Ken Wohlrob's Blog
November 8, 2009
331 pages, 60,643 words. Now comes the hard part: selling the blasted thing.
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November 4, 2009
I've reached 55% of my goal to raise $1,000 for Doctors Without Borders "Be There 1st" fundraising campaign. I have always been in awe of the work DWB (or Medecins Sans Frontieres) does — going into very hostile and dangerous situations to provide healthcare where none exists (or is inadequate). When they announced the "Be There 1st" campaign, I felt required to do my part.
Many thanks to all those who have already contributed. And if you haven't donated yet, please do, even if its a small...
November 3, 2009
I first discovered the concept of a "Graveyard of the Innocent" while living in Medina, Ohio. A local Catholic church, St. Francis Xavier, used to put up the display every Halloween (see the photo to the left). The crosses were supposed to represent the total number of fetuses killed in abortions in one week in the city of Akron. Needless to say, I'm glad I don't live in frickin' Medina, Ohio anymore.
That image of the mini-tombstones, so like the cover of Metallica's Master of Puppets...
November 1, 2009
Thanks to the good folks at Smashwords, all of my stories — The Love Book collection, "The Metronome Winds Down," and "Job in Williamsburg" — are all now available as ebooks through Barnes & Noble. If you've never read an ebook on your iPhone or computer, B&N actually has a reader for both.
And of course, if you're not a B&N person, you can still get all the stories in print or as ebooks through Amazon, Powells, Scribd, Smashwords, Lulu, and just about any other bookstore.
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October 27, 2009
Having lived in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn for eight years or so, I used to hear (and see) Anthony Delia driving up and down the side streets at least once a weekend. He was one of those neighborhood characters. You never know where they come from. They just exist and make the place more interesting. We could never figure out why he did it. In the end, I just assumed it was that wonderful sort of madness that one finds in New York City. And to be perfectly honest, I always enjoyed ...
October 23, 2009
October 22, 2009
I'm still reading through Anthony Flint's excellent book on the battle between Jane Jacobs and Robert Moses over the fate of New York City's neighborhoods in the 1960s . Last night, I reached the chapter where Jacobs is struggling to write her definitive work, The Death and Life of Great American Cities. The biggest problem Jacobs faced in writing the book was that she had more than enough examples of what destroyed city neighborhoods, but no way to make a clear argument for what makes a...
October 14, 2009
What a difference twenty years makes. Nick Cave's first novel, And the Ass Saw the Angel, which was released in 1989, opens with:
"Three greasy brother crows wheel, beak to heel, cutting a circle into the bruised and troubled sky, making fast, dark rings through the thicksome bloats of smoke."
His new novel, The Death of Bunny Munro, released in 2009, strikes a slightly more minimalist note with its first sentence:
"I am damned, thinks Bunny Munro in a sudden moment of self-awareness reserved...
October 7, 2009
I'm also looking for people to join my fund raising team ("First World Debt Payers"), which you can do so here.
It's a great organization and a very important cause. I have a ton of respect for the work they do and the dangerous situations they face in order to help the poorest people in the most devastated regions of our planet.
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