Friday, April 20, 2007

A Winning Combination -- The Pushcart Book of Poetry



The Pushcart Book of Poetry shopping cart for online Catholic bookstore for Catholic books
The Best Poems From Thirty Years of the Pushcart Prize
Edited by Joan Murray with the Pushcart Prize poetry editors
Pushcart Press. 275p $29.95
Click here for price at amazon.com

As the poet Joan Murray points out in her introduction to this stellar collection, the “glitteringly self-deprecating Pushcart Prize” has been bringing extraordinary literary talents to a broad readership for 30 years. This volume is the third in a series of prize-winning “Best of the Best” volumes from Pushcart Press (after short stories and essays). It features selections from the annual poetry anthologies from 1976 to 2006, which represent the best from small presses. Murray, the general editor, instead of choosing the poems herself for the volume, asked the editors of the separate prize volumes to pick a number of selections. A communal endeavor, she believed, reflected “the Pushcart spirit.”

The opening poem in the volume is “Power,” Adrienne Rich’s tribute to Marie Curie. Its last lines, which assert that Curie died “denying her wounds came from the same source as her power,” is richly evocative of the early years of Pushcart Prize volumes—volumes that capture the tensions not just in American poetry, but in the nation itself. Rich expressed, better than many poets of her generation, how American power and the wounds to the American psyche had the same source.

Seamus Heaney’s “The Otter” resonates with the lyrical rhythms of memory and personal history. If Rich looks to larger histories, to issues of state, class, gender and race, Heaney’s two selections reveal the poet’s quest for himself and his need to cherish personal and historic memory as a source for poetry. “Sweeney Astray” uses Flann O’Brian’s character from At Swim With Two Birds to find his own identity through Ireland’s bardic past; the meter and rhyme hurry along to the poet’s declaration of self and song.

Although, as Murray points out in her introduction, this anthology reflects a noticeable shift from the “socially conscious early volumes, through the casually ironic middle ones, to the eclectically postmodern and technically ambitious ones,” there is a wide variety of styles and subjects within each section of the book. In his “Everyone Knows Whom the Saved Envy,” James Galway asserts that “It isn’t such a bad thing/ To live in one world forever,” while Lisel Mueller’s “The End of Science Fiction” argues that we must invent a new world, “invent a child that will save the world.” It is not that the poems are so different in language and meter, but they do look at the world differently.

By the mid-1980’s, the Pushcart poetry turns toward concrete language and nature poetry. While nature poetry never really went out of style in the 60’s and 70’s, it was a nature that served political and social ends, as is seen in Stephen Berg’s “Variations on the Mound of Corpses in the Snow.” In John Haines’s “Rain Country,” however, the poet moves through the politics of his early years, ask ing “Is that/ the government? I ask you—/ is that the government?” to remem- bering the friends he has lost, the friends who came with him to the woods before politics entered poetry.

Allen Grossman’s “Poland of Death” and Arthur Smith’s “A Little Death” offer an opportunity to look at two seemingly different poems that might ordinarily never come in contact with each other. Grossman’s poem is an elegy to his father who, in his grave, is scratching his way to the Poland of Death, while the son stands above the earth, trying to talk to his parent. Smith’s poem, the narrative of an old turtle in the Knoxville zoo covering a female turtle—with accompanying sounds that make the viewer/speaker imagine that, even as he is creating life, the turtle must be dying—is both humorous and trenchant. Ironically, the female turtle in the Smith poem “scooting rather/ Indifferently toward the mud-bracketed pond,” after the act, is much like the mother in “Poland of Death” who, indifferent to her own son, says, “This is Death at Last.” What links the two poems are indifference in life and death, a desire to see oneself as unique and the final recognition that we, the turtles, the father, the son, the mother, share primeval connections.

Another set of poems, “Post Larkin Triste,” by Mary Karr, and “Dying in Massachusetts,” by Donald W. Baker, also establish a wonderful balance. It almost seems, reading the poems sequentially, that the man who wishes to die in Massachusetts is the embodiment of the poet Philip Larkin. Larkin wept “hearing Wordsworth read on the radio,” and he told a “terrifying” truth. The speaker who wishes to die in Massachusetts wants to die in a special place. Massachusetts, then, becomes the apogee of his life, rather than the nadir of his death. The man “wading Parker’s River in sneakers” sees the world in much the same way that Larkin’s poetry clutches at the sadness of reality and the imperfections of people, love and trust.

