Tuesday, May 30, 2006

Local gay themed documentary filming

The public response to a local gay couople's wedding announcement in The Derrick (Oil City) is the catalyst for a documentary the two are making about love, hate and understanding in a small town.

[the film's creator] believes the city's idea to transform itself into a community where artists, who practice across a spectrum of mediums, will want to relocate and fill downtown buildings with arts-based shops, studios, performance and living spaces, is a good one. But he has some concerns.
"How does a region that is so economically depressed think it will attract people ... by being so closed-minded? ... Isn't it time that we be inclusive of all people?"


Sounds like someone's been reading Richard Florida. When the film is finished, I hope there's a local screening, as the article suggests.



Amazon is moving into e-books. Sorta.

Saturday, May 27, 2006

Small Brutal Incidents release!

Today, my novel, Small Brutal Incidents was released. I was pleased that pre-sales had gone so well, and even more pleased to see it go from #500,000 on Amazon to #15,000 early this morning (and falling...). I'll celebrate by grading some papers, working on this Beat Generation manuscript, and sweating like a pig. God, I hate hot weather.

Today is Memorial Day, of course, a day where we celebrate the memory of the dead by watching sports on TV and drinking cheap beer. Let's put all this aside and instead enjoy Drive By Truckersfrontman Patterson Hood's (son of legendary bassist David Hood of the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section) cover of Tom T Hall's "Mama Bake a Pie (Daddy Kill a Chicken)"

Erie area blog "The Film Chair" reviews the new X men movie. I'll forgive him for misspelling "Mystique" since his review did tell me that I should have sat through the credits bladder be damned!

Nearby Oil City has many dubious claims to fame, but the one, for obvious reasons, that always sticks in my mind is that the school board , at one time, banned Of Mice and Menfrom their high school library. Although that flap has long since blown over, book banning is still a popular sport in some segments of society, according to the Chicago Trib.
. . . Leslie Pinney assembled a list of nine books she deemed inappropriate, including Morrison's Beloved, Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse-Five and Tim O'Brien's The Things They Carried. . .Pinney acknowledged that she had read only two of the books. . .

SPIN isn't too impressed with Pittsburgh punk band anti-flag's new release, For Blood and Empire.:
if all you do is endlessly browbeat 14-year-olds into raving that America is a fascist state -- sure to become a joke to them as they reach Anti-Flag's age -- then maybe itÂ’s time to grow up yourselves.

The Miami Herald chimes in with its reading list for the summer.

Since it's Ben Franklin's 300th birthday celebration all year long, why not check out his autobiography audiobook in a free MP3 download?

Monarch Park, Festival Season, Desmond Dekker, and Spaulding Grey

The long defunct Venango County amusement park, Monarch Park, has inspired the theme for the Oil City Garden Club's flower show, entitled Remembering Monarch Park. Contact Rosalyn Espy at 677-3560 or Linda Morrison at 676-9763 for more info about the June 24 show:
[The park's gardens contained]Canterbury bells, snapdragons, lupines, asters, bachelor buttons, zinnias, delphinium, petunias and salvia abounded on the grounds.
Today - nothing but ruins. Create your own metaphor.

The History of Oil,” is the theme for this year’s Hydetown Firemen’s Festival, which is scheduled for Friday and Saturday, June 9-10.

Bottled Laker Erie water? Yum!

Desmond Dekker, the Jamaican singer whose 1969 hit, "The Israelites," opened up a worldwide audience for reggae and launched a thousand ska bands, died on Wednesday. He was 64. His song The King of Ska

Spaulding Grey's work will hit the stage once more. The script is made up of:

Mr. Gray's published work as well as from more personal material: diaries, unperformed stories, poems from his youth (including one called "I Loved a Midget Once") . . . even . . . from a recording Mr. Gray left for Ms. Russo just before his death, in which he announces his plans to commit suicide.

The New York Times profiles much loved, but out of print cookbooks.

Thursday, May 25, 2006

Ginsberg marginalia and Thomas Shreve's local abstractions


I love marginalia - my wife, a former librarian, is not so fond of it, but as I was packing up these books on Ginsberg to send back to Slippery Rock University's Bailey Library, I was enchanted to find this in the back of Thomas F. Merrill's Allen Ginsberg The writing reads, "Yellow Tiedie" [sic]. The book itself had been written in countless times, although mostly underlining and starts and the always popular freshman "yes!". But what is this mysterious sketch. A new graduation gown? A bored professor imagining what he would wear at the weekend Ren Fair? The mind, pleasantly, boggles.

