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January 15, 2009

Readings for a Wind Chill Warning

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At the moment I type this it is currently -4 degrees Fahrenheit in Chicago, but it feels like -13 thanks to the wind chill. And this is warm!! The Wind Chill Warning advises that Chicago's coldest winter in 8 years is about to experience the coldest recorded day in 13 years, plummeting the air temperature well below zero for at least 24 hours.

The National Weather Service ardently admonishes in all caps: A WIND CHILL WARNING MEANS THE COMBINATION OF VERY COLD AIR AND STRONG WINDS WILL CREATE DANGEROUSLY LOW WIND CHILL VALUES. THIS WILL RESULT IN FROST BITE AND LEAD TO HYPOTHERMIA OR DEATH IF PRECAUTIONS ARE NOT TAKEN.

This is little comfort for a publicist who must wait for the bus twice a day.

But we in Chicago are not alone in our brutal winters. And for a few winter-weather survival techniques, I've turned to some books from those who know very well the tinging fingers and toes and icicled eyelashes of a long winter—The University of Alaska Press.

Painting a picture of early twentieth-century village life along the Bering Sea, two memoirs by Edna Wilder, Once Upon an Eskimo Time and The Eskimo Girl and the Englishman, poignantly capture the day to day life of an Eskimo village in a rapidly changing world.

Conservationist John Muir, who founded the Sierra Club in 1892 to "to make the mountains glad," was not one to disrespect Mother Nature, no matter what weather she offered up. In his letters documenting his travels through Alaska in 1879 and 1880 he provides a rare account of southeastern Alaska history, alongside breathtaking observations of glaciers and the untamed landscape.

Finally, another brave nature-lover, Will Troyer, offers his personal experiences as the former fish and game warden and manager of the Kodiak Island brown bear preserve in Bear Wrangler. It is the very exciting account of his thirty years as an authentic pioneer in the last vestiges of American wilderness.

Perhaps we should all stay inside, stay warm, and vicariously experience the snowy courageousness of others through these and other books from the University of Alaska Press.

January 02, 2007

Review: Karaoke by Zhou Xun and Francesca Tarocco

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James Parker recently reviewed Zhou Xun and Francesca Tarocco's Karaoke: A Global Phenomenon in the Boston Globe. Parker uses the book to trace some of the highlights of Karaoke's history. In the end, he offers his article as a tribute to karaoke-lovers: "I dedicate this one to the karoke-lovers, who will make tonight their own."

In Karaoke, Zhou Xun and Tarocco reveal karaoke's surprisingly complex history and significant cultural impact around the world. Originating in postwar Japan, karaoke soon spread to Southeast Asia and the West. Karaoke traces how the practice became a wildly successful social phenomenon that constantly evolved to keep pace with changes in technology and culture. Drawing on extensive research and international travels, the authors chart the varied manifestations of karaoke, from karaoke taxis in Bangkok to nude karaoke in Toronto to the role of karaoke in prostitution. Extensive personal anecdotes reveal the dramatic range of social experiences made possible by karaoke and how the obsession with performance and song has touched politics, history, and pop culture throughout global society.

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December 06, 2006

Review: Stalking by Bran Nicol

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Stalking remains popular today. Edel Kennedy writes in the Irish Independent that "Our modern attitude to love and relationships is breeding a generation of lusty stalkers," and quotes Bran Nicol's recently released Stalking from Reaktion Books: "Stalkers can find it particularly hard to read the implicit codes."

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Review: Stalking by Bran Nicol

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John Allemang recently reviewed Bran Nicol's Stalking in the Globe and Mail. Allemang praises the "lively work," which shows how ". . . our cultural artifacts not only reflect our growing social anxieties but also come to define them."

While Allemang points out that the Greek gods could be the original stalkers, he credits Nicol with successfully analyzing our current "Age of Stalking:" "Nicol builds a strong case that our era has aided and abetted a peculiar obsession to the point where it is accepted as an everyday phenomenon."

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