Tags
. Stone Tavern Farm 4th of July Afghanistan Alan Sidrane Aman Mojadidi Andrew Nichols Anna Moschovakis Apple apple cider Apple logo apple week applejack Architecture Arkville Arkville Bread and Breakfast Art Bibliobarn Bierstadt blogging Bovina Bovina Library Breezy Hill Inn Brian Loughlin Bull Run Road Catskill Mountain News Catskill Watershed Corporation catskills Catskills Community Garden Club Catskills FarmLink Christmas community garden Damien Hirst Dan Chadwick Devin Mills Dick Sanford East Meredith Erotica Farming Bovina Feminist Porn fireworks Fleischmanns flood cleanup Food Francis Jenkin III Frieze FSBO garden snakes gardening Gary Simmons glynwood Goldman Sachs Goya Foods Graffiti Headshot Hidden Inn Home Goods Hubbell Hubbells Hurricane Irene Indrani Mukherjee Jake Rosa Jeff Tomasi Jennifer Lyon Bell Joe Moskowitz Joe Perez John Ruskin Jon Raymond Jony Ive Kabinett & Kammer Kabul Kelly Reichardt ladies of the night Lee Little Lisa Selin Davis local food Margaretville Margaretville Central School Marge Miller Mark Birman MARK Project Marybeth Mills Matinee Metropolis Michelle Sidrane Middletown Mike Triolo Mountain Brook Inn Mureille Scherre Music Notting Hill NY Times NYC DEP Oakleys Our Greater Selves Peg Ellsworth Peter Schjeldahl Phoenicia Phoenicia Lodge plattekill poetry Quarlteres Richard Prince Rob Janoff Rob Pruitt Roger Ross Williams Roxbury Roxbury Central School RSK farm Sara Loughlin Sean Scherer Sex short stories skiing Skin Like Sun snowmaking South Kortright Stephen Elliot Steve Jobs Steve Koester Stroud Sue Ilho Supervisor Campaign supervisor debate Television the Bibliobarn The Catskills The Cheese Barrel The Evening Standard The Peekamoose The Roxbury Barn The Rumpus The Western The Woolpack Treadwell Two Dark Birds Upstater Wayd Jaquish weddings Whisky Williamsburg Winter in the Catskills blog WIOX writing zucchinis

Entries in Bibliobarn (1)

Wednesday
Jun222011

Recent reads on Goodreads... 

My recent review on Goodreads of Anna Moschovakis's YOU AND THREE OTHERS ARE APPROACHING A LAKE.
Now I am not a poetry person (I hate admitting that. Makes me feel like one of those who says they don't get art or "I don't know porn but I know it when I see it..."). You get the drift, basically I am saying I am not an educated poetry reader. (Also makes me sad if people were to say that about short stories --and I'm sure they do-- but it would break my heart).
I loved this -- poetry as cultural criticism, but still moving/emotional. Poetry for the kindof gal I am and was growing up --that is the kind that had a crush on John Ruskin as a teen and quoting Das Kapital in unsavory places. It's a book that looks at the economics of the world with a hard and loving eye. It's generous and critical.
To quote from page 19 part of the first poem in the book:
It has been said (following Ruskin) that 
"The production of base forms of art in painting, music, the drama, literature, the plastic arts, must necessarily entail the highest human costs, the largest loss of human welfare, individual and social. For such an artist poisons not only his own soul but the social soul, adulterating the food designed to nourish the highest faculties of man."
In other words:
     Language: it is fun to watch
     but it's even more fun to play
or
      More than 2,000 persons have been killed in theater collapses in the past ten years.
or
      Adulteration packed the life preservers of the General Slocum
      with sawdust instead of cork
      as she sank with all on board.
Oh, and the other awesome thing about the book -- inspired by books from the lovely Bibliobarn in South Kortright, NY. Aka the Sticks.