Weekly Volcano Blogs: Walkie Talkie Blog

Posts made in: 'Books' (471) Currently Viewing: 431 - 440 of 471

July 14, 2009 at 4:29am

Nosh Pit

JAKE DE PAUL: TUESDAY FOOD LINKS >>>

Cocktailcation At Toscanos: Tuesdays and Thursdays are "Absolut Summer" on their patio. Just saying.

Grant Achatz Says What Most Chefs Won't: Getting out of the kitchen is essential.

Try It: Granola with a perk of olive oil.


Today's South Sound Special
New York Times bestselling author Molly Wizenberg is bringing her book, A Homemade Life: Stories and Recipes from My Kitchen Table, and her cooking skills to the Bayview School of Cooking in Olympia tonight at 6 p.m. Wizenberg and Bayview instructor Nancy Judge will provide an evening of food, stories and book chat. For reservations, call 360.754.1448.

LINK: South Sound Restaurant Guide

Filed under: Books, Food & Drink, Olympia, Puyallup,

June 23, 2009 at 4:06pm

Cool story

SUZY STUMP: MEET LYNDA MAPES >>>

Breaking-Ground Sometimes you just want to kick humanity. Collectively. All of ’em. Stupid humans. Sometimes you just want to travel back in time and collectively kick your ancestors, too.

Lest you think this is nothing more than a whole lot of misdirected rage, attend Lynda Mapes’ lecture on her book, Breaking Ground: The Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe and the Unearthing of Tse-whit-zen Village Thursday night at Orca Books. Listen to the incredible tale of the discovery of the largest and oldest Indian village site during construction of a Port Angeles waterfront project.

Guess what the state workers working on the project did after discovering the village?

They kept backhoeing.

Now guess what the Native Americans did?

They forced the project to stop!

Discover how Thursday night.

[Orca Books, 6 p.m., free, 509 E. Fourth Ave., Olympia, 360.352.0123]

Filed under: Books, History, Olympia, Word,

April 22, 2009 at 9:45am

Poem-A-Tacoma: Luna’s literati

TAMMY ROBACKER: LUNA CITY LOVE >>>

Embellish-web-ad-April-2009 Last summer while volunteering at the poetry readings for Showcase Tacoma I met Christopher Luna, a poet and open mic host from Vancouver, Wash. In support of the thriving poetry scene at Showcase, Luna rallied up a bunch of fellow Vancouver poets, and they caravanned up here to put on a poetry show that had folks asking me afterward, “Who were those Cover to Cover poets?”

The open mic Luna hosts down south are words worth the drive. His readings at Cover to Cover Books showcase Vancouver’s burgeoning literati and invites many fine poets from across the state of Washington.

“One of the great thrills I get from hosting the open mic is listening to the diversity in age, background and subject matter. I am also honored to host many first-timers. We try very hard to create an environment in which everyone feels safe. Each reading is completely different, and we often draw 40-50 people per month. There is a real sense of community at these readings, and I'm proud to report that the attendees are friendly and supportive of one another,” says Luna.

A poet, editor, and collage artist, Luna graduated from the Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics in Boulder, Colo. A New York expatriate, he currently lives in Vancouver, where he is the host of a monthly open mic poetry series “always all ages and uncensored” at Cover to Cover Books every second Thursday at 7 p.m. For more info call 360.514.0358 or 360.694.9653. His most recent chapbook, Ghost Town, USA, which features poems and observations of Vancouver, is available at Cover to Cover, or through the author.

Part I from Christopher Luna’s Poem: Burning Word Triad

I.
AMTRAK STATION
Tacoma, WA
April 30, 2007

I give James the eight dollars
He needs to get on the bus

James was shot in the leg
during the first Gulf War
by a Shiite Muslim
he had fed and shared water with
only moments earlier

When James first approaches he explains
that he has just come from the VA
where they had replaced the rod in his leg

he hadn’t realized that his leg was deteriorating
had attributed his pain to arthritis
but by the time he made it to the hospital
it had gotten so bad
that they had nearly decided to amputate it

James and I agree
that George Two is out of control
and that Guantanamo Bay
and the war in Iraq
    are a travesty
and that our actions
have made the world
a more dangerous place

I'll bring you more poetry ditties Friday. Check out the Poem-A-Tacoma archives.

