Author: Michael Janairo

  • Russell Banks at Saratoga Arts Fest in June

    A new art fest in the Spa City, and Russell Banks has already signed up to be one of the main attractions:

    this is from the post star:

    SARATOGA SPRINGS — Art in its many forms will be on display and packed into a new three-day festival this summer.

    The first SaratogaArtsFest will be held June 15-17, organizers announced Wednesday. The event features performances and exhibits by several dozen artists at venues throughout the city, festival coordinator Marie Glotzbach said.

    The idea of an arts festival had been in the works for six years, Glotzbach said, and Skidmore College helped make the idea a reality. Marie Glotzbach is the wife of college President Philip Glotzbach.

  • Middle school reading recommendations

    stormbreaker.jpegImagine a 14-year-old British boy, orphaned soon after birth, and raised by an uncle who travels the world.

    Imagine this boy being tapped by MI6 to be a spy for Her Majesty’s government.

    Think James Bond for the Harry Potter set and you got Alex Rider, the her of a series of novels by Anthony Horowitz that top the reading list for my seventh-grade stepson and his friends.

    There have been six Alex Rider novels so far:

    Stormbreaker
    Point Blanc
    Skeleton Key
    Eagle Strike
    Scorpia
    Ark Angel

    A seventh is set to be published in November, which is a long way to wait for younger readers. An eighth book is also said to be likely.

    The seventh-grade critic I know says these books are interesting and are better than Carl Hiaasen’s Hoot and Flush.

  • What were your favorite books of 2006?

    marso2.jpgUnion College political science professor Lori Marso, and director director of Women’s and Gender Studies, weighs in with her favorite reads of the last year:

    2006 was the year I reread most of the work of political thinker, Hannah Arendt. October 14th would have been Arendt’s 100th birthday, had she not died in 1975 at the age of 69. Her work was celebrated, remembered, debated, andarendt.gif updated around the world this past year at conferences and seminars devoted to studying why Arendt’s work is still, and maybe even more, relevant than it was in the century when she wrote.

    Arendt was a Jewish intellectual, an émigré to New York from Nazi Germany who subsequently published her best known work, the 600+ page Origins of Totalitarianism, in 1951. Arendt is one of the most unconventional and controversial political thinkers of the twentieth century. Known as an “outsider” and sometimes even a “pariah” in philosophical circles, she valued “thinking without banisters” (i.e. without foundational principles or moral precepts) resulting in anti-systematic and highly original work. Her book, Eichmann in Jerusalem, which was first prepared as a series of New Yorker articles, sparked considerable controversy and criticism in the Jewish community in the United States. I also recommend the biographical Rahel Varnhagen: The Life of A Jewess, one of the first books Arendt wrote (finished in 1933, but not published until 1954), for its depiction of 19th century European anti-semitism and the difficulties and travails of assimilation for the Jewish woman.

    Analyzing the horrors of the 20th century—the holocaust, potential nuclear destruction, the specificities of totalitarian societies, and the “banality of evil”—Arendt’s work is indispensable for an age facing environmental destruction, the ongoing war on terror, and the disintegration of civil liberties and spaces for political action. Arendt is indeed a writer for “dark times.”

    Lori Marso is Professor of Political Science and Director of Women’s and Gender Studies at Union College. Her most recent book is Feminist Thinkers and the Demands of Femininity: The Live and Work of Intellectual Women(Routledge, 2006).

  • NBCC finalists to be announced Saturday

    In just three days, the National Book Critics Circle will announce the finalists of its 33rd annual book awards. The member votes are being tallied as we speak, and this Saturday the board will meet at the offices of Library Journal on Park Avenue South in New York City to deliberate.

    The announcement of the finalists will be posted on the NBCC blog by 6:45 pm Sat. The blog is here.

  • Who’s going to see Richard Ford?

    Thanks to Eli for posting about the upcoming Ford visit. I know one person has written in to say he expects to attend. I’m going to try to make it. Anyone else?

  • Ultimate lists; ultimate time-waster

    This looks like fun, if you have the time: 125 writers are asked to name their top 10 books.  It’s a Web site and a book, created by fellow National Book Critics Circle member J. Peder Zane, the Book Review Editor and Books Columnist for the News & Observer in Raleigh, N.C.

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  • The Big Read 2007

    The Upper Hudson Library System will be taking part in the National Endowment for the Arts Big Read 2007 program, featuring Zora Neale Hurston’s “Their Eyes Were Watching God.”

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  • Events on Wednesday, Jan. 17

    From Christopher D. Ringwald’s A DAY APART press release:

    Ringwald is a journalist (and a former Times Union reporter) and educator based as a visiting scholar at The Sage Colleges in Albany, NY. A DAY APART has been hailed by Asma Gull Hassan as “a solemn, brilliant call to multi-faith commonalities and by Solomon Schimmel as “illuminating and inspiring.”

    (Oxford University Press, Jan. 2007; Aly Mostel, publicist, 212 726-6111)

    Roundtable with author and families portrayed in A Day Apart. Wednesday, January 17. 5:30 pm potluck, 7 pm discussion. Catholic Worker House, 45 Trinity Place, Albany, NY 12207. Contact Fred Boehrer, 518 292-1727.

  • Zadie Smith on reading

    zadie_smith.jpg“Reading, done properly, is every bit as tough as writing,” says one of my favorite novelists, Zadie Smith (“White Teeth” and “On Beauty”), in an extended essay in a recent Guardian out of London.

    Click “more” for more. It’s worth it.

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