
Wednesday, November 29, 2006
Katherine Min at the Writers Center Sunday December 3rd @ 2 pm

Tuesday, November 28, 2006
Wars Within War by Irving W. Levinson

Monday, November 27, 2006
Madam Mayo's Top 10 Blog Title Picks (In No Particular order)
For my amiga M in Mexico: how 'bout them titles? I'm not commenting on the content here, just the titles. I say, a good blog title is easy to remember, easy to type into "google" and it piques one's curiosity.
By Neddie Jingo!
The Duck of Minerva
Evil Bobby
How to Learn Swedish in 1000 Difficult Lessons
Max Speak, You Listen
Nuclear Mangos
The Raving Atheist
Super Frenchie
Whirled View
Wilbrod the Gnome
UPDATE:
-->Click here for Madam Mayo's Top 10 Writers' Blogs
-->And here for the archive of posts on blogging.
By Neddie Jingo!
The Duck of Minerva
Evil Bobby
How to Learn Swedish in 1000 Difficult Lessons
Max Speak, You Listen
Nuclear Mangos
The Raving Atheist
Super Frenchie
Whirled View
Wilbrod the Gnome
UPDATE:
-->Click here for Madam Mayo's Top 10 Writers' Blogs
-->And here for the archive of posts on blogging.
Sunday, November 26, 2006
Maribeth Fischer and "Writers at the Beach: Pure Sea Glass" '07

Friday, November 24, 2006
At the Corcoran: Princess Marie d'Orleans' Joan of Arc in Prayer

"Princess Marie d'Orleans, the second daughter of King Louis-Philippe, was a gifted amateur artist with a passion for medieval art and culture. After a life-size marble copy of her Joan of Arc in Prayer was installed at Versailles in 1837, the princess's sculpture became one of the most popular and widely emulated images of Joan ever made. In the mid-19th century, Joan of Arc in Prayer was replicated and could be found in varying sizes and materials in churches, museums, public squares, and private collections throughout France. Joan of Arc in Prayer is one of the first historical treatments in sculpture of the Maid's appearance. Joan appears here with a short, boyish haircut, wearing late medieval armor, including a cuirass (joined back and breastplates), condieres (elbow guards with shell-like flanges) and in full-scale reproduction, a bascinet (an open-faced helmet) resting with a pair of gauntlets on a tree stump."
The exhibit continues through January 21st 2007. Click here for the Corcoran Gallery's press release on the exhition.
The Bandits from Rio Frio: A Naturalistic and Humorous Novel of Customs, Crimes, and Horrors

Sunday, November 19, 2006
Saturday, November 18, 2006
Oakland CA's Libreria Coyoacan
Via David Peattie at Whereabouts Press, an interesting article by Duanes Moles about Oakland CA's new Spanish language bookstore:
When Hurtado opened Libreria Coyoacan, he chose to name store after the neighborhood in Mexico City where he grew up. Once home to Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera and Leon Trotsky, Coyoacan has remained a neighborhood where the arts and political action meet. Beyond the name, Liberia Coyoacan keeps Hurtado connected to his roots. When Hurtado has trouble tracking down a hard to find book, he sometimes calls old friends back in Mexico City.... read more
Friday, November 17, 2006
Friday Night Faculty Potluck @ The Writers Center

Thursday, November 16, 2006
Eduardo Jiménez Mayo's New Website
Translator, writer and professor Eduardo Jiménez Mayo (no relation?) has just launched his new website--- check it out at www.eduardojimenezmayo.com. His fine translation of Bruno Estañol's "Fata Morgana" appears in my anthology Mexico: A Traveler's Literary Companion. He has also recently published Bruno Estañol: Collected Fiction (1989-2003) with Floricanto Press. Here's what's coming down the pike: The Lost Empire: Literature and Society in Austria (1880-1938), Jiménez’s English translation of the nonfiction title by Mexican intellectual José María Pérez Gay about some of the great Jewish Viennese writers of the Holocaust.
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