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Beau and Arrow – the new intern’s new blog

Dearest Fans,

Welcome to my very first blog, very first internship, and very first exploration into whatever the heck is on my mind.

I have chosen “Beau and Arrow” as the official name for my blog because, well, it sounds cute and slightly creative (hence, the soon-to-be-gained BFA in Creative Writing).

Now seems like a good time to tell you a little bit about myself. My name is Rachel Benun and I am winding down to my very last semester at Brooklyn College :-(The sad face is the result of my undying love for my hometown college, where I have spent the last four years learning about the world and wondering why I am not on the admissions payroll.

So here I am at my first (amazing) internship, basically throwing myself into the publishing world and hoping someone, somewhere, something will catch me. Hope it’s you.

-Rachel

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From Our Beau House To Yours – Thunder Dance in 4.0 Russia

What is the meaning of translation? When you see worldwide thrillers spreading their gory fonts and blazed, burnt (and shiny!) hardcovers all over bookstore tables, elbowing out even Irving novels (!), with always, for some unknown reason, “Available in over 50 Languages!” What does this all mean?

Translation to Derrida meant, well, noone really knows. But it certainly can’t get closer to a literary text’s meaning, we can perhaps safely say it increases the always-already distance to a text from meaning. But today, translation is an afterthought, but an important one. It’s not like people buy Thunder Dance in 4.0 Russia in French and English to compare meanings. It’s purely a marketing ploy, a status symbol of book money, a feat in a “dying” industry (Also, I’d probably buy Thunder Dance in 4.0 Russia but I also made up that title). So, would Derrida be horrified at what translation now means? Are texts further and further away from their meaning?

Are we, everytime we walk into another (metaphorical interrogation) room in another novel that is international-thriller-banking-conspiracy-post-soviet-spy-esque, not to mention (walking into another raw food sushi restaurant room) chic-lit-fashion-smashion-20/30-something-dating-dirge, walking further away from our meaning? Or am I just being an unfounded elitist. Safe to say, I was never cool enough in middle school when everyone else was reading Gossip Girl.

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From Our Beau House To Yours – N+1 Teaches You How To Be A Contemporary Intellectual

On Tuesday I dragged a friend to see, and I use that verb intentionally as it was, indeed, a spectacle: “Evangelism and the Contemporary Intellectual” sponsored by n + 1, the coolest “literary” and “social criticism” magazine in town. Well I’m here to tell you they’re not cool; in fact, they’re not even hot anymore (multiple editors balding, hello 35 you’re-too-old-to-live-in-Brooklyn, Harvard hasn’t found a cure for baldness and self-importance yet).

The panel consisted of several “Evangelists,” none however who fit what you would think an American Evangelist is (b/c we’re talking about intellectuals in New York, right?), also all were no longer “believers:” Malcom Gladwell, A CANADIAN, James Wood, an ENGLISH MAN, and some 20-something grad student at Columbia from New Jersey who has written for a few magazines but was mostly there for gender balance, and to complain about how Jewish she looked. So if you thought it was actually about Evangelists, think again, but n + 1 will still throw the name in there to draw controversy and culturally specific media attention.

The Tischman auditorium was stuffy, and the writers mostly talked about their biographies,  which was the only thing they could do as the topic made no sense. James Wood, however, was funny, thoughtful, smart as hell (Evangelist pun!), and as a result I have a crush on him even though he’s bald and born way before I was. In short, they should rename the PanelN + 1 Teaches You How To Be A Contemporary Intellectual.” These are the steps we came up with during the discussion, or reflective moments of self-proclaimed intellectuals/narcissists (self-proclaimed Russian if you’re Keith Gessen, wow that was harsh):

1. Be on your way to Europe if you’re a delivering an introduction to a panel discussion.

2. Think and talk about when you “came-of-age.”

3. Use the word “vulgar” and “pugnacious” a lot.

4. When someone says “crisis of narrative.” Follow with quiet laughter, knowingly.

5. When asking a question say: “I can still remember reading it in the first n+1,” which was 3 years ago?

Overall, in the words of a New York bard: “n+1 to me means never having finished your PHD, wait, never having finished your master’s.” Amen.

