Columns

Reporting

  • "Made in the Shade"
    A package on Southern writers: profiles, interviews and an 11-state directory of writers you may never have heard of but are worth your time. Appeared in Creative Loafing chain.
  • "Mass Appeal"
    A day-in-the-life profile of a telegenic parish priest in Miami. Published in Catholic Digest, reprinted in the St. Petersburg Times
  • "The Liberation of Tam Minh Pham"
    How the first West Point graduate from South Vietnam disappears after the fall of Saigon, only to be rescued by his classmates two decades later. A cover story in The Washington Post Magazine

Fiction

Blogging's ugly side

I’ve often cited “Creating Passonate Users" and one of its chief bloggers, kathy Sierra, as a favorite site, rich with humor, wisdom and solid advice.

So I was totally bummed out by this latimes.com piece

http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-internet31mar31,0,4064392.story?coll=la-home-headlines

that reports threats have forced her to cancel appearances and worst of all, to shut down her blog. (sorry i can't embed the links in the text. I'm using a loaner machine that's playing tricks.)


Go to her post, "Death Threats are NOT "protected speech" http://headrush.typepad.com/

and you’ll understand why, in the face of such hate speech, she’s scared to leave her yard and is not sure she’ll ever blog again. What a loss! What a crime (is it?)

What can/should/is being done about it?

Bloggity Goodness #2

Malcolm Gladwell blinked. The New Yorker writer and author has launched a blog?

Does that mean we've reached the tipping point?

Bloggity Goodness #1

Check out:

http://americanadianlife.blogspot.com/ Rebecca Cook Dube is a friend who recently moved from Seattle to Toronto.

"This AmeriCanadian Life: The True North adventures of an American writer in Canada" is funny, wonderfully conversational and brings the kind of pleasure that comes from hearing a smart writer just musing about stuff. For all the definitions of blogs, perhaps what they really are is the equivalent of a literary salon. Imagine Oscar Wilde blogging.

Lines I love:

1. On a White House press conference: "You can almost smell the Scott McClellan flopsweat."

2. " Home is where the dog is."

3. Advice from her parents, including this one from Dad: "Everything tastes better with nuts."

Mr. Cook, I couldn't agree with you more. Brownies, salads, cookies, you name it, nuts make all the difference.

My advice to Rebecca: keep writing this blog. Definitely a book here!

Stay on top of the news

with USAToday's "On Deadline"

This afternoon I got the news alert about the poor millionaire who had the foolishness to stick up his head just when Dick Cheney fired his shotgun the other day on a hunting trip. Thanks to Al Tompkins, Poynter's man on the cyberstreet, for the link.

A simple case of pockmarking of the face and neck seemed to be the first
description that emerged after it was reported -- 24 hours after the incident.

I learned  the latest--the millionaire got it even worse, a pellet from the Veep's shotgun, did more than do cosmetic surgery; it lodged in  his heart leading to what doctors called "a silent heart attack."

Cheney and the President inherited Ronald Reagan's Teflon, so I don't expect much to come from it.

What was more interesting and useful to me was the source of the alert:  USaToday's blog of breaking news and "must read stories."

What I especially like about this news alert service are the comments appended from readers, many of them with apparently authoritative takes on the news, such as the two brothers who are doctors and are confused by the diagnosis to the self-described "life long Republican" and declares:

I am embarrassed by how light heartedly everyone is taking this "accident." It was not only serious but it was irresponsible. I don't know if I can trust the judgment of a person that just turns and fires a gun. Cheney shot a person all be it by accident, and this person is suffering from it. Maybe Cheney should consider tendering his "retirement."

Another interesting take comes from from slate.com,which reports that take on the case from friends of the victim, Harry Whittington.

"If there is anything that Harry's friends at the Vaughn Building are angry about, it is not the shooting itself but the attempt by White House Press Secretary Scott McClellan to place the blame on the victim. It's the shooter's duty to know what he is shooting at and where his companions are. A shooting accident is always the fault of the shooter. Always."

Anybody know what kind of shotgun Cheney wields? As the rule established by Gene Miller, the late and great Miami Herald legend, dictates: always get the name, whether it's a dog, an ice cream or a hunter's weapon of choice. They represent what Tom Wolfe called status details, a key device the so-called "New Journalists" borrowed from the literary realists of the previous century.

It's "the recording of everyday gestures, habits, manners, customs, styles of furniture, clothing, decoration, styles of traveling, eating, keeping house, modes of behaving towards children, servants, superiors, inferiors, peers, plus the various looks, glances, poses, styles of walking and other symbolic details that might exist within a scene. Symbolic of what? Symbolic, generally, of people's status in life, using that term in the broad sense of the entire pattern of behavior and possessions through which people express their position in the world or what they think it is or what they hope it to be. The recording of such details is not mere embroidery in prose. It lies as close to the center of the power of realism as any other device in literature."

Seven Reasons Why I Blog

Blogging, among other things, pulled me out of a dark place recently. Here are seven reasons why I think writing in this form lightens my life.

What does blogging do for you?

Thanks.

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