NPR: World Cafe’s David Dye interviews Chris Walla about his newest album, Field Manual. Have any of you heard it? NPR: World Cafe Story
This is really amazing. Dan Phillips creates homes using 85% recycled or reused materials, which is incredible in itself, but Phillips works with the working poor to . . . just watch:
via Treehugger Article check out Phillips’s website.
Anyone looking to major in geology? Something to think about: NPR Story.
Domingo Martin plays a song using his Moleskine journal as his only instrument. Video at Moleskinerie.com Article.
Interesting commentary on the current election slogans. In These Times Article
Library WII. Gothamist Article
John Marks writes about Stoker’s Dracula and how it reminds him of . . . Easter. Just check it out: NPR Story.
NPR: World Cafe’s David Dye interviews Chris Walla about his newest album, Field Manual. Have any of you heard it? NPR: World Cafe Story
This is really amazing. Dan Phillips creates homes using 85% recycled or reused materials, which is incredible in itself, but Phillips works with the working poor to . . . just watch:
via Treehugger Article check out Phillips’s website.
Anyone looking to major in geology? Something to think about: NPR Story.
Domingo Martin plays a song using his Moleskine journal as his only instrument. Video at Moleskinerie.com Article.
Interesting commentary on the current election slogans. In These Times Article
Library WII. Gothamist Article
John Marks writes about Stoker’s Dracula and how it reminds him of . . . Easter. Just check it out: NPR Story.
NPR: World Cafe’s David Dye interviews Chris Walla about his newest album, Field Manual. Have any of you heard it? NPR: World Cafe Story
This is really amazing. Dan Phillips creates homes using 85% recycled or reused materials, which is incredible in itself, but Phillips works with the working poor to… Just watch.
via Treehugger Article check out Phillips’s website.
Anyone looking to major in geology? Something to think about: NPR Story.
Domingo Martin plays a song using his Moleskine journal as his only instrument. Video at Moleskinerie.com Article.
Interesting commentary on the current election slogans. In These Times Article
Library WII. Gothamist Article
John Marks writes about Stoker’s Dracula and how it reminds him of . . . Easter. Just check it out: NPR Story.
with some sad news.
Arthur C. Clarke, author of 2001: A Space Odyssey, has died. I’m not sure how many of you are familiar with his works, but there are many eulogies and tributes available online (Christian Science Monitor, The New York Times, NPR, Google Search) for you to check out. Much has been made of his most famous work, 2001: A Space Odyssey (first a book then a movie with Kubrick), but I am most familiar with him though his World of Strange Powers miniseries.
We have lost four brilliant minds in less than a year (Clarke, Ingmar Bergman, Madeline L’Engle, and of course, Kurt Vonnegut). I’m not sure why this has caught me so off guard, but I can’t help but imagine what my world would be like if I hadn’t read A Wrinkle in Time when I was in elementary school, if Clarke’s World of Strange Powers hadn’t scared the pants off me when I was younger, or if I hadn’t watched The Seventh Seal in college. I won’t attempt to explain the impact Vonnegut’s oeuvre has had on my love of reading, because I’m not sufficiently talented to explain that in a blog entry. It seems to me, though, that when an author goes beyond simply keeping the reader’s attention, beyond entertainment, and is able to impact the reader’s perception of the world, the author has tapped into the true power of the written word. That is, I believe, the point of most (if not all) writing. Just something to think about.
For your journal (perhaps), here are Clarke’s Three Laws of Prediction:
What authors, artists, musicians, inventors, magicians, scientists, politicians, philosophers, or saints have had an impact on your life?
Per aspera ad Astra.
We all get a song stuck in our heads every once in a while, but Robert Krulwich interviews a deaf woman who has had music playing in her head for years. NPR Story