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Books

Topic archive / 103 posts

See also my reading diary

1300 pages of Raymond Chandler and a down blanket. Merry Christmas.

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ArtsBeat: Winfrey Picks 2 Dickens Novels

No need to click through. Just check out the abstract.

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Completely outstanding @creativemorning talk from @zuckermanstudio today. musicthebook.com

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Sleepwalk With Me and Other Painfully True Stories book cover

Sleepwalk With Me and Other Painfully True Stories

I became a fan of Mike Birbiglia after hearing a handful of his stories on This American Life and The Moth. But before I could get around to checking out one of his albums or seeing one of his performances, Sleepwalk With Me was published, so I picked it up expecting great things. And in some ways, it is great. Just not quite as great as I expected.

In the AV Club interview that persuaded… See more →

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Books: Interview: Mike Birbiglia

One of our rules of thumb or guiding principles is that the writing has to be about—I don’t know if this makes sense when I describe it in words, but the writing has to be about the audience. The writing can’t be about me. It has to be about everyone.

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“Henry & Glenn Forever” + “Out of Stock” = “Sad Face” microcosmpublishing.com/catalog/z…

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So, has any book ever not topped the New York Times Bestseller list?

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Penmanship of the 16th, 17th, and 18th centuries

And it’s not even my birthday yet.

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Just finished @adactio's forthcoming HTML5 for Web Designers from @abookapart. Unsurprisingly, it is excellent. books.alistapart.com

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Dust jackets establish books' visual identities, yet are only marginally attached, and must be removed for comfortable reading. Poor design.

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Can any bibliophiles out there explain to me how dust jackets are not obnoxiously superfluous?

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New Book Collects Misfits Photography

!!!

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Thomas Pynchon has disabused me of any notion I may have had about myself being an expressive writer.

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At long last, The Superest book is available! If you want my advice, I think you should get it right now. amazon.com/Superest-Kevin-Cor…

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A Visual History of Typefaces and Graphic Styles, Volume 1 (1628–1900) has arrived, and I am in love. amazon.com/Type-Visual-Histor…

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People who like to laugh should pick up @mSutters's new book, Son of Picnic Mtn (lulu.com/content/paperback-bo…), featuring this gem: inkfinger.us/my_weblog/2006/0…

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Liking Penguin's approach to their New Think for Old Publishers panel: they describe their problems and the audience offers solutions.

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Zombie Haiku!

one thing on my mind only one thing on my mind I'm going to eat you

amazon.com/Zombie-Haiku-Good-…

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At the Free Library for a graphic novel panel featuring Spiegelman, Burns, Abel, Kidd, and more.

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All the mainstream press can say about comics is that they're finally recognized as a real art form, which means it's still not true.

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"To really try to be informed and literate today is to feel stupid nearly all the time, and to need help." - David Foster Wallace

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Consumption: September 2008

In the Stereo

On the Silver Screen

In Print

  • Watchmen by Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons
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Watchmen book cover

Watchmen

I never really got into superhero comics, and while Watchmen is quite a bit more sophisticated than most of the ones I've been exposed to, it indulges in enough of the genre's brash fantasy to keep me from being as excited about it as a lot of people are. That said, I did really enjoy it. Alan Moore's alternate 20th century is more interested in its (mostly) mortal heros' politics and relationships than their powers… See more →

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Consumption: August 2008

On the Web
  • Dear Lulu: A downloadable book of print samples you can use to test the capabilities of print-on-demand services. Such a great idea.
In the Stereo
On the Silver Screen
In Print
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Did way more reading this summer than I have in a long time. Novels, short stories, fiction, nonfiction. Feels good to be back on the horse.

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The Book of Other People book cover

The Book of Other People

Zadie Smith commissioned twenty-three reputable writers (including herself) to each "make someone up." Their stories were named after their characters and compiled into this book, published and sold for the benefit of 826NYC, a non-profit that gets kids into writing. It's a good enough idea, but unfortunately, most of these stories are instantly forgettable.

Some of the authors I've found to excel at short-form character studies before (like Dan Clowes and Miranda July) don't disappoint,… See more →

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The Curious Case of Benjamin Button: A Graphic Novel book cover

The Curious Case of Benjamin Button: A Graphic Novel

Preferable to the story's original form, this graphic adaptation is well-paced and beautifully illustrated (full disclosure: the illustrator is a good friend of mine), both preserving and enhancing Fitzgerald's winking, flowery prose. Kevin Cornell's loose lines and sepia watercolors strike a flexible tone that deftly manages the story's mood swings and evokes the era magnificently. The portraits marking Benjamin's progress in backward aging at the beginning of each chapter are an especially nice touch.