-Nikki-Lee

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From Our Beau House To Yours – Auster, My Auster

Paul Auster’s new novel Invisible just came out last month, the NY times reviewed it, to say it was favorable is an understatement, I quote: “It has the illusion of effortlessness that comes only with fierce discipline. As often happens when you are in the hands of a master, you read the next sentence almost before you are finished with the previous one…” Which sounds a little trite if you ask me, if we’re in the hands of a master, try reviewing like one,  Clancy Martin (I’m such a hater).

But Auster really is a New York master. Publishing consistently, more philosophically intellectual, nay intellectually metaphysical, than most contemporary popular novelists, he’s a rare bird that bridges the gap between the popular and intellectual. And homeboy makes money doing it (I checked his sales). And by “popular” I mean Dan Brown and by “intellectual” I don’t mean Benjamin Kunkel (don’t know who he is? Neither does anyone else who doesn’t live in Williamsburg or Greenpoint). Auster also does all of this in New York, with books very specific to New York, but his novels daily fly past the golden borders of Manhattan and Selected Parts of Brooklyn (he’s an international bestseller). For a city that is more and more criticized for its closed-off (or cut-off) literati, that’s nothing to sniff at. And still, no matter how far Auster travels (I was given the New York Trilogy by a flamboyant Irishman who worked at Shakespeare & Co in Paris, yes, that Shakespeare & Co) his books are always, even, singularly, more, transcendent, cool, eyelid-opening and better here. Why?

He used to be a fighter pilot. He’s bffls with Mark Rudman. He asks us to look at our mind’s eye differently, he still asks us to look differently.

-Nikki-Lee

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From Our Beau House To Yours – Keepin’ You Cool in the Hot Weather

You’re thinking, that doesn’t make much sense. I know.

But here are  some more Events for yo’ weekend, remember: gotta spend the money before it goes to rent.

1. Gotham Girls Roller Derby. At CANAL ROOM/ Sun, Dec. 6: 7-1 pm. 285 W Broadway/ Girls, roller skates, DJ, beer, ironic senses of humor, and if you ever get in a fight these are the girls you want on your side. Get your wheels on! $10 RSVP (www.grdtix.com).

2. “Impulse.” At NYCAMS/ Fri, Dec. 4: 6-8 pm. 44 W 28th. 7th Flr/ Student show and I’m showing my solidarity. If you have money, go and patron people who deserve it. Patron of the Future Arts.

3. Panache Holiday Party. At GlASSLANDS/ Sat, Dec. 5: 8 pm. S 1st and Kent, DirtyBurg/ $5 but you get to listen to Stalkers, the Beets, War Party, others. And you know what? I like The Beet’s humor, and their music, and I’m not ashamed to admit it.

4. Evangelism and the Contemporary Intellectual. At NEW SCHOOL TISHMAN AUDITORIUM/ Tues, Dec. 8: 8 pm. 66 W 12th st/ OK so it’s hosted by n+1, which I will someday expound upon. For now let’s just say: you used to be cool. Go check it out while  seriously questioning the geniuses who think they can title a panel  with the words “contemporary intellectual” without sounding like Brooklyn males, early 30s, who a. didn’t finish their master’s b) finished their master’s and then never went on to do anything else in academia. Then thought: let’s start a “literary” magazine! Good job boys!

-Nikki-Lee

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From Our Beau House To Yours – 5 Things To Do To Make You Cooler in 5 Days part 3

Thanksgiving was awesome: turkey, tofurkey, and silly dancing to Frankie Valla. Yes! Now it’s time to get your cool on again. I’m here to help you get back into the swing of things.

1. Ron Padgett & Katha Pollitt: Poems & Pints. At FRAUNCES TAVERN/ Tues, Dec. 1: 6:30 pm. 54 Pearl St at Broad. Don’t know who the girl is but Ron Padgett is what they’re slowly starting to teach high schoolers as the “New York School” of poets in the 60s. Read that as The Beats, New York style, a bit later, and instead of Allen Ginsburg we’ve got John Ashbery and he’s still around! Poetry in a bar, good marketing.

