A tale of two bookfests
A new Seattle book festival launches this weekend in Columbia City, amid bad news for Elliott Bay Books and word of a new fest planned for next year.
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Many thanks to
Bill Thorness
and
Ronald Holden
some of our many supporters.
ALL MEMBERS »A new Seattle book festival launches this weekend in Columbia City, amid bad news for Elliott Bay Books and word of a new fest planned for next year.
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At more than 140 miles spread among three events, the Ironman race is a huge feat to pull off all at once. But what if you could spread out the pain over a week?
READ MORE | COMMENT NOWHealth experts say that "moderate" drinking is practically no drinking at all, but that's not what they show on Mad Men. Nor would it sustain the Northwest economy.
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The Showbox dresses up for the city's inaugural music awards program, honoring KEXP, Quincy Jones, Fleet Foxes, and others. Even the restrooms smelled nice.
READ MORE | 2 COMMENTSUpgrading to Windows 7? Redmond's video guide, while helpful, seems almost like an Apple-produced parody.
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Volunteers, artists, and an absentee landowner are together creating a P-Patch honoring the father of the University District Street Fair.
READ MORE | 4 COMMENTSOn this date five and 47 years ago, massive fronts took the region by force.
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The elaborately designed new Bravern complex is a pastiche of ideas drawn from European public spaces. As architecture, it's all very tasteful, but it lacks whimsy, unpredictability, and Northwest context.
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What does it mean that weddings these days are more traditional and more lavish than ever? Scoff not.
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With one candidate "born to eat," the other fighting the "campaign 15" pounds, the road to Seattle City Hall is paved with good intentions ... and chocolate bunny crackers.
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The popular movie about Julia Child inspires our writer — not to cook with lots of butter, but to write longhand, and then use a typewriter and carbon paper. Tasty lessons result.
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The Future Shack awards suggest some design principles that could help us shape the city and region for the better.
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Among the highlights: the wineries in the new Lake Chelan appellation, where a cooler climate is producing Alsatian-style whites.
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A classic Northwest story (and fantasy) is re-enacted on a run-down farm on Lopez Island
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Walkable neighborhoods take more than density and sidewalks. You have to create conditions where small stores can survive.
READ MORE | 21 COMMENTSThe latest from news outlets and blogs around the Northwest and beyond, chosen by Crosscut editors.
"Basically, it's not that people born after 1980 are narcissists, it's that young people are narcissists, and they get over themselves as they get older."
Rebecca Mead writes:"Her experience [in Italy] is not so different from that of many young American women now, caught in a post-post-feminist narrative in which it is proposed that sexual emancipation may be achieved through emotional disengagement. Whatever light “Waiting to Be Heard” does or does not shed on the awful death of Meredith Kercher, it offers a dispiriting account of prevailing mores. It is not new for students to “give casual sex a chance.”... It is new for girls to strive to adopt the sexual behavior of the most opportunistic guy on campus."