Steve’s Kowit’s “Beetles” is a reminder that the list poem, when executed elegantly, is a wonderful compendium of knowledge and beauty, and Charles Harper Webb’s “Biblical Also-Rans” is a list that urges us to see our lives in the context of the many forgotten, rather than the few remembered. Charles Wright’s “A Short History of the Shadow,” while not technically a list poem, creates a series of images that evokes the many stages of the day and year and shows the reader the shadow in its many and varied forms.

Readers will pick their own favorites in this volume of beautiful, elegantly structured poetry. Carol Frost’s “The Part of the Bee’s Body Embedded in the Flesh” has a simple beauty that almost makes one shed tears. The bee-boy, who “gave himself—his palate, the soft tissues of this throat—/ What Rubens gave to the sun’s illumination,” fills his bosom with bees, and “Whatever it means, why not say it hurts.” As in all poetry, it is the suffering that makes the beauty. It is the wound that creates the power of Adrienne Rich’s poem that opened the volume, and it is “the mind’s raw, gold coiling whirled against/ air currents, want and beauty” that creates poetry. Mary McCay

Mary McCay is chair of the English department at Loyola University New Orleans. Click here for a sample of author's writings in America and for books by author at amazon.com. Link to "sample writings" is slow; link to amazon may list books by authors with similar names.

Source : http://www.americamagazine.org/BookReview.cfm?articleTypeID=31&textID=5435&issueID=612

Pope wins German popular support, sales of book zoom

Cologne, Germany (dpa) - A survey of Germans issued Thursday showed Pope Benedict XVI has won over 70 per cent of his homeland, where many opinion leaders were initially sceptical about his papacy.
The survey by Forsa pollsters for N-TV television found 50 per cent approving the pope and 20 per cent strongly approving, whereas only 8 per cent said his performance in the two years since his election was below average or bad.

Benedict's new book, published with both his papal name and personal name, Joseph Ratzinger, on the cover, was Germany's top-selling non-fiction title in its first week on sale, separately calculated market figures showed.

A Media Control GfK International survey said the title, Jesus of Nazareth, published Monday on Ratzinger's 80th birthday, had a 43-per-cent market share among the top 25 non-fiction titles at book retailers.

Publishers printed 250,000 copies of the German edition of Jesus of Nazareth, in which the pope says the findings of biblical scholars about the gospels should not obscure Christianity's beliefs about Jesus Christ.

As a cardinal and author of many books in German, Ratzinger frequently faced hostile comment in the secular German media. His two visits to Germany as pope proved triumphs, attracting large crowds.

Source : http://www.eux.tv/article.aspx?articleId=6687

Shark Catch in Pensacola May Earn Its Place in the Record Book

PENSACOLA, Fla. (AP) - A shark catch in the Panhandle could be one for the record books.

Four people were cobia fishing Wednesday when they spotted a Mako shark chasing dolphins -- possibly for lunch -- near the shore between Pensacola Beach and Navarre Beach.

A crew from another boat had to help catch the 12-foot, six-inch
shark that weighed one-thousand-63 pounds.

Jim Roberson with the International Game Fish Association in the Panhandle says it's a possible world record in the 30-pound line class for a short-fin Mako.

The current record goes to a 997-pound, 11-ounce shark caught in Sidney, Australia, in 1995.

The largest Mako recorded in the all-tackle division was a 1221 pounder caught in Massachusetts in 2001.

The Pensacola shark is now in a refrigerated truck and will likely be used for research.

Source : http://www.wtvynews4.com/home/headlines/7121056.html

FRIDAY'S LINKS: Protest Over of 'AJC' Book Review Cut, NBC and the Cho Video, Protest Over Elliott's Pulitzer

By E&P Staff

April 20, 2007 10:50 AM ET

NEW YORK In today's links, Jack Shafer says that NBC was right to show the Cho video, Bruce Shapiro wonders what the "narrative" of the Virginia shootings will end up as, and literary voices criticize the Atlanta Journal-Constitution's decision to get rid of its book review editor.

-- Slate: NBC News needn't apologize to anybody for originally airing the Cho videos and pictures, writes Jack Shafer.

-- Portfolio: Billionaire Emigrant CEO Milstein buys a stake in the New York Times.

