
AUDIO & PODCASTS
EXCERPT: This is from Elizabeth E. Lea’s 1866 cookbook Domestic Cookery, Useful Receipts, and Hints to Young Housekeepers. This pound cake recipe is the basis for the method of many of the other cakes in the chapter. This is not such an extravagant cake - the fruit cake recipe calls for
EXCERPT: What happens when seven people get together to read a section of Ulysses in a bar in Tokyo? Hilarity ensues. We changed tables twice trying to find a quiet place away from the irritating 80s pop background music but failed. We ordered lots of beer, we rattled the microphone,
EXCERPT: Noh performer in mask during Okina, a ritualised Okinawan form of Noh. (photo by Tod, the steady-handed) Tonight we attended a performance of Noh plays in Shinjuku Gyoen. It was my first Noh experience and although it was a beautiful specta, even the comedic play was way over my
EXCERPT: Two-fisted painting Having quickly tired of the bath and hotel, I spent the second morning drawing a little bit of tree trunk after having another walk around the grounds. I made a recording of birds sounds with a stream burbling in the background (and a bit of a breeze,
EXCERPT: I volunteered with Librivox to read aloud some of the public domain Project Gutenberg texts. I talked about doing this on my own last year, but except for some scattered short stories, never really followed through. It’s a daunting task to read an entire book aloud, so sharing the work
EXCERPT: The evening sky at 6 pm I woke to the sound of crickets this morning—a promise of cool weather to come. I recorded their quiet chirping outside my office this evening complete with kids playing and a train rushing past at the end: Early Autumn Evening 0’56” MP3 (864
EXCERPT: Ah, another Parker reading randomly selected from The Portable Dorothy Parker. At this rate, I’ll have read the whole thing aloud in about two years. Still haven’t gotten to the poetry, though. This one is a short story from 1936. From the Diary of a New York Lady by Dorothy
EXCERPT: I can’t get enough of Dorothy Parker, though you are probably tired of my daily readings. That’s just rotten for you but I assure you it is just a phase. I’ll soon be onto new topics. Here’s another book review from the New Yorker column, “Constant Reader,” circa April 1928.
EXCERPT: One of my favorite sections of The Portable Dorothy Parker is the collection of her book reviews. From 1927 through 1933 she wrote a column for The New Yorker called “Constant Reader.” I’ve never enjoyed book reviews as well as hers; they are snarky comments on society with books as
EXCERPT: I had the good fortune at St Mark’s Bookshop in New York, to find a book I’ve been missing since I packed it away eight years ago in Pittsburgh. The Portable Dorothy parker is something I opened again and again when it was on my bookshelf. So today, when it
EXCERPT: The silent and vast Reading Room on the third floor of the NY Public Library My seat in the Reading Room, with a volume of the OED My first visit to the NY Public Library was all I could have hoped for. The Guttenberg Bible was on display along
EXCERPT: Last night Kagurazaka’s main street filled with traditional dancers Dancers waved their hands gracefully while stepping on tiptoe and chanting in high-pitched voices Musicians played gongs, drums, and wooden flutes as live accompaniment The music was very loud and vibrated through our bones. I recorded some of it to
EXCERPT: I think I have a tin ear, which makes me most unqualified to do what I’ve been doing all morning—putting together the first show for Hanashi Station. MJ, who is a trained audio engineer, gave me a “good job honey” when she listened to the draft, so maybe it’s not
EXCERPT: No longer thwarted by broken sound equipment, I recorded one of the shortest of the Grimm brothers’ fairytales. this morning. It’s a funny little story about a peasant turned savant via a book with a cock on the frontispiece. I used Audacity to record and convert it to MP3 (after
EXCERPT: Every year around this time, neighborhood volunteers are out on the streets at night, clacking wooden sticks together and calling out to people about fire safety. It’s taken us six years to figure out what they are chanting. The other night, as we were walking home late from work, the
EXCERPT: UltraBob beat me to the punch of acting on the desire to read aloud with his chapter-by-chapter posting of a Mark Twain’s $30,000 Bequest short story, but here’s a recording I did this morning of an O. Henry short story. By Courier. 7’30” (10.3 MB MP3)







