Archive for the ‘Current Affairs’ Category

Twitter Book Tour: Paul Greenberg, FOUR FISH

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

Please help me welcome Paul Greenberg, AKA @4fishgreenberg, to his first live event on Twitter. At noon Eastern on Thursday, August 12th (that’s today!), he’ll be chatting with readers using the hashtag #4fish; I’ll moderate and answer any questions you may have about the process. I’ll also handle giveaways of Paul’s book!

More about “Four Fish: The Future of the Last Wild Food” can found on this Indiebound page

More about Paul Greenberg.

New York Times Book Review front-page review of “Four Fish.”

Election Day and Reading

Tuesday, November 4th, 2008

I found this presidential election reading list on PoliticalLore.com, and it got me thinking: What is the relationship of reading to our political process?

Now, it's early on Tuesday morning, and while I've thankfully already voted, I do have other early-morning things to do, like ingest my full complement of very strong coffee — so I'm not going to try and write anything too complicated, lest I get everything wrong, confuse you utterly, and wind up saying something inconclusive and unnecessary.

Instead, I'll say this: Reading and writing meant everything to our nation in its infancy and youth. It was words and their power that allowed a people who wanted freedom to express their principles.

Today, we supposedly still adhere to those principles (on our best days, like today, I believe we do), but many people say that reading and writing have lost their power to watching and listening.

To some extent, that may be true. But I believe, too, that reading and writing aren't simply alternatives to watching and listening; they're qualitatively different. That's why I continue to champion books and continue to string sentences together (even without benefit of caffeine). For someone to write a cogent, cohesive manifesto — like, say, "The Declaration of Independence" — and for someone to read it, actively and thoughtfully…

Well, that's a radical act. It always has been and it still is. Get out and vote, then come home and read something that makes you think. You'll never feel — or be — more American.