-- Westword: The profoundly human yearning to impose a narrative line on chaotic tragedy leaves the meaning of an event like Virginia Tech up for grabs, writes Bruce Shapiro.

-- Publishers Weekly: Atlanta's literary community rallies against The Atlanta Journal-Constitution's elimination of the position of book review editor.

-- National Journal: Consumers spend more and more of their media time in demographic ghettos defined by ideology, sensibility, and other sources of tribal identity, writes William Powers.

-- Reuters: A human rights group calls on Egypt to release a journalist who criticized torture.

-- NY Sun: A feature by a New York Times reporter, Andrea Elliott, that this week was awarded a Pulitzer Prize has come under fire from critics because it did not mention that a murderer who committed a 1994 terrorist attack had been incited by a former imam at the Islamic Society of Bay Ridge, as well as for portraying a succeeding imam as moderate when he had praised the leader of Hamas and a female suicide bomber.

-- I Want Media: Craig Newmark insists Craigslist isn't a media menace.

-- San Diego Union-Tribune: Geffen's star power could light up the L.A. Times.

Source : http://www.mediainfo.com/eandp/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003574372

McLain regales fans on book tour

Friday, April 20, 2007

By Brian Vanochten
The Grand Rapids Press

GRAND RAPIDS -- Detroit Tigers pitching legend Denny McLain regaled local baseball fans with tales of going from the big time to the big house during an appearance Thursday night at Schuler Books and Music, 3615 Alpine Ave. NW, to sign copies of a new book chronicling his colorful life.

All of it the truth -- for better or worse.

McLain, 63, spoke about his mixed feelings for Hall of Fame right fielder Al Kaline, the rampant abuse of alcohol and drugs among big leaguers in the 1960s and early '70s and his proud standing as the last 30-game winner in the majors.

He signed more than a hundred copies of "I Told You I Wasn't Perfect," an autobiography written with Detroit sportscaster Eli Zaret, after fielding questions for almost an hour as part of his ongoing promotional tour.

"I'm the last guy to win 30," said McLain, who compiled a 31-6 record in 1968 while helping the Tigers claim the World Series championship. "No one is ever going to do it again. They don't let the pitchers throw that much anymore. They take much better care of their investments in young pitchers like (current Tigers right-hander) Justin Verlander than they ever did of us."

Highs and lows

He endured painful moments on and off the mound throughout a career that included becoming the youngest pitcher, at age 25, to reach 100 wins.

McLain captured the 1968 Cy Young and MVP awards.

In the Fall Classic, however, the right-handed ace surrendered the spotlight to left-handed teammate Mickey Lolich, who defeated the St. Louis Cardinals three times and led the Tigers to a thrilling triumph in Game 7 of the series.

"Lolich made me go," McLain recalled of his personal rivalry with Lolich. "We didn't like each other very much, but we made each other better pitchers."

http://www.mlive.com/sports/grpress/index.ssf?/base/sports-0/1177081055244350.xml&coll=6

McLain regales fans on book tour

Friday, April 20, 2007

By Brian Vanochten
The Grand Rapids Press

GRAND RAPIDS -- Detroit Tigers pitching legend Denny McLain regaled local baseball fans with tales of going from the big time to the big house during an appearance Thursday night at Schuler Books and Music, 3615 Alpine Ave. NW, to sign copies of a new book chronicling his colorful life.

All of it the truth -- for better or worse.

McLain, 63, spoke about his mixed feelings for Hall of Fame right fielder Al Kaline, the rampant abuse of alcohol and drugs among big leaguers in the 1960s and early '70s and his proud standing as the last 30-game winner in the majors.

He signed more than a hundred copies of "I Told You I Wasn't Perfect," an autobiography written with Detroit sportscaster Eli Zaret, after fielding questions for almost an hour as part of his ongoing promotional tour.

"I'm the last guy to win 30," said McLain, who compiled a 31-6 record in 1968 while helping the Tigers claim the World Series championship. "No one is ever going to do it again. They don't let the pitchers throw that much anymore. They take much better care of their investments in young pitchers like (current Tigers right-hander) Justin Verlander than they ever did of us."

Highs and lows

He endured painful moments on and off the mound throughout a career that included becoming the youngest pitcher, at age 25, to reach 100 wins.

McLain captured the 1968 Cy Young and MVP awards.