If you're in Franklin this weekend, drop by the Summer House Coffee Roasters downtown on 1236 Liberty Street and check out Thomas B Shreve's City in Abstraction of Venango county landmark. It's refreshing to see these landmarks that have been done over and over again so reverently - in pewter, aluminum, photography and especially watercolors and pastels (over and over again)treated in a violent new way that really reflects the mixed feelings and uncertain future that lies beneath the placid surface of our small town. I'm really psyched about this guy's work and so will probably return to talking about it again. In the meantime, see what I mean:


Tongiht, Heidi Blakeslee hosts the Poetry Scene at the Erie Book Store. 137 E 13. Friday, May 26, 6:30-8:00. Read (or listen to) poetry by or about women, or be a woman and read original poems. Free admission.

Conneaut Lake Park has dodged the bullet again.

As comic book nerds like myself prepare our disdainful sniffs about the opening of X-Men 3, the Erie Times News reports that the actor playing colossus (the big metal guy) went to Gannon. Meanwhile /Film lists the top 10 ways to ruin a comic book movie:
Comic books are like Swiss Cheese with plot holes. It works in the medium, but in the movies it looks like bad screenwriting. I want to know how Doctor Octopus can pay for the machine that he’s building, who he’s renting the warehouse from, and from where did he order those custom-made parts that were delivered practically overnight?


USA Today lists hot summer reads.

This weekend is, of course the official summer kick off. Lots going on. Some highlights:

Tomorrow, Rochester, PA Improv group The Cellar Dwellers are appearing at 8 p.m., at Franklin's Barrow-Civic Little Theatre; $5 at the door. The troupe's myspace page is here.

The Yankee Zydeco Company shows up Saturday, May 27th at Erie's The Docksider at 10 pm until last call. It's a $3 cover and @1 and over show.

Wednesday, May 24, 2006

A call for regional bands


So, as readers know, I try to keep the majority of the focus of this blog on NWPA arts events, yet I have this huge jones to add more MP3s - so local bands, if you have a MP3 you'd like me to feature for a week, please send them or a link. Please. Pretty please.

First up, Big Jack Earl's new song Justin Casey. Make sure you catch BJE's release party Saturday, June 10, 2006 at 7 pm at the Barrow-Civic Theatre in downtown Franklin, PA. For advance tickets, call the Barrow box office at 1-800-537-7769 or 814-437-3440.


The Erie Times News lists their June activities calendar in today's paper.

Interested in taking a drive this weekend? The trustees of the Ridgway Community Mausoleum will be opening the marble building's doors next week so that the public may tour the historic structure.
The mausoleum will be open from 9 a.m., Friday, May 26, to 8 p.m., Saturday, June 3. . . there are few mausoleums of this size and quality anywhere.

The New York Times profiles the Pittsburgh Symphony.

Am I taking crazy pills? The National Review has compiled a list of its top 50 conservative rock songs.

Google is opening a music store, rumor has it...

Want to buy me a nice gift? Here's the Kerouac auction on eBay - anything is fine, really, I'm not choosy...

Tuesday, May 23, 2006

Advertisments at the theatre and a guilt free Lee Greenwood

The fourth annual Taste of Clarion will be held Thursday, June 22, in the Clarion County memorial park. (via The Derrick)

Starting Friday, Pittsburgh has the dubious honor of being one of the first cities to use live advertisements before theatre performaces.

Suddenly, media outlets are baning the "are indie bookshops dead" drum again. Check out the Village Voice and the Guardian (UK)takes on the much masticated question:
The novelist Susan Hill infuriated independent booksellers earlier this year by arguing that some small shops don't deserve to survive. She had visited three - one that was being run down, one run by a man who clearly knew nothing about bookselling, the third owned by a "witch" who appeared to hate selling books. "Whenever I hear people shouting, 'Save the village store', I wonder if they have been in one lately,"

I'm pretty excited about the Yellow Arrow project, as well as the Backfence project. I'd love to see them both implemented around here...

