From the monthly archives:

January 2008

New Tom Waits Lyrics Book Released

by Eric Franklin on January 14, 2008

Tom Waits. The voice. The performer. One of the only people on the planet I will pay hundreds of dollars to see play and KNOW that it’s money well spent.

Well, the good news is that Harper Collins has just published The Early Years: The Lyrics of Tom Waits 1971-1983, a collection of the first 10 years worth of his lyrics. While you can easily look up any lyrics of Tom’s that you like online, having them all put in a nice little book that you can flip through - jumping between road songs, songs of grief, loss, chocolate confections, old cars, cologne, deals with devil, late nights, drinking, and dancing; why, that’s just too much to pass up now isn’t it?

Ol’ 55
Now the sun’s coming up, I’m riding with Lady Luck, freeway cars and trucks,

Stars beginning to fade, and I lead the parade

Just a-wishing I’d stayed a little longer,

Oh, Lord, let me tell you that the feeling’s getting stronger.

Click the little widget below to view pages from inside the book. It will be fun. I promise.

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My Faves for Thursday, January 10, 2008

by Eric Franklin on January 11, 2008

Rafe Furst has published a way of reading entire books for free on Amazon. By searching for a set of keywords which progresses you through an entire book, you create a Covering Set. It sounds a bit heavy-weight to me…

Quoted: A set of keywords that lets you read an entire book for free on Amazon is a covering set (CS). If the number of keywords in a CS is less than or equal to that of all other CSs for the same book, then it is a Minimal Amazon Covering Set (MACS). There may be more than one MACS for any given book. (And yes, someone who is highly skilled at discovering these could be considered a “MACS book pro”).

[tags: free, books, thepugetnews]

This seems like a handy service. You can select a Public Domain book from the Internet Archive or Google Books and have it printed by Lulu for you.

[tags: books, literature, public domain, copyright, publishing, thepugetnews]

See the rest of my Faves at Faves

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My Faves for Wednesday, January 09, 2008

by Eric Franklin on January 10, 2008

An awesome metal house in Texas. I wonder if the cooling bill is awful?

Quoted: We’re going to need hardened steel habitats after the zombie apocalypse That might have been what Robert Bruno architect had

[tags: architecture, thepugetnews]

See the rest of my Faves at Faves

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My Faves for Tuesday, January 08, 2008

by Eric Franklin on January 9, 2008

If I ever start writing that science fiction novel I’ve been putting off, this program seems like an excellent choice for organizing the thoughts and getting to writing.

[tags: writing, software, mac, apple, thepugetnews]

A multimedia slide show of modular housing from Wired Magazine.

Quoted: With increased population density and climate change, space- and energy-efficient housing is all the rage. But style need not be sacrificed for practicality. Wired News scopes the smallest and coolest modular housing out there.

[tags: architecture, thepugetnews]

Travelodge is experimenting with Travelpod, experimental sleep pods made out of shipping containers and stacked for special events like Burning Man. Cool!

[tags: design, architecture, thepugetnews]

See the rest of my Faves at Faves

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My Faves for Thursday, January 03, 2008

by Eric Franklin on January 4, 2008

The Baltazar Residence. Cool architecture.

Quoted: A small one story bungalow sat on a substandard lot between two nondescript condominiums. Within that small house lived a growing family with a modern aesthetic who wanted to take advantage of the ocean views their site offered while adding square footage. The house has a concrete base that rises out of the ground with a minimal amount of openings until the second story, where it turns into a steel frame with a glass window wall that offers a panoramic view out to the Pacific Ocean.

[tags: architecture, thepugetnews]

See the rest of my Faves at Faves

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My Faves for Tuesday, January 01, 2008

by Eric Franklin on January 2, 2008

Yayoi Kusama is an artist infautuated with “dots!”

Quoted: -year old Yayoi Kusama has had a hallucinatory obsession with dots for as long as she can remember Throughout the

[tags: art, Yayoi Kusama, thepugetnews]

I’m excited about the new io9 Science Fiction blog. This is their manifesto explaining the site purpose.

Quoted: Earth is full of people who want to sell you cheap ways of seeing the future They tell you tomorrow will be more of the same, with shinier toys. Or that work as we know it is about to end. io9 is the visionary watchdog who calls those charlatans on their shit. We’re going to show you a new world that’s shockingly different from what you’re used to. And it’s not always going to be a shiny happy place.

[tags: science fiction, literature, blogs, manifesto, thepugetnews]

London City Map created entirely out of typography. Cool.

Quoted: NB: Studio is a graphic design consultancy based in London.

[tags: design, London, maps, thepugetnews]

A work of short fiction by David Foster Wallace writing for “The New Yorker,” about two “good people” trying to come to a joint decision.

Quoted: The New Yorker

[tags: religion, literature, David Foster Wallace, thepugetnews]

See the rest of my Faves at Faves

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