In the Fall Classic, however, the right-handed ace surrendered the spotlight to left-handed teammate Mickey Lolich, who defeated the St. Louis Cardinals three times and led the Tigers to a thrilling triumph in Game 7 of the series.

"Lolich made me go," McLain recalled of his personal rivalry with Lolich. "We didn't like each other very much, but we made each other better pitchers."


Seattlest Book Club: The Pretty Bad Sorta Difficult Time

April 20, 2007

To recap our past few weeks spent with Timothy Egan's The Worst Hard Time: the initial disaster set-up was working for us (collect all the characters, watch as they fail to heed dire warnings, shake heads as rain stops coming and wheat stops growing), but Seattlest Michael questioned whether people could really relate to the days of mud-houses and not eating and all that.

What we hadn't thought along the way was that Egan's book was hyperbolic. In fact, given the impossible to ignore connection of the Dust Bowl to recent worldwide events (Southeast Asian tsunami and Katrina to name two), we've been surprised so far that Egan has let us draw those conclusions on our own. But maybe he need not point that out to us, perhaps his readers are wise enough to puzzle that non-puzzle for ourselves. Perhaps the best route was to simply describe this event in all its gory detail. Well, not according to the New York Times' review:

The book is, for the most part, thrilling. But Egan trips himself up with redundant outrage and with iterations of superlatives: the High Plains are "the best grassland in the world" and also "the greatest grassland under the heavens." The bison is "the finest grass-eating creature on four legs," and it ate "the richest sod on earth." The author takes far too many stabs at explaining why anyone opted to stay in the Dust Bowl, instead of following the Joads, and he slips from inventive, wonder-filled descriptions of the landscape to pure bluster (the native grassland species were "a perfect fit for a big neighborhood of tough winds and unforgiving sun") and cowboy talk (a town "where dreams took flight on the last snort of a dying horse," people "who believed in tomorrow because it was all they had in the bank").

We feel the NYT was reaching for some criticism with that one. This is a disaster tale, people. The day the worst dust storm stampeded across the plains is historically referred to as "Black Sunday." We'll forgive Egan the occasional superlatives in exchange for the slow dramatic build-up they provide.

We also suspect he knows hyperbole when he sees it. Last week we made brief mention of Dalton Texan editor John McCarty, prompting Seattlest Michael to ask what is it with these Texans and their response to natural disaster. But we have to ask: what is it with these Presidents, and their response instead? From a brief profile of McCarty, we find this gem of a quote from Roosevelt:

"You and I know many farmers in many states are trying to make both ends meet on land not fit for agriculture," he said, "But if they want to do that, I take it, it's their funeral."
Which got us wondering: Roosevelt's callousness not withstanding (and his inability at that point in time to admit his administration's role in creating the situation in the first place), what responsibility do the people who live in a disaster-prone area bear? We're not talking Katrina here, we're just wondering the same thing we've always wondered about people who live in Florida: why in the hell do people still stay after each successive hurricane? Why does anyone stay? And what responsibility does the government have towards those who can't afford to do otherwise? McCarty with his hyperbole and bravado guiled a large number of people to stay, which certainly felt like the most purely and defiantly American thing to him at the time, but at what point is it wise to cut your losses and leave?

Source : http://www.seattlest.com/archives/2007/04/20/seattlest_book_club_the_pretty_bad_sorta_difficult_time.php

New book examines polygamy

Scholar draws on numerous sources from the 19th century

By Brooke Adams
The Salt Lake Tribune

04/20/2007 01:48:36 AM MDT

For many Mormons, polygamy is little more than an "embarrassing doctrinal heirloom," one left unexamined and forgotten in the historical attic.

A docent once even suggested as much to historian B. Carmon Hardy after he asked about the lack of exhibits on polygamy at the Museum of Church History and Art, operated by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

But Hardy would have it otherwise, arguing that the faith's "polygamous passage" and those who lived it deserve a "long overdue heraldic place, a salute to their proud religious audacity . . . ."

Remembering - and understanding 19th century Mormon plural marriage - is the goal of Hardy's just published book, Doing the Works of Abraham: Mormon Polygamy, Its Origins, Practice and Demise.

"I think it is important not because it is something they should live and believe in themselves, but out of regard for the dear, old Saints who gave their lives for it in the 19th century," Hardy said in a telephone interview. "It is quite a heroic story and needs to be told. They deserve not to be forgotten."