2. Andrey Vrady: Reconquista. At SPUTNIK/ Thurs, Dec. 3: 6-8 pm. 547 W 27th St, Chelsea/ Photo exhibit at the best named gallery ever. Vrady is an “artist, graphic designer, musician, and director.” He’s like a recession special! All-in-0ne. Wonder if that makes his photos sell at a discount…

3. Plant Body, Animal Body. At CAVIN-MORRIS/ Thurs, Dec. 3: 6-8 pm. 210 11th Ave, Chelsea/ Interspecies references, if you’re interested in: “anthropomorhpism, shape shifting, and metaphysical insinuation. Follow with a list of hyphenated, international selling names to give the show street cred: Gregory Van Maanen, Ignacio Carles-Tolras, Lubos Plny, Mort Golub, Christina Sefolosha (they’re just parodying my joke by now right?), Hyungsub Shin and I could go on but I’ll stop here. If anyone ever uses the phrase “metaphysical insinuation” in my presence I will send you to the School for Wayward Pretentious 20-(30+ if you’re a guy) Somethings. That’s in Williamsburg.

4. Patrick Brennan: Fazes. At DAILY OPERATION/ Sat, Dec. 5: 6 -9 pm. 103 Reade St., No 2, Tribeca/ Abstract painting with lots of hints. Look for: crosses, moons, skulls and probably Hamlet, Ethan Hawke rendition. Or just a pop art print of Ethan Hawke’s face that they’ll sell at Urban Outfitters and call it “abstract painting.” That was harsh. The artist is probably good I’m just hating on what passes for “abstract painting” these days. Glad we got that one out in the open, before the opening.

5. PSA Chapbook Fellows. At KATE’S PAPERIE/ Sat, Dec. 5: 4 pm. 8 W 13th St at 5th/ Has Jean Hartig and Idra Novey reading, who are all people I don’t know. But Lytton Smith is also featured and he’s what excites me when I think about slapping someone over the state of young contemporary poetry. This is rarely done, but since he’s a poet in NY, young, talented, (and not bad looking, hello English accent!) buy his book HERE.

-Nikki-Lee

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From Our Beau House To Yours – My Date With Robert Pattinson

Today is the movie premiere of The Twilight Saga: New Moon.

I’d like to focus on the film masterpiece hitting cinemas today, which as you know is based on the books by Stephanie Meyer, aka Mormon extroadinaire (and abstinence advocate).

What you all didn’t know about New Moon, is that I feature in the end scene, and spoiler alert, I’m gonna tell you how it ends. Bella (played by underage Stewart) up until now has been vampire Edward’s human interest (played by Pattinson, 23).

(Now I’ve never read Twilight so the scene came from skills I learnt from that Christian-Jewish improv team I saw last year)

Bella Swan, after getting in a motorcycle accident is taken in for surgery and discovers a brain tumor that has impaired her judgment for the last year and a half. Doctors thankfully save her life and she realizes her she’s pining for a vampire, rebounding with a werewolf (played by Taylor Lautner) and has vampire crazies after her. She goes into life long therapy for her fear of new moons and the dark, and later writes a self-improvement memoir about it (that last part appears in a ‘where are they now?’ subtitles at end of movie). All of this worked out, she says in the end, because it enabled her to go to college like a normal person.

Edward, heartbroken (oh wait, he doesn’t have a heart, he’s a vampire!) moves to New York City to drown his sorrows with his powerful original songs. We meet in Washington Square Park where he stumbles over the NYU literary journal The Plague, and (because he so old) thinks the plague is actually back and in America. My character, Sella Bawn, stops him from having an anxiety attack and we fall instantly in love. We go on a date at a Older-Hipsters-Meet-Kristen-Stewart-Aged-Girls-Dating-Service bar in Williamsburg (that’s in Brooklyn where his loft apartment is), at which time he reveals his terrible secret: he’s not a vampire but actually Robert Pattinson, and isn’t love with me, but in a longtime relationship with former co-star Daniel Radcliffe.

The End.

-Nikki-Lee

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From Our Beau House To Yours – 5 Things To Do To Make You Cooler in 5 Days Part 2

If you don’t make the openings, the shows are there for a month. Yay.

1. The Resident Faction. At CAMEL ART SPACE/ Fri, Nov. 13: 6-9 pm. 722 Metropolitan Ave, Brooklyn/ Lots of Brooklyn artists, ever noticed that galleries in Brooklyn always have group shows? Too much space (than Manhattan) and too many “artists.” Too mean? Don’t care. Go get your hipster on.

