- Interesting slideshow at Slate: "The mismatch of technology and picture books."
- This must be the week for ouchie reviews; Peter Bergen on Morgan Spurlock’s new book/docu: "Spurlock’s musings read like the interminable blog of a pampered college kid on an all-expenses-paid trip around the Middle East and South Asia. The documentary is even worse, as Spurlock is constantly on camera delivering the same platitudes, a supersized display of narcissism that makes Michael Moore’s on-screen preenings look like those of a Trappist monk."
- Also, in the WaPo, this fascinating story on the National Security Archive: "Blanton loves government documents. It’s an acquired taste that has also been acquired by his colleagues at the archive. Over the past 23 years, they have filed more than 35,000 FOIA requests and collected more than 5 million pages of government documents. Some of the documents are mind-numbingly boring, of course, but others are nothing short of astonishing…"
- 2007 Believer Book Award short list — excellent to see Liz Hand’s Generation Loss on there.
- Feeling very steampunk.
- The people are demanding bicycle novels. (Ahem.)
- Pretty pictures.