Deerhoof has released a free EP (as one track) of cover songs and live tracks through their label's website (Kill Rock Stars). (via largehearted boy)

Does Lee Greenwood ever feel guilty that his fortunes rise every time Americans die?
According to the Meadville Tribune, there's a new brewpub opening in Cambridge Township.

[Sprague Farm and Brew Works owner Brian Sprague]and his wife, Minnie, plan to have the first batches of their Hellbender porter, Ale Mary wheat ale and Rust Belt amber lager ready for the beer-drinking public by mid-June. Meadville micro-brewer Matt Allyn has been working closely as a consultant in the crafting process, Sprague said.

Sprague is also a chainsaw artist and his website has some really unintentionally funny photos of him all beefcaked out holding a chainsaw in jean cutoffs - sort of like a more butch Tobias Funke

My friend and former professor Herb Kitson won the 2006 Crawford County Older Adult Spelling Bee on Monday afternoon at the Titusville Health and Aging Center. Kitson will represent Crawford County in the 2006 Pennsylvania Older Adult Spelling Bee next month in Pottsville.

Monday, May 22, 2006

Allegheny College Bookstore


After four hours of math as a spectator sport on Friday, the family and I headed up to Meadville's Allegheny College to check out their redesigned bookstore. In the past, the bookstore was in the basement of what I think was the post office. It was tiny and cramped, but had a great selection.
Now in their new location, in the union, with comfy chairs and glass walls it is, bar none, the best used book store in the region. I pulled over $100 worth of $3.50 books in less than half an hour including The Golem's Mighty Swing, an edition of Coming Through Slaughter that I had never seen before, and a collection of Pickney Benedict. But, the tyranny of choice got to me - the family was anxious to go to the Market House gallery and everything looked so good, I put it all back (even the hard cover Black Hole)making plans to come back later. But, if you're into books at all, you've got to check this store out....


"Art" was a good show, although, let's face it, by this time in my life I know I'm, never going to be happy or satisfied with anything I do. It was, however, very cool to see Mr and Mrs Big Jack Earl at the show.

















Saturday was a reading/workshop at which I was appearing. The less said, the better.

But enough about me:
Talk about uncomfortable. In Saturday's News-Herald Oil Region Alliance board member Neil "I never met a oily robber baron I wouldn't want to kiss hard on the lips" McElwee spoke of his contempt for Edwin Drake saying,
"There are two types of history. The real stuff and the popular folklore that's easy to relate [to]...It
[the father of the petro disaster, er, industry] wasn't Drake. That's for kids."
Meanwhile, his wife, Lois, is quoted in the same paper this morning as spearheading the drive for a Edwin Drake stamp. "We want a postage stamp commemorating the 150th anniversary of the petroleum industry, one that will coincide with the 2009 date," said Lois McElwee of Oil City...McElwee is the sesquicentennial coordinator who is leading the campaign to globally commemorate style Col. Edwin Drake's fortuitous drilling escapade on Aug. 27, 1859, near Titusville. Drake's successful oil well launched the petroleum industry and marked the Oil Valley as its birthplace.
Phew. See what happens when you let the little lady speak for herself?

The Erie Times News has an update on the Warner Theatre renovation.

The Syntax of Things has a great post about the crapshoot that is getting anything published...

As I move into the Burroughes chapter of my next project, I thought you might be interested in this collection of ol' WSB's cut-up movies.

Friday, May 19, 2006

Small Brutal Incidents cover

Just about to run to the theatre to get everything set for "Art" tonight, but I just got the final cover art for Small Brutal Incidents, which is coming out in just nine days and wanted to show it off...

Thursday, May 18, 2006

Meadville Cinema for sale

The Oil Heritage Art Show runs from July 15-23, 2006 this year, in the Oil Valley Center for the Arts on the first floor of the National Transit Building at 206 Seneca Street (corner of Seneca & Center Streets) in downtown Oil City. The show is open free for public viewing

This annual event is a judged exhibit of artwork for all levels of artists, from amateur to intermediate to professional. This year's event features five categories: Watercolors & Graphics, Oil & Acrylics, 3-D, Photography and Computer Generated Works. Cash prizes and ribbons will be awarded in this non-juried show.

Pick up entry and release forms here.

