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Waterfall on a Hazy Day

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One of Olafur Eliasson's three New York City waterfalls, this one visible from the Promenade. On display through October 13, 2008. I haven't gotten super close to any of Eliasson's three waterfalls, but any thoughts on this public art project? I want to be able to get closer. I suppose I could always hop on a Circle Line boat. Is it worth it?

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I know I'm not the first blog to report this, but I figure a new shop in Red Hook can use all the help it can get. And so, if you're wandering Van Brunt tomorrow (maybe say having a coffee and cupcake at Baked or brunch at Hope and Anchor), you should stop by metalwork and sewn-goods shop Metal and Thread at 298 Van Brunt, between Coffey and Dikeman streets. The work is the product of two artists, Denise Carbonell and Derek Dominy. See the Etsy store for a better idea of their stuff. The store opens at noon, and the party starts at 4 p.m.

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Zeebahtronic reminded me that the Idiotarod is coming up. There's still time to register or just plan to watch. See what we had to say about 2007 and 2005. The basic jist is this: Teams find, decorate and attach themselves to a shopping card (often while in elaborate themed costume) and race around the city for prizes. One of the best reasons to live in New York in the winter.

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Subway Reads: New Year's resolutions

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Last night, under the influence of champagne and chocolate, it occurred to those of us at abrooklynlife's New Year's party that 2008 rhymes with ... great ... yeah, so some would consider that a rough night. Others, perhaps, would consider that an indicator of New Year's Eve success. Regardless, in the spirit of eminent future greatness, Subway Reads emerges from the glitter and spangle to greet the cold light of the new year with spectacles and keyboard in hand.
Less ambitiously this year, instead of chronicling the ins and outs of the F train, I'll be exploring the much more modest confines of my bookshelf, though hopefully a few observations from underground will make its way onto the screen as well.

Today, we begin with the one book I received for Christmas:

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Women in the Material World

by Faith D'Allusio and Peter Menzel

Arranged alphabetically, Women in the Material World explores the lives of women in countries from Albania, Brazil, and Cuba to Russia, Thailand, the United States, and fourteen other countries all over the globe. This book follows on the heels of the authors' previous project, which documented thirty statistically average families around the world. You can check out their portraits here.

But D'Allusio and Menzel discovered that the stories they had told were predominately male stories, and so revisited many of the profiled families to take a look from the female point of view. This new book is full of life--through conversations, observation, statistics, and of course, photography.

I'll include excerpts from these women's stories here each day of the week.

As Naomi Wolf writes in the foreword, "the beauty on the page is a tribute to the inherent beauty of the subject: the female love, passion, and toil that invisibly undergird human societies everywhere."

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To Do: Brooklyn Book Festival

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Logo_3 Sixty-nine events. Eight hours. The Brooklyn Book Festival is back.

Certainly, borough president Marty Markowitz does enough trumpeting for all of us, but I can't help but do a little extra promotion myself. Most impressive is the broad range of offerings—whether you are a writer, reader, publisher, comic geek, poet, wannabe or just someone who likes festivals, yep, there's probably something you're interested in. Everything is free, even the ticketed events—just pick up tickets an hour before the event.

Kick off the festival on Saturday evening with a free screening in Borough Hall Plaza of Paul Auster's film Smoke.

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Dennis and I have been experimenting with making stencils (not easy when you have grandiose ideas about how complex said stencil should be). I posted a long, long time ago about Stencil 1, but I came across the company again in my search for examples of nice stencils. I'm particularly taken with how they've treated this room (photo below), using a lighter color with the stenciled image, instead of the traditional darker--I find it quite striking. Don't be surprised if it crops up on one of our walls in a future post.