Poem-A-Tacoma is sponsored by Embellish Multispace Salon in downtown Tacoma.

TAMMY ROBACKER is a poet and writer living, breathing, typing and spitting words in Tacoma. She owns a freelance writing and marketing communications company called Pearle Publications. Her poetry has appeared in Plazm, Women's Work, The Wild Goose Poetry Review, and the Allegheny Review. A recent recipient of the 2009/10 TAIP grant, she will be publishing her first book of poetry, The Vicissitudes, through the generous support of this funding made possible by the City of Tacoma and the Tacoma Arts Commission.

Filed under: Books, Poem-A-Tacoma, Word,

April 21, 2009 at 8:15am

Morning Spew

April 14, 2009 at 9:05am

Nosh Pit

JAKE DE PAUL: TUESDAY FOOD LINKS >>>

Tightwad-Tues-rectangle Eat a bacon sandwich after a bender.

Coke: I’d like to teach the world not to sue …

Slow Food can be fun.


Today’s South Sound Specials

Tightwad Tuesdays with $2 tacos, $2 beers, and $2 wells, Hell’s Kitchen, 3829 Sixth Ave., Tacoma, 253.759.6003.

Wine Tuesday, 20 percent off bottles wines on regular list, Toscanos Cafe and Wine Bar, 437 29th St. N.E., Puyallup, 253.864.8600.


Future Things Are Coming

As part of Tacoma Reads Together’s book of the year, Barbara Kingsolver’s Animal, Vegetable, Miracle, The Tacoma Public Library hosts a community conversation titled “Eating Local” Thursday, April 16 at 7 p.m. in the Main Library’s Olympic Room. Two Tacoma families will discuss the challenges they faced when they decided to eat only what was grown or raised locally. The Main Library branch is at 1102 Tacoma Ave. S. in downtown Tacoma. For more information, call 253.591.5688. For a complete calendar of Tacoma Public Library community conversations centered around this year’s book, go here.


Playing with your food

LINK: South Sound Restaurant Guide

April 2, 2009 at 9:41am

Nosh Pit

JAKE DE PAUL: THURSDAYS FOOD LINKS >>>

Go-Local-rectangle Cloris Leafman for PETA

Organic Idol

Straddling the divide between food science and culinary arts


Today's South Sound Specials

Ravenous Readers Book Club: The community book group focused on reading books about food and sustainability pulls a chair up to Cod by Mark Kurlansky tonight at King’s Books. Pull up a chair at 7 p.m. King’s is at 218 St. Helens Ave., 253.272.8801.

Wine tasting, noon to 6 p.m., complimentary, Walter Dacon Winery, 50 S.E. Skookum Inlet Road, Shelton, 360.426.5913.

LINK: Find a date in the grocery stores

Filed under: Books, Food & Drink, Nosh Pit, Tacoma,

March 24, 2009 at 3:38pm

Eat your words

RON SWARNER: THE INCREDIBLE, EDIBLE BOOK >>>

Ediblebk2009 Collins Memorial Library at the University of Puget Sound dedicates itself to protecting books, but come April 1 (no joke) it will eat them at the University's third Edible Book Festival.

Eat this up:

For the third consecutive year, Collins Memorial Library will participate in the international edible book festival. There are few restrictions in creating an edible book â€" namely that it's made of food and is inspired by a book. Past entries have included such delicious titles as: Green Eggs and Ham, Olive or Twist, and Sisterhood of the Traveling Ants.

This year, entries will be judged in categories: "Most Delicious," "Most Creative," "Most Literary," and "Best Student Entry." (This one being awarded a $25 gift card to the UPS Bookstore.)


Drop by on April Fool’s Day and browse for a story you can really dig into.