2. Finding Work: Representing Labor in Contemporary Art. At GALLATIN GALLERIES NYU/ Fri, Nov. 13: 6-8 pm. 1 Washington Pl, Village/ Because who doesn’t want more recession themed art at Gallatin (“The school of individualized study”) or (“Where NYU kids go to be different and then complain that they don’t get enough credit [for their difference/uniqueness], while having a thesis photo show featuring their bike friends”)? Let’s have NYU (employee rights violator and the world’s highest tuition) curate a show about the working man, yes please! You should go to articulate this and then ask them to donate money to workers’ rights. Watch NYU security tazer you and throw you out the back door. Free food.

3. DDARK. At HOME SWEET HOME/ Sun. Nov.15: 11:30 – on. 131 Chrystie St, LES/ DJ Kingdom, Hood by Air, and DJ Fatima. I like Home Sweet Home’s chandeliers and mounted animal heads;gallery above, bar below, and I think that’s a pretty honest conceptualization for the New York art scene! Vodka on the house at 11:30 if your feelin’ partial. Also the owner looks like Johnny Depp and that makes you feel young and trendy. Glory Days.

4. German Tagle: New Empire. At ELGA WIMMER/ Thurs, Nov. 19: 5-7 pm. 526 W. 26th St, 3rd Flr, Chelsea/ Who doesn’t like Germans, mixed media, questions about culture? And let’s face it Berlin is cooler than New York nowadays, sorry.

5. Angela Strassheim, Evidence. At MARVELLI GALLERY/ Thurs, Nov. 19: 6-8 pm. 526 W. 26th St, 2nd Flr, Chelsea/ Who doesn’t like CSI? Learn how to not get caught…while making art at “Evidence” which uses forenzic techniques at original crime scenes to make money and profit art out of it. While you’re there make sure you ask a particularly pretentious-looking attendee how much the art goes for! Then ask if Strassheim donates it to crimebusters. Free champagne, wine etc and same place as above (b/c we know how your mind works).

Keep posted for some reviews/impressions/expressions of a few listed events next week.

-Nikki-Lee

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From Our Beau House to Yours – 5 Things to Do To Make You Cooler in 5 Days Part 1

So if you don’t always take advantage of all the superduper cool things in “culture capital” NYC, I’m here to help you out. The following is a list of 5 cool things to do in NYC in 5 days. Before you know it; yes, your newly cool self will be making the rounds in Chelsea and getting invited to cool art parties in Dumbo (that’s in Brooklyn).

1. Tony Feher: Blossom. At D’AMELIO TERRAS/ Sat, Nov. 7: 6 – 8 pm. 525 W. 22nd St, Chelsea/ Sculpture show, lots of pink, talk about seasons since “blossom” is the title, no snickering at overboard minimalism. While you’re there check Yoshihiro Suda in the Front Room of the gallery.

2. TL Solien: To The West. At LUISE ROSS GALLERY/  Sat, Nov. 7: 3-6 pm. 511 W. 25th St, Chelsea/ Because who doesn’t like the American West interpreted in weird colors by a guy named TL? Make sure to look down upon the underage SVA students trying to pregame their Saturday night.

3. Josephine Halvorson: Clockwise From Window. At MONYA ROWE GALLERY/ Sat, Nov. 7: 6 – 8 pm. 504 W. 22nd St, Chelsea/ Windows are the new doors man, get in on the latest “hip fad.” Free wine and PBR usually, make sure you wear skinnny jeans.

4. Tomaz Salamun, perhaps Slovenia’s finest living poet today, reads at the Lillian Vernon Creative Writer’s House/ Mon, Nov. 9: 1 -2:30 pm.  58 W.10th St btw 5th and 6th Ave. Go for a little lunchtime poetics, prove your hardcore, make fun of the severely self-important NYU creative writing program (which sponsors the event because they probably have too much money).

