Barnett, Tad Hills, Chris Raschka, Michael Rex, Matthew Reinhart and Francisco X. Stork.

Continue reading Book Fest on Sept 12: 200 Authors, 175 Publishers/Presses

OTBKB Music: Bruce Springsteen and The Damnwells

Both last week and this week were kind of slow musically, with one exception I’ll mention shortly.  So while we cool our heels waiting for Labor Day to come and go and the Fall Music Season to begin, let’s go take a look back at the late 20th century.  Specifically, at a video of an amazing performance of Prove It All Night by Bruce Springsteen and The E Street Band posted here at Now I’ve Heard Everything.

That exception to the slow week?  It’s An Evening with The Damnwells at The Rockwood Music Hall Stage 2 tomorrow (Thursday 9/2) night.  The Damnwells had one of my Ten Best Albums of 2009, One Last Century, which was only available as a free download on the Internet. Their followup is now in the can and the band will be performing it live tomorrow.  There are two shows, a long sold out one at 7:30 and one at 10:15, which the band tells me is almost sold out.  So if you are interested in seeing that show, get your tickets now from The Rockwood’s website.

–Eliot Wagner