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How Life Imitates Chess book cover

How Life Imitates Chess

Part motivational pep talk, part memoir, and part chess instruction, How Life Imitates Chess shares insights accumulated through a lifetime on professional chess's world stage by the most accomplished player the game has ever known. Self-awareness is the main message, and Kasparov has a gift for making the steps to achieving it plain, if not easy. His points are well-illustrated by anecdotes from his chess and political careers as well as historic examples from the… See more →

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If his interview in the LA Confidential behind-the-scenes featurette is to be taken seriously, James Ellroy is quite an ass.

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Consumption: July 2008

On the Web
In the Stereo
On the Silver Screen
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Planning on a relaxed day with my good friends air conditioning and Dashiell Hammett.

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Consumption: June 2008

On the Web
In the Stereo
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Typesetting the whole of Ulysses on a quarter panel of a 7" sleeve.

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wishing my trusted Chicago Manual of Style was handy, and wondering what it has to say about international capitalization standards.

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Consumption: August 2007

On the Web
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Consumption: May 2007

On the Web
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Consumption: April 2007

On the Web
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Bridging the Type Divide: Classic Typography with CSS

A brief history of type

Like all the arts, [typography] is basically immune to progress, though it is not immune to change. —Robert Bringhurst, The Elements of Typographic Style

The art of typography has a rich and storied tradition, and like most art forms, its production processes have moved at a snail’s pace. After Gutenberg’s landmark invention of movable type (a printing method consisting of individual letters carved out of metal) in the fifteenth century, the… See more →

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Consumption: February 2007

On the Web
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The Hunt Is on at SXSW

I’ve done a bad thing. And I didn’t act alone.

Nine esteemed colleagues and I collaborated with Friends of ED editor Chris Mills to create a book called Web Standards Creativity, which will be released early in March. It is poised to infect the minds of innumerable readers with several creative approaches to standards-based web design and development. These progressive ideas in XHTML, CSS, and DOM scripting could single-handedly set back the cause of mediocrity… See more →

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The Ten Commandments of Typography book cover

The Ten Commandments of Typography / Type Heresy: Breaking the Ten Commandments of Typography

This could be a great book if it bothered to go into any actual detail or offer any really compelling arguments for or against abiding by typographic principles. Instead, it offers two equally under-developed halves. The first half gives us the ten “commandments,” several of which are typographically context-specific, and each of which has barely a sentence of explanation or justification for why it should be followed. The second half of the book supposedly describes… See more →

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Consumption: July 2006

On the Web
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Consumption: February 2006

On the Web
  • Microsoft Designs the iPod Package: This amusing little video demonstrates perfectly why designers typically prefer Apple.
  • Metal: A Headbanger’s Journey: An insider’s anthropological documentary examination of the much-maligned musical subculture.
  • Dev2.0: Band-sanctioned, kid-friendly versions of Devo classics on Walt Disney Records. I don’t know whether to laugh or cry.
  • Lotte Klaver: A beautiful watercolor sketch blog from Amsterdam.
  • Netdisaster: Wreak harmless havoc on the web site of your choice. A neat idea,… See more →
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Consumption: January 2006

On the Web
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Consumption: December 2005

On the Web
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Consumption: November 2005

On the Web
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Consumption: October 2005

On the Web
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Consumption: September 2005

On the Web
  • Download My Store: Is e-commerce moving backwards?
  • Shining: A trailer for The Shining, if it were a warm-hearted family comedy.
  • Egg Song: A superbly animated Flash cartoon with a catchy little tune about eggs.
  • MST3K Movie Poster Index: A collection of posters from every single movie featured on “Mystery Science Theater 3000.”
  • A Not-To-Do-List: A big ol’ list of things not to do.
  • Pentagram: Hillman Curtis profiles one of the world’s most… See more →
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Consumption: July 2005

On the Web
  • Guitar Shred Show: Learn the way of the exploding solo and become the shredder you have always dreamed of being!
  • Picnic Mtn. Book 1: Thirty-two pages of perplexingly hilarious comics for $5.00.
  • Live: Shellac: I have passed up a few opportunities to see Shellac. I am stupid.
  • The Bearskinrug Store: Kevin Cornell is now selling prints and posters. Buy now—this stuff is gonna go fast!
  • Glyphs: Dave Shea examines the awesome power… See more →
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Consumption: April 2005

On the Web
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