Month: January 2009

  • No More Washington Post Book World?

    Call me old-fashioned, but I think that one of life’s joys is to sit down with a good newspaper.  Though I’m someone who’s spent a career working on web sites, there’s some really special about a quiet morning with a paper.  And some coffee.

    A newspaper is easier on the eyes than a glowing screen.  It also offers the chance of serendipity, of stumbling upon some article you never would’ve read, just because you have to turn pages to find the article you’re looking for.  A newspaper is also mostly distraction-free (no videos blaring, no animating ads) which, IMHO, makes reading an article in print a richer and more rewarding experience.  Things I really want to absorb, I need to see on paper.  

    Today comes the news (ironically, from The New York Times), that the Washington Post is ending Book World, its Sunday books supplement.  Economic reasons are cited.  I find this hard to believe.  Washington is one of the most literate cities in the country, filled with readers, and writers, too.  Hop on the Metro, visit a coffee shop, stroll through a park and you’ll find scores of people lost in good books.  The city is home to excellent and popular bookstores, like Kramerbooks and Politics and Prose.  With the wide range of books that people in DC read, there’s got to be a need for book reviews. (more…)

  • Vote for Me!

    One of my photos is a finalist in Washingtonian magazine’s monthly photo contest. My pic is the first one:

    http://www.washingtonian.com/blogarticles/10934.html

    It’s a black and white shot from a Pink Line Project art exhibit that was held at an old auto dealership. Very arty – the event featured dancers in gold paint who posed like statues.

  • Murder in Ocean Hall – First Chapter

    I’m just about done writing my murder mystery, “Murder in Ocean Hall.”  I’ve put the first chapter online.  The book is about a famous explorer who dies in mysterious circumstances in Ocean Hall at the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History.  Suspects are many. A cynical DC detective investigates the case.

    Read the first chapter.

    Feedback is welcome :)