
So that’s what 12 Seattle-are poets did. (Above, one poet lost her glasses.) But before leaping into the frosty arms of Green Lake each plunging poet did a recital of his or her own work. One was a certain Dr. Clinton Bliss, who rhapsodized, “The coronary arteries tighten up and cut the blood flow. If there already has been a narrowing of the arteries, it could precipitate heart attack or arrhythmia."
Oh, my bad, that’s the doctor describing vasoplasm, a potentially fatal reaction of the body after it's subjected to extreme cold. Bliss's actual poem was about a polar bear “swimming, skimming bottom, bubbles beating time.”



UPDATE, 1/22/09: Broadway Books survived, and 25 people took advantage of the burrito offer.
On the heels of this news came this posting from Around the Sun that two other local indies, Twenty-Third Avenue Books and In Other Words Women’s Books and Resources are in dire financial straits.

UPDATE, 1/22/09: In Other Words Survived. Twenty-Third Avenue Books did not.
While these are Portland businesses, stores worldwide are having a tough go of it. So if you’re planning on buying books for the holidays, opt for your local independents. Not only does your dollar has a far greater impact there, it may well stave off a bookstore’s vasoplasm.

2 comments:
Burritos for books--an innovative marketing hook for these hard times. As one of your many publishers, Bart, I encourage you to consider something similar. What could you offer to someone showing up at your door with a receipt showing purchase of your oeuvre--besides your sympathy?
Yrs,
TSB
Well, I do have a lot of whoopie-cushions. Seriously!
Post a Comment