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Archives for 2011

Montgomery, Alabama, 1958

January 23, 2011

MLK arrested, 1958

Martin Luther King, Jr. is arrested for loitering outside a courtroom where his friend Ralph Abernathy is appearing for a trial, Montgomery, Alabama, September 3, 1958. Photo by Charles Moore.

Filed Under: Photography Tagged With: civil rights, history, journalism, Martin Luther King

Making Eddie Coyle

January 23, 2011

Robert Mitchum

Robert Mitchum signs an autograph while on location in Boston filming The Friends of Eddie Coyle, autumn 1972. (via)

Filed Under: Movies Tagged With: Robert Mitchum, The Friends of Eddie Coyle

Don’t Do It For Anyone Else

January 23, 2011

Keith Haring letter

Via Letters of Note.

Filed Under: Creativity, Writing Tagged With: Keith Haring, letters

Shanghai 1990 vs. Shanghai 2010

January 20, 2011

Shanghai 1990 and 2010

Filed Under: Odds & Ends Tagged With: China, cities

Record Club: Need You Tonight

January 20, 2011

“Need You Tonight” (INXS cover) – Record Club. More information about Beck’s Record Club project here.

Filed Under: Music Tagged With: Beck, music videos

Wanda Jackson: Thunder on the Mountain

January 18, 2011

Wanda Jackson – “Thunder on the Mountain” (with Jack White) (via myonetruevine)

Filed Under: Music Tagged With: music videos

How To Become a Writer

January 18, 2011

So You Want to Be a Writer? - comic by Grant Snider

By Grant Snider.

Filed Under: Writing Tagged With: cartoons

Flaubert at Work

January 16, 2011

From Frederick Brown’s definitive biography of Flaubert, a typical day during the writing of Madame Bovary in 1851-56. Flaubert was 30-35 at the time.

Flaubert, a man of nocturnal habits, usually awoke at 10 a.m. and announced the event with his bell cord. Only then did people dare speak above a whisper. His valet, Narcisse, straightaway brought him water, filled his pipe, drew the curtains, and delivered the morning mail. Conversation with Mother, which took place in clouds of tobacco smoke particularly noxious to the migraine sufferer, preceded a very hot bath and a long, careful toilette involving the regular application of a tonic reputed to arrest hair loss. At 11 a.m. he entered the dining room, where Mme. Flaubert; Liline [Flaubert’s niece]; her English governess Isabel Hutton; and very often Uncle Parain would have gathered. Unable to work well on a full stomach, he ate lightly, or what passed for such in the Flaubert household, meaning that his first meal consisted of eggs, vegetables, cheese or fruit, and a cup of cold chocolate.… In June 1852, Flaubert [wrote in a letter] that he worked from 1 p.m. to 1 a.m. A year later, when he assumed partial responsibility for Liline’s education and gave her an hour or more of his time each day, he may not have put pen to paper at his large round writing table until two o’clock or later.

Filed Under: How Writers Write, On Writing, Writers, Writing Tagged With: Flaubert

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