5. “Projection Reading Series” with Jennifer Knox, Tao Lin and others. Curated by Zachary Pace. At CENTER FOR PERFORMANCE RESEARCH/ Wed, Nov. 11: 8 pm. 361 Manhattan Ave, Unit 1, Brooklyn (Graham Ave, L train).  “Text projected beside…a unique sonic and visual experience of the literary arts.” Apparently, you won’t lost the “kinetic energy” audiences usually lose in a normal poetry reading experience. Whatever that means, go, wear neon, have fun.

-Nikki-Lee

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From Our Beau House To Yours-Halloween H20

As Halloween is over I thought I’d catalogue a few impressions from the wonderful night of mischief, vampires, and literary encounters with the ghosts of writers past. If you didn’t spend All Hallow’s Eve at a monster ball in Brooklyn and ended up in a loft party with sparklers, demanding fake passwords from strangers, you may have been in Manhattan, and well, I can’t help you out there, it’s the worst place to spend All Saints’ day.

Back to the Better Borough (yes, said that for the alliteration since this is a publishing house) Repulsed, enthralled, impressed, enlightened, and “Woah, my eyes hurt from all that stardust, Ziggy!” Here are the top 3 costumes I witnessed from my Zombie-Ben-Franklin-Your-Mom persona that evening. Before this list, a quick message on America’s numero uno founding father. First, it’s entirely relevant to this blog: he started as a printer and publisher, dirt poor (like me!) and changed the course of history, while also founding the first Philadelphia public library (not like me!). Back to the list:

1. Some cute little 13 18 year old hipsters (and it is affirmative they were not grad students with IKEA apartments with a creepy obsession with Liz Lemon) dressed as the entire cast of “30 Rock.” So either a) my friends aren’t that cool. b) I don’t have 9 friends.

2. Cast of “Freaks and Geeks.” Now I know you’re not cool enough to think of that, neither was I.

3. Kissing Booth. Genius.

So there you have it, the last ever post on Hallo – remember to hydrate next time kids! -ween.

-Nikki-Lee

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Best Books of 2009 or My Holiday Shopping List

Yesterday afternoon my copy of Publisher’s Weekly arrived and highlighted on the cover: their annual 100 Best Books of the Year. As a well read member of the book community I always look forward to this issue and inevitably feel bad after reading it-this year was no different. There has been a lot of discussion about the sheer number of books being published today, and I will site that as my excuse, because once again I have read less than 10% of the Best of list.

My PW break down: Of the 100 listed, I have read three children’s books- gifts for my godson, one graphic novel- picked up at BEA because I felt I should be better educated about the genre, and three YA novels- I am finding some of my favorite new reads have ended up in YA , that is a grand total of seven titles. I think I should be able to go with eight for my final count as one of the fiction titles listed is sitting on my bookshelf unread, but I digress.

Last year was not much better, and I have to wonder- why is that? With a variety of titles vying for my attention (in addition to those I am looking at in-house) am I picking poorly? (NO! I love the books I’ve read this year). In hope of finding some vindication I turned to the Amazon Top 100, kindly cited for me on PW.com.

My Amazon break down: Two of the three YA novels also listed in PW, six fiction listings now listed in PW, two of which I would not have put on a top 100 list, for a grand total of eight titles. Boo.

What the ‘Best of” craze breaks down to for me every year is, I am sure, its intended goal: a pre holiday shopping list. Amazon brilliantly links their list to BUY NOW buttons title by title. So for my contribution to this end of the year push, included below are the combined titles from both PW and Amazon’s Best of 2009 that I have read and agree should have made the cut. Happy shopping readers. Thanks to PW and Amazon for the frustration and motivation to pick up a few new titles, I hope my sort list may inspire some of you to do the same.

Catching Fire

Suzanne Collins (Scholastic Press)

The Curious Garden

Peter Brown (Little, Brown)

Duck! Rabbit!