Readers will find in the 448-page volume the raw materials of history interspersed with the insightful commentary of a meticulous researcher.

Hardy weaves together accounts from diaries, letters, sermons, newspaper accounts, lawsuits, church records, pamphlets and other primary sources - 120 documents in all - to richly retell the story of how Mormons embraced and then rejected the practice of polygamy. The book covers the period from 1830 to 1910.

Hardy draws on diaries and letters from the 1880s - when persecution and prosecution of polygamist was most intense - to detail pleas from some members to be allowed to give up the practice; in letters and sermons, the answer from church leaders emphasized the necessity of living the tenet.

"The central high role given 19th century polygamy by church leaders have been ignored, so I emphasize that," he said.

The book is the ninth volume in the Kingdom in the West Series: The Mormons and the American Frontier. The series is expected to run to 20 volumes, all relying heavily on primary documents to tell their stories.

Hardy is an emeritus history professor at California State University-Fullerton. His 1992 book Solemn Covenant: The Mormon Polygamous Passage, received a "best book" award from the Mormon History Association.

Reviewers who have read Hardy's new work, which he spent about 10 years crafting, predict it will get similar accolades. Todd Compton, author of In Sacred Loneliness: The Plural Wives of Joseph Smith, said in a book blurb that Hardy's work "should supplant all former books as a history of polygamy."

The book makes a timely debut, given renewed government and media focus on polygamy's continued and controversial practice by fundamentalist Mormons.

Hardy gives them only "summary" attention, a treatment dictated by the time period he frames. That said, he believes the book offers helpful perspective for current events.

"The Mormon treatment of polygamy and what they said about it and the way they viewed it is essential to understanding the rise of fundamentalism," Hardy said.

brooke@sltrib.com

Source : http://www.sltrib.com/news/ci_5710894

Bill Cosby and Alvin F. Poussaint Sign Book Deal With Thomas Nelson

In communities across the country, Bill Cosby has publicly drawn attention in the last three years to the dire crises in black America: more young men in prison than in college, 50 percent high-school drop-out rates, too many children born to teen-aged parents, children whose parents are ill-equipped and disinterested in parenting. These problems have been fermenting for years, but few have called them out with as much force, determination, passion, and credibility as has Dr. Cosby.

Now Cosby, one of America's most beloved and revered cultural icons, and Alvin F. Poussaint, professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and a civil rights veteran, lay out their message of hope and empowerment in a new book with Nashville-based publisher Thomas Nelson, entitled "Come on, People! On the Path from Victims to Victors," scheduled for publication in fall 2007.

"Come on People!" is built around the themes of Cosby's popular call-out sessions, in which he has challenged people in towns and cities across America to reclaim and restore their families and communities.

Cosby and Poussaint share their vision for strengthening America by addressing the crisis of people frozen in feelings of low self-esteem, abandonment, anger, fearfulness, sadness, and feelings of being used, undefended, and unprotected. By addressing these issues and providing tools to deal with them, Cosby and Poussaint help empower people to make the daunting transition from victims to victors.

At times challenging, at times inspirational, "Come On, People!" provides real-life examples of the problems plaguing communities throughout America and the time-tested solutions that can help turn things around.

"I am honored to work with Drs. Cosby and Poussaint on this important book," said David Dunham, senior vice president and Thomas Nelson group publisher. "There have been a few books in American history that have actually shaped the course of the nation. I feel confident that this book has that kind of potential. No two people in America are better poised to address this subject in any way more meaningful or more constructive than Bill Cosby and Alvin Poussaint."

Source : http://www.elitestv.com/pub/2007/Apr/EEN4628d96574cae.html

Chinook elder to discuss book on his youth, tribal customs

Friday, April 20, 2007
by DEAN BAKER Columbian staff writer

Celebrated author George Aguilar, a 76-year-old Chinook elder, will speak in Vancouver Tuesday about a book he has written of his youth along the Columbia River.

"Nearly seventy-five years of my lifetime have come and gone since hearing of the sparse historical events from the old-timers," Aguilar said in a press release from Washington State University Vancouver, where he plans to speak. "It's my turn now."

Entered in the 2006 Oregon Book Award competition, it won the Sarah Winnemucca Award for creative nonfiction.