I hate to say I told you so (oh, who I am kidding, of course I don't), but according to the Meadville Tribune, The former Meadville Cinema 4 four-screen theater building is for sale on eBay.

Jon Goldstein, developer of The Movies at Meadville, said he isn’t interested at this time in buying the Meadville Cinemas building. “I’ve never set foot in the building.”

Ouch. I thought Kayne was the only sore winner.

Wednesday, May 17, 2006

Yasmina Reza's play "Art" Franklin May 19th

I wanted to give you a head's up on this week's TiLT Reader's Theatre. It's Yasmina Reza's play "Art". The performance is at Franklin's Barrow Civic Little Theatre (1223 Liberty St, Franklin PA 16323). Doors open around 7:30pm, cover is $3 with a cash bar. The show starts at 8pm has a ten minute intermission and runs about 1 hour 20 minutes (wihout intermission).

The lovely and talented Amy Dittman is the hostess for the evening and Kim Tarr, Michael Molitoris, and I, Michael Dittman, are providing the talent (or at least
Kim and Molitoris are...).

The story, about art and friendship, is marvelously simple. A man, Serge (Molitoris), buys a modern painting for a relatively large sum of money (200,000
French francs). It is basically a large canvas, about five foot by four, painted white, with "fine white diagonal scars". One friend to whom he shows off his new purchase, Marc (Tarr), is completely unsettled by Serge's purchase. Another mutual friend, Yvan (Dittman), is more ambivalent.

At issue, in part, is the question: "What is art ?" The white canvas pushes at the limits of the definition in the age-old debate. There are, however, more layers to the question, and to Reza's play. Central to the piece, for Serge, is the official
sanction -- "Huntingdon would take it off my hands for two hundred and twenty" is Serge's first justification of the price. The artist, Antrios, is "well-known",
and it is "worth mentioning" that it is a seventies Antrios. The experts say it is significant, so Serge believes it is.

However, Serge also wants validation from his friends. They, in turn, question their relationship with a man willing to spend such a large amount of money on
something that they find hard pressed to consider 'art.' In the end the play is, in fact, not about art at all. As Robert Hurwitt observed in a review for the San Francisco Chronicle, ‘‘Art isn’t about aesthetics but the psychological, emotional and power dynamics of friendship.’’


The purchase of the painting by Serge comes to symbolize a deeper rift in his friendship with Marc, a piece of concrete evidence that the two of them have
grown apart. Yvan attempts to play the part of mediator between Serge and Marc but is inevitably drawn into the conflict at a deeper level.

When we first chose "Art" for Reader's Theatre, I had second thoughts about maybe it being too intellectual. Howver, after rehearsal on Sunday when we are laughing so hard that incontinence was a cleaar and present danger, I came to realize that it is a show that must be seen to truly understood and enjoyed.

I hope you'll be able to drop by - I'll be using it as an offical end of the semester blow out and would love to celebrate with you.

Looking ahead, my latest novel, Small Brutal Incidents comes out on the 28th of this month. I'm currently putting together the book tour - we've got dates in NYC, Philly and Boston, but my heart belongs to the NWPA region, so if you'd like me to come to your town, or you know a venue that might like to host me, please drop me an email.

Marx Soldier Show and the Edinboro Arts Festival

I'm almost done with the Ginsburg chapter of my next book - which is good, since the entire manuscript is due at the publishers on July 1st. I didn't ever think I would so sick of the Beats, but geez, if you want to destroy your passion about something, write a book or two about it.


When I mosey down for my bi-weekly trip to the angry loners at the Franklin Post Office today, I'm going to buy a whole bunch of these pretty Katherine Anne Porter stamps, released on Monday.


More importantly, The Northwestern Pennsylvania Toy Soldier Show and Sale is scheduled from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday at the Rocky Grove fire hall (28 Shuffstall Street, Franklin,PA) - expect lots of Marx figures. Contact Randy Sabousky: 814-354-6053.

8:00 PM - Saturday, May 20 is Public Night for
The Oil Region Astronomical Observatory . The Education Presentation is on "Gas Giants - Jupiter & Saturn" The Observatory is located in the Lockwood area of Venango County's Two Mile Run Park. Get directions on their website.