Amy Krouse Rosenthal, illus. by Tom Lichtenheld (Chronicle)

Fire

Kristin Cashore (Dial)

The Girl Who Played with Fire

Stieg Larsson (Knopf)

The Help

Kathryn Stockett (Amy Einhorn Books/Putnam)

The Lion & the Mouse

Jerry Pinkney (Little, Brown)

Logicomix: An Epic Search for Truth

Apostolos Doxiadis and Christos H. Papadimitriou with art by Alecos Papdatos and Annie Di Donna (Bloomsbury)

This Is Where I Leave You

Jonathan Tropper (Dutton Adult)

The Unit

Ninni Holmqvist (Other Press)

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From Our Beau House To Yours – Book Philanthropy

While reading Edgar Allan Poe, rather defensively, as I came home to Brooklyn last night on the L train, a young man (ok, let’s say a hipster with an MA in English Lit) asked politely what I was reading. I was faced with a predicament. Do I ignore this (despite what must have been a hipster parody Halloween costume rehearsal) presentable young fellow who was clearly not a subway lunatic, law and order psychopath, or seller of illegal drugs? My non-New York roots said clearly, well that’s just rude. So I answered, rather defensively, Poe. He then said a pretty decent question in my book (yay “book” pun):

“Do you like poetry?”

Me: “Never heard of the stuff (read: lie).”

“What enchanting lies! Here’s a book of poems, take it, it’s good.”

Me: “Um…”

He got off at the next stop while I profusely claimed I couldn’t accept this gift. Now, while my crazy radar went off like crazy, as it does in NY, I thought: well now that’s pretty cool, man. It was an Italian translation of Umberto Saba, and is still in my totebag. In the future I think I’ll be more prone to impulsive fits of literary kindness in the big city. Turn to your neighbor, put on your best smile, a philanthropic book exchange in a looming misanthropic winter!

-Nikki-Lee

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From Our Beau House To Yours – Literary Costumes

As schedules become more hectic with the speeding year, it’s easy to forget about one of the best celebrations of the year, that is Halloween. As a firm believer in the make-your-own-costume Halloween ethic, and given the current economic crisis, I hope many New Yorkers steer clear of overpriced costume stores or websites.

Common Store Bought Costume Examples. And yes, everyone can tell you bought it online:

  1. Slutty Devil/Angel/Vampire/Werewolf/Meercat/Whatever

  2. Slutty Tinkerbell

  3. Slutty Hermione Granger

Now, it may just be me, but the standard let’s pick a universal theme and sluttify it doesn’t strike me as that hard to come up with. But bridging into childhood fairytales seems a little off-kilter. Slutty Hermione Granger? Who came up with that? Why don’t they just say outright: Warning – this is a 13 year old favorite literary character aimed at pre-adolescent teens. Just saying it’s a little weird. What about that actress who plays Hermione Granger? On October 31 there’s going to be 20-somethings all over the world dressed like her, but looking like a prostitute. Just a little irresponsible.

To fight the masses here are some AWESOME do-it-yourself-literary costume ideas:

  1. James Joyce: don some spectacles, a mustache and a constant supply of Guinness.

  2. (for couples) Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes: Red lipstick, 50s garb, and a convincing look of manic depression in your eye.

  3. Hunter S. Thompson: this one particularly helps if you look like Johnny Depp, but unbuttoned Hawaiian shirt, short shorts, glasses, cigarette and cigarette holder, medicinal marijuana if you have a prescription.

  4. David Foster Wallace. Um, too soon? Ok too soon.

And you get the idea: they’re fun, convincing, and you don’t have to worry about pedophilia or going to your cute friend’s Halloween party dressed as a hot dog. Or just the mustard.

-Nikki-Lee

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From Our Beau House To Yours – What I Talk About When I Talk About Brooklyn

Feeling rather pale and sickly lately, perhaps due to the rain and long hours of reading (but also doing the bar rounds at Lorimer and other Brooklyn drinking favourites that have lost my interest), I’ve rethought the notion of the writer/intellectual lifestyle. A number of examples come to mind, we’re not the Beats anymore – we’re not cool enough to jump on a freight car to ‘Frisco (unless your Jerimee’s friend Juan) with the breezy northern California sun on our faces. We’re not war heroes like Orwell or Hemingway; Spain and Italy don’t need our immediate help. No one can really afford an F.Scott Fitzgerald romp on the French Riviera, what do we have? Proust’s beloved Parisian apartment and Kafka’s middle class recluse?

