Weekly Reader

  • Also, from The Quarterly Conversation, Grant Bailie’s new novel looks interesting, Bolano receives a lukewarm review for Nazi Literature In The Americas, and Daniel Green covers Donald Barthelme, an author I have wanted to check out for a number of years.

Meanwhile…

On Twitter….

  • WordPress 2.6 came out this week. Everyone should upgrade their blogs as soon as possible. The best way I have found is to install this plugin, which takes care of the upgrade rather seamlessly.

  • Dr. Kinsella has finished uploading his student’s readings of Paradise Lost from this past semester. I am going to give these a listen soon.

  • I am really impressed with the new version of last.fm that was opened up for the public a few days ago. Add me on there. The “neighbors” stream is quite impressive; it gave me artists as varied as Devo, Eric Dolphy, Negative Approach, and The Birthday Party the other night.

Newspaper Blackout Poems

Newspaper Blackout Poems is an interesting project that takes newspapers and cross out words to make a poem.  Each week, the creator of this blog offers a challenge (this week’s is Nikola Tesla’s obituary) paper and posts the best user submissions.

This looks like a lot of fun.  A lot of interesting games and constraints can come out of this project.  I am reminded a lot of Regime Change, which is a program that remixes news articles.