The Yankee Zydeco Company has two new songs up on thier website:
Zydeco Party Time
Louisiana Belle
Their next show is at the Edinboro Arts and Music Festival which starts tomorrow and runs through the 20th. Download the schedule for the fest here.

Tony Nomiations have been announced

Mark Twain surfed.
You heard right, Huck: America's greatest writer took a wooden surfboard and paddled out to wait, as he had seen naked locals do, "for a particularly prodigious billow to come along," upon which billow he prodigiously wiped out.

Tuesday, May 16, 2006

Erie poet Chuck Joy writes, "No Feature Feature. That's right, Friday, 6:30, Poetry Scene, Erie Book Store, 137 E 13. The No Feature Feature. To be part of the No Feature Feature, simply be there. It isn't even necessary to bring a poem, certainly not a poem inspired by the subject line for an email or a gathering of poets at a Starbucks, nope. Don't even need to bring a favorite cover. Who knows? The No Feature Feature."

Conor McPherson, who wrote "Dublin Carol" (a play which contains one of my all time favorite lines, spoken by an end of the line alcoholic undertaker, "Boredom. Loneliness. A feeling of basically being out of step with everybody else. Fear. Anxiety. Tension. And of course a disposition to generally liking the whole thing of drinking until you pass out.")which received its NWPA premiere last October at Franklin's Theatre in the little theatre and whose play, "The Weir" will be this year's October show (the 28th at 8 pm - mark your calendars), is now clean and sober and has a new play, "Port Authority" out, according to the NY Times.
"The definition of an alcoholic in Ireland is a person who doesn't drink, because you are the exception," Mr. McPherson said. "If you're in a bar and you're drinking a glass of water, then you're asked about it. Are you going to drink? Why don't you drink? It's quite a difficult culture to not drink in."

Stanley Kunitz, who was one of the most acclaimed and durable American poets of the last century and who, at age 95, was named poet laureate of the United States, died on Sunday at his home in Manhattan. He was 100 and also had a home in Provincetown, Mass.
Ironically, I just picked up one of his books at the Franklin Public Library used book sale, which runs through this weekend.
You can hear him read his poem, "The Portrait", here.
But, personally, I enjoy his translation of Anna Akhmatova's "Lot's Wife" much more:

And the just man trailed God's shining agent,
over a black mountain, in his giant track,
while a restless voice kept harrying his woman:
"It's not too late, you can still look back

at the red towers of your native Sodom,
the square where once you sang, the spinning-shed,
at the empty windows set in the tall house
where sons and daughters blessed your marriage-bed."

A single glance: a sudden dart of pain
stitching her eyes before she made a sound . . .
Her body flaked into transparent salt,
and her swift legs rooted to the ground.

Who will grieve for this woman? Does she not seem
too insignificant for our concern?
Yet in my heart I never will deny her,
who suffered death because she chose to turn.


Chicago's The Beatnik Turtles has released the Indie Band Survival Guide
The members of Beatnik Turtle have split the guide into about a dozen chapters, looking at everything from major-label contracts (they're against them) to file sharing (they're for it) and physical distribution (their expectations are low). Perhaps what's most notable about the guide, however, is that it strives to offer practical advice based on the experiences of an everyday band -- most members of the eight-person group have a day job and a family.

Monday, May 15, 2006

Pneumonia, finals, and a heavy speaking schedule have kept me away from posting.
But enough about me.

Tuesday is the primary election. Get out and vote.

Saturday, June 10, 2006 at 7 pm, Big Jack Earl will release their second studio album, "Peppercorn Rent," at the Barrow-Civic Theatre in downtown Franklin, PA. Joining them onstage will be David Perry, studio drummer for the band, and Tree by Leaf, an amazing folk group from Maine. For advance tickets, call the Barrow box office at 1-800-537-7769 or 814-437-3440.

According to the Erie Times News, The number of women's restrooms at Erie's downtown Warner Theatre will quadruple by the end of the year

My birthday is coming up in July. You may want to buy me something nice from the upcoming Kerouac auction.

The Pittsburgh Post Gazette discusses a new Steel City bike trail.

The New York Times lays out a literary itenerary for New York City.

What are the best books of the last 25 years?

Analog photography holds on via the Internet.

Finally, mediashift lists Do-It-Yourself Ways to Find Good Music