Four years ago I got up early on Memorial Day and decided that breakfast out was a good idea. I drove to the only place I thought might be open. It’s a small grocery store and diner called “Fraternity Village” in Searsmont, Maine. I sat down at a table at the open front window and [...]

I liked what Alan Kaufman, Neil Ortenberg, and Barney Rosset did as editors of “The Outlaw Bible of American Poetry“. It’s still in print and selling well. It’s a good read and when it isn’t: the weaker stuff is easy to step over. Look, there’s another poem waiting right there. Thick as a phone directory, [...]

Kurt Vonnegut is no longer stuck in time. I first heard of Vonnegut when he was protesting a war. He was described in a newspaper article as a fiction writer who had been a prisoner of the Germans in World War II. He had my attention. I read everything he wrote. It was hard not [...]

Adbusters Magazine is one of the best things happening in our culture and largely ignored by literary web log sites. I remember the feeling of excitement I felt when I first saw an altered billboard in San Francisco that had a large lipsticked mouth with gleaming teeth glued on the small head of a nearly [...]

Why would anyone want to list their personal library in public? That was my question when I heard about Tim Spalding and his LibraryThing site last year. It makes sense if you are a rare book seller and want people to know what you have, but why would others take the time? Business 2.0 magazine [...]

I enjoy reading criticism and review, but I don’t write it. I am also a baseball fan. Statistics bore me and I don’t have room for the hiring/firing/trading drama that follows star players, but I love driving down to see the regional farm team. If I’m lucky, I will get lost in the game and [...]