shiwani | Shared With: Everyone - Oct 10 2008 | books, world, news
Working on an article about the book that came out of this story... So sad.
Quoted: For six years, Fekkak Mamdouh, whom everyone knew by his surname, had been a waiter at Windows on the World, the luxury restaurant on the 107th floor of the North Tower. He had started working there in 1996 when Windows reopened after the 1993 terrorist bombing in the World Trade Center basement.
shiwani | Shared With: Everyone - Sep 15 2008 | books, news
Can't believe there'll never be another book by David Foster Wallace. So sad :(
Quoted: After David Foster Wallace became a twentysomething literary phenomenon - after the publication of his first novel ("The Broom of the System," 1987) and short-story collection ("Girl With Curious Hair," 1989) got the Thomas Pynchon comparisons flowing - he checked himself into a hospital and asked to be put on suicide watch.
shiwani | Shared With: Everyone - Jun 20 2008 | food, world, books, news
My International Examiner review of Raj Patel's book about the global food crisis!
Quoted: The global food crisis certainly isn’t starved for media attention. Turn to any news organization and rising food prices are making headlines alongside the rising cost of gas. With all the recent coverage, it seems like a problem that came out of left field.
shiwani | Shared With: Everyone - Jun 05 2008 | books, news
shiwani | Shared With: Everyone - May 12 2008 | brain, health, books, news
Haha we all have an inner Homer Simpson. For example, it took every ounce of energy this morning to overcome my impulse to eat the free donut (which would make me feel crappy later) and have healthy cereal. Mmmmm, free donut.
Quoted: The real trick to understanding how to approach Nudge: Improving Decisions About Health, Wealth, and Happiness, the new book by Cass R. Sunstein and Richard H. Thaler, lies in recognizing the limitations of your inner Homer Simpson and opting out of your own stupid choices.
shiwani | Shared With: Everyone - May 05 2008 | books, book publishing, news
shiwani | Shared With: Everyone - Apr 15 2008 | books, funny, news
This book looks great - it's a satire on a really particular self-help genre that is super popular right now. The sad thing is, the author got the idea for the book because he was told he was too nice to ever advance. So, he experimented with being a major a@#hole, got the idea for this book, and is having the last laugh. Good for him. I also love all the various euphemisms for a@#hole in the article (like "orifice").
Quoted: A satirical new book serves up a 10-step program on how to be, well … an a--hole "I was the nicest guy in the world—and it was killing me," he writes in "A$$hole: How I Got Rich and Happy by Not Giving a Damn About Anyone and How You Can Too," his new mock-help masterpiece.
shiwani | Shared With: Everyone - Apr 14 2008 | music, books, news, business
I see where the writer is going, but it's not an easy call. This doesn't really work for CDs/books that never have the promise of selling big in the first place...
Quoted: What should record labels, software giants, & other media companies do about digital piracy? There are two options: Get tough and defend intellectual-property rights with every legal & technological trick in the book, or tolerate some illegal copying in the hope of generating buzz & making money in some other way.
shiwani | Shared With: Everyone - Apr 13 2008 | india, books, news
A review of A Blue Hand: The Beats in India. I had no idea that India had this kind of influence on the Beats (specifically Ginsberg), although it's not surprising. Sounds like an interesting read.
Quoted: Fifteen months in India in the early 1960s had a lasting influence on American poet Allen Ginsberg.
shiwani | Shared With: Everyone - Apr 12 2008 | news, books
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