Here in Illinois, it's simply Northern. My heart goes out to Northern.
Thursday, February 14, 2008
"Dowdy world" love story
Back when there were phone booths:
Janet and Nathan Polsky, both 84, were prom dates as high school sweethearts in 1941. He soon entered the military, and the two became involved in separate lives. He studied art at New York University. She, who had wanted to be an opera singer, joined the chorus of the original Broadway production of "Oklahoma!”Mortals Amid the Immortals, Savoring the Romance of Art (New York Times)
One afternoon after World War II, she was at the Museum of Modern Art and accidentally left her wallet in a phone booth. He called her the next day. He said: “This is Nat. Did you lose your wallet?” He had also been at MoMA, just happened to be the next person to go into the booth, and found it. Shortly afterward, they married.
Mrs. Polsky mused, “Talk about destiny.”
All "dowdy world" posts (via Pinboard)
By Michael Leddy at 8:45 AM comments: 0
Happy Valentine's Day
Yes, it's for you.
Photograph by James Kimberlin (valart2008), via Flickr, licensed under a Creative Commons License.
By Michael Leddy at 7:22 AM comments: 0
Wednesday, February 13, 2008
Proust in Love, on sale
Attention, Proustian shoppers: William C. Carter's Proust in Love is on sale at Amazon. Really, really on sale. Hardcover list price: $26. Sale price: $7.62.
All Proust posts (Pinboard)
By Michael Leddy at 11:08 PM comments: 1
CNN and mixed metaphors
It's a race. It's a gun battle. It's a prizefight. From CNN's front page tonight:
Democratic presidential hopeful Barack Obama, moving into front-runner status following a week of eight straight wins, is facing a new rival, exchanging fire with John McCain, the presumptive GOP nominee. In what could be a preview of the general election, the two exchanged jabs over Iraq and the economy, sure to be key issues in November.Related posts
The Elements of Style
Mixed metaphors
Myth and mixed metaphors
By Michael Leddy at 9:09 PM comments: 1
How to make a "recent posts" feed
Since switching to new Blogger, I've missed old Blogger's "recent posts" bit in the sidebar. I realized yesterday that one can recreate "recent posts" via a page element with a blog's feed. But Blogger limits a feed to a maximum of five posts.
A better solution: a bit of JavaScript courtesy of Alan Levine that creates a feed with as many posts as you like: Feed2JS. I chose ten. Seems like old times.
(Thanks, Alan! And thanks to Modevia Web Services, home of the server that runs Feed2JS.)
By Michael Leddy at 6:48 AM comments: 0
Tuesday, February 12, 2008
SparkNotes and Homer
The man for wisdom's various arts renown'd,Say what?
Long exercised in woes, O Muse! resound;
Who, when his arms had wrought the destined fall
Of sacred Troy, and razed her heaven-built wall,
Wandering from clime to clime, observant stray'd,
Their manners noted, and their states survey'd,
On stormy seas unnumber'd toils he bore,
Safe with his friends to gain his natal shore:
Vain toils!
Students who think that SparkNotes make life easier have another think coming when it comes to Homer's Odyssey. Here's what Spark offers as a reading text to accompany its plot summaries: Alexander Pope's translation in heroic couplets. Vain toils indeed!
All Homer posts (Pinboard)
By Michael Leddy at 9:08 PM comments: 0
The car as oikos
Chrysler chairman Robert L. Nardelli, in a New York Times article on the trend to outfit cars with elaborate entertainment technology:
"I think a vehicle today has to be your most favorite room under your roof. It has to bring you gratification; it has to be tranquil. It's incidental that it gets you from Point A to Point B, right?"Thus the car as oikos. Note that those who are to dwell in this house of the future are deemed incapable of finding gratification in low-tech endeavors: reading, drawing, singing, talking, telling stories, playing "I spy," looking at scenery. All pleasure must be mediated — and, as the Times article details, dangerously distracting to the driver.
More High-Tech Invitations to Take Your Mind Off Road (New York Times)
By Michael Leddy at 6:59 AM comments: 1
Monday, February 11, 2008
Like hope, but different
A parody of will.i.am's "Yes, We Can" song, short and to the point:
john.he.is (YouTube)
By Michael Leddy at 11:25 AM comments: 4
Bafangool!
Part of what makes Orange Crate Art exciting for me is the chance to share what I learn and to learn, in turn, from readers. Manicule? Who knew? George and Lesle's comments on that post point to further beautiful curiosities in the language of type: dingbat, pilcrow.
Something I just learned: the meaning of bafangool, via a piece in the New Yorker on Beppe Grillo, a comedian fighting political corruption in Italy. Reading about the word vaffanculo, I realized that here was the word I heard kids saying in Brooklynese Italian forty years or so ago: Bafangool! I never knew what it meant, only that it was "bad."
As you may know or suspect, this post has come to focus on an Italian curse. Click at your own risk:
Beppe's Inferno (New Yorker)
Bafangool (WordReference.com)
Vaffanculo (WordReference.com)
Va Fangul! . . . And Have a Nice Day (Time)
And one more, risk-free:
You Say Prosciutto, I Say Pro-SHOOT (New York Times)
By Michael Leddy at 6:42 AM comments: 0