Birchforest_room

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Floatingpoollady

There's no shortage of things to do in Brooklyn when the parents come to town. Today's agenda included brunch at Miriam, a stop at Lily (cute $34 green top) and Soula, (super comfy $95 fs/ny flats--both people in front of me also purchased a pair) a walk through Brooklyn Heights (does anyone know what the Floating Pool Lady is?--above), a stroll down the promenade, leisurely Brooklyn Bridge park hopping, and classical music on a barge.

Music on the barge was the one thing I'd never done before, and I'd highly recommend it to anyone who likes an intimate classical concert and isn't bothered by a bit of rocking when the big boats roll by. Truth be told for the first two pieces, I felt like I was on six bottles of beer, but once my insides got used to the lilt of the outside, I enjoyed being within spitting distance of the performers. The barge itself is pretty cool--wood paneled interior, wood floor, and a raised stage with a grand piano, plus the performers of the day. My favorite part was listening to the music and watching the birds float by in front of the Manhattan skyline.

Here's the program ($30 a ticket):

Piston
Duo for Viola and Cello
Lees
Contrasts for Solo Violin (World premiere--the composer was in the audience)
Beethoven
String Trio in G major. Op. 9, No.1
Schumann
String Quartet in   F Major, Op. 41, No. 2

Hiroko Yajima, Violin
Harumi Rhodes, Violin
Samuel Rhodes, Viola
Marcy Rosen, Cello

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Subway Reads: Poem in Your Pocket

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Pocket_3Put a Poem in Your Pocket

One good reason to get out of bed this rainy Friday: the magic of alliteration.

National Poetry Month winds down this weekend, and to bid a fond farewell, the city of New York has teamed up with a bevy of august organizations to get poetry out into the streets (or, at least into a certain Manhattan park). Bring a poem to the Bryant Park reading room any time today and receive a free book of poetry.  Students can participate in an open mic all afternoon.

Poem in Your Pocket Day
Friday, April 27, 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Bryant Park, 40th to 42nd  streets between 5th and 6th avenues

In my pocket today:

Meditation at Lagunitas by Robert Haas

All the new thinking is about loss.
In this it resembles all the old thinking.
The idea, for example, that each particular erases
the luminous clarity of a general idea. That the clown-
faced woodpecker probing the dead sculpted trunk
of that black birch is, by his presence,
some tragic falling off from a first world
of undivided light. Or the other notion that,
because there is in this world no one thing
to which the bramble of blackberry corresponds,
a word is elegy to what it signifies.
We talked about it late last night and in the voice
of my friend, there was a thin wire of grief, a tone
almost querulous. After a while I understood that
talking this way, everything desolves: justice
pine
, hair, woman, you and I. There was a woman
I made love to and I remembered how, holding
her small shoulders in my hands sometimes,
I felt a violent wonder at her presence
like a thirst for salt, for my childhood river
with its island willows, silly music from the pleasure boat,
muddy places where we caught the little orange-silver fish
called pumpkinseed. It hardly had to do with her.
Longing, we say, because desire is full
of endless distances. I must have been the same to her.
But I remember so much, the way her hands dismantled bread,
the thing her father said that hurt her, what
she dreamed. There are moments when the body is as numinous
as words. Days that are the good flesh continuing.
Such tenderness, those afternoons and evenings,
saying blackberry, blackberry, blackberry.

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Putting Your Diploma to Work

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Admin_3
In honor of the under-employed, Happy Administrative Professionals Day!

Instead of the awkward post-dinner drink with coworkers, most of whom make more money than you do, spend the evening with folks who really care. The Reverend Jen has organized a night of reverence, delight, drunken debauchery, and what's even better--free treats. Relax with free back rubs, makeovers, an open mic, raffle prizes and (she promises) more!

Reverend Jen's 11th Annual Professional Secretaries Day Extravaganza

9:30 p.m. at Mo Pitkin's, 34 Avenue A

$4

(thanks to nonsense nyc for the tip)

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Funny Fashion Week Video

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My friend Keith Wagstaff over at Fashion Geek just uploaded this hilarious video.

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