Aguilar's talk will be from 7 to 8:30 p.m. in Room 129 in the university's administration building.

In his book, "When the River Ran Wild! Indian Traditions on the Mid-Columbia and the Warm Springs Reservation," he recounts hearing stories of watching his grandmother make moccasins by the light of a coal-oil lamp and of being strapped to the back of his aunt's horse on the way to the huckleberry grounds.

He also listened to tales at a site called "Coyote's Fishing Place," where his uncles built scaffolds and taught him how to catch salmon as the fish made their seasonal runs up the river.

A member of the Confederated Tribes of the Warm Springs, Aguilar was born and lived on the tribes' Oregon reservation for 70 years.

A soldier in the U.S. Army from 1949 to 1952, he also worked as a fisherman, transient field worker, timber faller, carpenter, service station retailer, auto mechanic, and owner and dealer of blackjack gaming tables. He was the construction manager for the tribes and continues to work as a general building and reforestation contractor.

His research for this book has taken him into libraries and archives throughout the Pacific Northwest.

A review in The Western History Quarterly says his book "is both a family history and a detailed record of the Kiksht Chinook's age-old customs and subsistence practices, many of which are no longer used by contemporary Indians. Aguilar's opening chapter describes the various Native groups that once lived along the Columbia River Gorge, their prophecies and their subsequent removal to reservations."

The quarterly notes that Aguilar drew on tribal lore and writings from the journals of Lewis and Clark and early ethnographers to cover such topics as ethnobotany, hunting and tanning, salmon fishing, spiritualism and ceremonies, ancestral name-giving and genealogy dating back two centuries.

The WSU program is sponsored by the Center for Columbia River History and Associated Students of WSU Vancouver.


If you go

What: Chinook elder George Aguilar will speak on his book, "When the River Ran Wild! Indian Traditions on the Mid-Columbia and the Warm Springs Reservation"

When: 7 to 8:30 p.m., Tuesday

Where: Administration Building, Room 129, Washington State University Vancouver, 14204 N. E. Salmon Creek Ave.

Cost: Free

Information: Call Sheri Byrd, WSU Office of Marketing and Communications, 360-546-9602, byrds@vancouver.wsu.edu


Dean Baker writes about history. Reach him at 360-759-8009 or e-mail dean.baker@columbian.com

Source : http://www.columbian.com/news/localNews/04202007news129508.cfm

The International Day of the Book



Come Celebrate The Book as Literature, The Book as Art, The Book as Music Sunday, April 22nd, 12-5 at Howard Avenue, Old Town Kensington, MD. Celebrate the Book. Street Festival. Under Tents Rain or Shine. This year's festival is dedicated to Richard Martin 1948-2006.


Kensington, MD, April 20, 2007 --(PR.com)-- Welcome to Old Town Kensington, MD and the Celebration of the International Day of the Book. April 23 is a symbolic day in world literature. Declared as International Day of the Book by UNESCO in 1995, this celebration of books and literature draws it's inspiration from a Catalan tradition, the Festival of the Rose.

Legend has it that Saint George, Patron Saint of Catalonia and international knight-errant, slew a dragon about to devour a beautiful Catalan princess. From the dragon's blood sprouted a rosebush, from which the hero plucked the prettiest rose for the princess. Hence the traditional Rose Festival celebrated in Barcelona since the Middle Ages to honor chivalry and love. In 1923, this lover's ‘festa’ became even more poetic when it merged with ‘el dia del llibre,’ or The Day of the Book, to mark the nearly simultaneous deaths of Miguel de Cervantes and William Shakespeare, the two giants of literary history, on April 23, 1616.

On this day in Barcelona, bookstalls and street festivities run the length of the picturesque La Rambla, the old city's main boulevard and, according to the Spanish author Garcia Lorca, “the only street in the world which I wish would never end.”

The Town of Kensington, Kensington Literary Group, and the Pauli Bellet Foundation Catalan Library, invite you to celebrate this wonderful day on Howard Ave, our La Rambla.

Over 100 authors will attend this book fair including John Gaudet, author of "The Iron Snake."

Visit www.dayofthebook.com for information, map and activities program.