When we look around at who’s deemed creative, the ironic mustaches and pale faces of Brooklyn’s finest. The thrift store magnates, secret Top Shop binges, cafe-with-cool-bookstore-on-Bedford soy milk latte drinking, bleary eyed smokers. It’s actually not aesthetically displeasing, I like that image: think Michael Pitt in The Dreamers, except this is not 1968, or Paris, and most of your friends are from New Jersey or Pennsylvania. The point is (or really my point got a little lost) it’s unhealthy, man.

Being outshined by my older brother’s interest in extreme sports and his shared love of surfing and healthy eating (inherited from my mother), I had some not-so-feeble attempts of fitness positive thinking that manifested in cross-country running. Of course this faded, like all parent-sponsored high school skills, when I started university. Then I read Haruki Murakami’s What I talk About When I Talk About Running (again, left by my brother visiting from Tokyo last week, who mentioned running the NYC marathon sometime in the future, outshined again!). Murakami talks about how running marathons/triathalons/6 miles a day for the last 25 years helps his writing lifestyle, is essential to his creative process. He’s says (in words I will interpret as relevant to my life) you don’t have to be a pale, thin hipster to be a creative genius, and since he’s most likely a creative genius, I’m going to take his word, quite literally, for it. Everyone hit the streets! Take your vintage Schwinn seriously! Hydrate, protein, positive thinking! This is gonna be productive.

-Nikki-Lee

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From Our Beau House To Yours – Hello Cello!

In my quest to become a female version of a Renaissance man, I have decided to take up the cello again. Instead of hiring a private teacher through a music school (which is quite expensive in the city), I thought: it’s a recession, there has to be a hungry cello genius somewhere, right? While at the farmer’s market in Union Square the other day, it occurred to me that I should keep this local, home grown. So instead of posting an ad on Craigslist (because I didn’t want to fear for my life). And thinking it was pretty unlikely to stumble upon a homeless cello protegy that looks like Jamie Foxx (movie reference), I decided I’d put up a sign in the NYU music department. This is what I came up with:

Hello Cello!

Need money for yo’ metrocard? Recession proof music?

Student needs advanced level cello teacher, $35 per lesson, please contact: (and I put my email).

My roommate stopped me before I busted out the glitter pens, pointing out that my sign looked like a three year old’s, or rather, that a three year old would probably have drawn a more accurate cello, or a cooler sign in general. I’d be better off buying a book or looking up cello lessons on youtube. I don’t care, this is going to work, when I’m playing Bach cello suites perfectly, late at night, they’ll be sorry.

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Tie-ins, Give-aways and TV to Book Oh-My!

With the industry debate on the value of e-books, online marketing, free versus paid and the like I thought this would be a great time to rave about an example of how it can all be done well.

One of my prime time, never erase DVR picks of last year (and this) is the ABC show Castle. Crime novelist Richard Castle shadows NYPD Detective Kate Beckett- crime solving, snarky one liners and the requisite sexual tension ensues. Completely enjoyable. In a BRILLIANT move, it was announced that an actual Richard Castle novel would be released this fall from Hyperion (a company not so coincidentally part of the Disney-ABC Television Group).

Not only have the people at ABC and Hyperion taken advantage of an easy tie-in most networks have thus far overlooked or been on the other side of, they have also been doing a fantastic job of marketing the entire collaboration by releasing one chapter a week on the ABC site, and leaving the previous weeks chapters up (to which I want to give a hearty thank you!) I don’t know how many people are visiting the site and reading the excerpts besides myself, some reviewers I found online, and all my friends who watch the show- but I do know that where I don’t usually jump in line to buy a new release hardcover (however modestly priced at $19.95, ahem Dan Brown ahem), I will be swinging by my local indie bookstore of choice to pick this one up. Why? Because it’s good. And there my friends is the key. If you have a bad product, no amount of give away is going to make it good. In giving us all a taste of a Richard Castle mystery, Hyperion has, I guarantee, increased their sales dramatically, which is ultimately the goal.

In this week’s season premier of Castle they included scenes of of the fictional author gearing up to promote his no longer fictional book, due out September 29. I am hoping to see a few Richard Castle book signings (with actor Nathan Fillion of course) in my area soon… can Hyperion and ABC please work on that next?

And as I am plugging a book I sadly did not work on, but appreciate it when others say kind things about my titles:

You can buy Heat Wave by Richard Castle HERE, HERE, HERE, or HERE.

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