[Collins Memorial Library, Wednesday, April 1, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., entry drop-off 7:30-11:30 a.m., people’s choice voting 11 a.m. to 12:40 p.m., awards ceremony 12:45 p.m., University of Puget Sound, 1500 N. Warner, Tacoma, 253. 879.2651

PHOTO: "Sisterhood of the Traveling Ants" by Liz Howell (2008

Filed under: Books, Food & Drink, Tacoma,

March 22, 2009 at 9:28am

Good beef

JASON DE PAUL: BUFFALO SOLDIER >>>

I have been re-reading the Omnivore’s Dilemma by Michael Pollan. Anyone who has read this book will understand when I say I don’t want to look at another mainstream burger again.  It’s shocking how much petroleum, disease and genetic engineering goes into beef.

We are blessed to have Tatanka Take-Out in our backyard.  The tiny spot in Ruston specialize in the other red meat â€" bison â€" raised on grass, not in steer lots. 

Did you know that buffalo has half the cholesterol of beef, lamb and pork and 85 percent less fat?

Tatanka has bison meat in all forms: tacos, chili, jerky, soup, burritos and burgers. 

[Tatanka Take-Out, 4915 N. Pearl, Ruston, 253.752.8778]

Filed under: Books, Food & Drink, Ruston,

February 22, 2009 at 8:22am

Yummer reading

JAKE DE PAUL: RAVENOUS READERS BOOK CLUB >>>

Ravenous-Readers If “Ravenous Readers” means famished folks flipping through forms to you, you better get yourself to King's Books. At King's Books, they will tell you that “Ravenous Readers” is actually a community book group focused on reading books about food and sustainability, sponsored by Grow Local Tacoma. Meeting the first Thursday of the month at King's, this hungry group will dig into issues such as growing food locally, the impact of commercial agriculture, and growing communities through selected reads such as the first book on the menu: Animal, Vegetable, Miracle by Barbara Kingsolver. In Kingsolver's first work of narrative nonfiction, she passionately records a year lived in complete harmony with the seasons and their products and the trials and tribulations that her family endured in order to consume only what they and their farming neighbors produced. Animal, Vegetable, Miracle is this year's Tacoma Reads Together selection.

Future books will be Cod by Mark Kurlansky (April 2),  Plenty by Alisa Smith & J.B. MacKinnon (May 7), and In Defense of Food by Michael Pollan (June 4).  

So if you just had fantasies about finishing your Confessions of the Shopaholic while packing you face with pasta at Ravenous, then this isn’t the club for you. In fact, you should stay far, far away from this club. But for those of you who desire to make a difference in the way we live and eat, check out this book club.

[King's Books, Thursday, March 5, 7 p.m., no cover, 218 St. Helens Ave., Tacoma, 253.272.8801]

February 15, 2009 at 9:11am

Tuesday with Krik? Krak!

STEPH DEROSA: BANNED BOOK CLUB >>>

Krik-Krak Damn Judy Blume suckered me in at an early age with Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing and Superfudge. Next thing you know I’m hiding underneath the covers, secretly reading Forever by flashlight. The kids totally “do it” in that book. I think I can blame her version of teenage sex and heavy petting for my adulthood obsession with amateur porn. Hell, I’ve got to blame somebody, haven’t I?

Long gone are the days of masking illicit book covers behind Time Life magazines, hiding under the covers, and reading those “banned books” your momma always warned you about. Challenged and banned books have come a long way from being chastised by the general public, just ask members of the Banned Book Club. This wayward group of literary enthusiasts, who engage in books that have either been banned or challenged, meet Tuesday, Feb. 17 at Tempest Lounge.

This month’s pick, Krik? Krak! by Edwidge Danticat, can be purchased at King’s Books. Anyone is welcome to join the Banned Book Club Tuesday, so take part in the conversation and open your eyes to a world of half priced hors d’ouvres, open-minded opinions, and people who enjoy literacy for what it is â€" not for what society deems unfit for mental consumption.

[Tempest Lounge, Tuesday, Feb. 17, 7 p.m., no cover, 21 and older, 913 Martin Luther King Jr. Way, Tacoma, 253.272.4904]
[King’s Books, 218 St. Helens Ave. Tacoma, 253.272.8801]

Filed under: Books, Tacoma,

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