Contact Information

John Gaudet Writer/Consultant
703-465-5251
jjgaudet@aol.com
www.theironsnake.com
Media contact: jjgaudet@aol.com
or: www.theironsnake.com

Source : http://www.pr.com/press-release/36577

Bentonville man threatens suit over book on lesbian sex

Friday, April 20, 2007 8:46 AM CDT

BENTONVILLE, Ark. - A Bentonville man wants the city to pay his two sons $20,000 after they found a book on lesbian sex on the shelves of a city library.

Earl Adams says since his 14- and 16-year-old sons found "The Whole Lesbian Sex Book" while looking for books on military academies, they have been "great disturbed ... and this matter has caused many sleepless nights in our house." Adams wants the city to pay each son $10,000 under Arkansas' obscenity laws and called for Library Director Cindy Suter to be fired.

Suter, who plans to leave her job May 31 to work at her privately owned art gallery, said Adams' complaints did not figure into her resignation. She moved the book after the first complaint, but after receiving more letters from Adams, the library's advisory board voted to take the book off the shelves earlier this month.

Bentonville City Attorney Camille Thompson described Adams' claim as baseless.

"There is not a valid legal concern here," Thompson said. "In fact, (the request for money) made me question his motivation."

In an e-mail Thursday, Adams said that "God was speaking to my heart that day and helped me find the words that proved successful in removing this book from the shelf."

The book, by Felice Newman, is a sex guide deemed suitable for all public libraries, according to the Library Journal, which the Bentonville library uses to decide what to place on its shelves. Suter said the library aims to have books and other materials to serve a diverse group of library users.

Library Advisory Board member George Spence said he found the book crude, but said it should be replaced with another book on the same topic.

"A more sensitive, more clinical approach to (the) same material might be more appropriate for the library," Spence said.

Information from: The Morning News, http://www.nwaonline.net/

Source : http://www.pbcommercial.com/articles/2007/04/20/ap-state-ar/d8okbb2o0.txt

SEMI: March book-to-bill shows continued market stability

By Suzanne Deffree, News Editor -- Electronic News, 4/20/2007

SEMI today published its March book-to-bill with numbers that the industry association’s CEO believes show market consistency.

On a three-month average basis, North American-based manufacturers of semiconductor equipment posted $1.42 billion in orders in March and a book-to-bill ratio of 1.00, according to SEMI. A book-to-bill of 1.00 means that $100 worth of orders were received for every $100 of product billed for the month, therefore, both the three-month average of worldwide bookings and billings for the month were at $1.42 billion.

The March bookings figure is more than 1 percent higher than the final February level of $1.4 billion and more than 2 percent above the $1.39 billion in orders posted in March 2006. The March billings figure was even with the final February level and 6 percent higher than the March 2006 billings level of $1.34 billion.

“Bookings improved slightly in March, while there was a small decline in billings when compared to February,” said Stanley T. Myers, president and CEO of SEMI, in a statement. “Updated figures show relative equilibrium of orders and shipments over the past few months, reflecting continued market stability for North American providers of chip making equipment."

March’s book-to-bill report comes from SEMI just days after the group revamped its January and February figures. The new numbers show a January book-to-bill of 1.0, down from SEMI’s original statement of a book-to-bill ratio of 1.04. The new February numbers show a book-to-bill ratio of 0.98, down from SEMI’s original 1.05.

Source : http://www.edn.com/article/CA6435177.html

Rooney is sued by Moyes over book

David Moyes claims that his
reputation has been harmed

Friday, 20 April 2007, 14:39 GMT 15:39 UK

England footballer Wayne Rooney is being sued by ex-manager David Moyes over comments made in the striker's autobiography "My Story So Far".

In a writ issued at the High Court, Everton boss Moyes claimed the book had "injured his professional and personal reputation" and caused him distress.

Moyes is objecting to an account of how Rooney came to leave Everton.

Libel proceedings have also been issued against the book's author Hunter Davies and publishers Harper Collins.

If the writ is not settled the case will go before the High Court.

Moyes has asked for an injunction preventing the offending passage of the book from being published again.

A spokesman for Rooney refused to comment on the proceedings and Moyes's solicitor was unavailable.

The player became the then youngest Premiership goalscorer with a last-minute strike to secure a 2-1 win against Arsenal in October 2002, five days before his 17th birthday.

Rooney went on to score 17 goals in 77 appearances for the Toffees before securing his move to United in August 2004.

Source : http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/manchester/6576489.stm

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