Saturday, July 17, 2010

Bengie Molina on cycle: "Being slow has never been a joke for me"

http://rangersblog.dallasnews.com/archives/2010/07/bengie-molina-on-cycle-bei...

Bengie Molina on cycle: "Being slow has never been a joke for me"

Posted at 11:02 PM on Fri., Jul. 16, 2010 

Evan Grant / Blogger 

 

BOSTON - Sure, it wounds like the ultimate punch line to the ultimate slow catcher joke. Bengie Molina pulls of perhaps the most unlikely triple in baseball history, then limps off the field with a quadriceps injury. Only thing, to Bengie Molina being slow is laughing matter.

And so Friday, in the wake of the fifth cycle in Rangers history, Molina talked more about laying it on the line than about punchlines.

"I'm not a stats guys, but this is an individual accomplishment that makes me very happy," said Molina, who went 4-for-4 with a go-ahead grand slam in the Rangers' 8-4 win Friday. "For more than eleven years, I've been criticized as the slowed guy in baseball. To pull off the cycle was personally very satisfying.

"Being slow has never been a joke for me. I don't want to be slow. I want to be as fast as I can. It's just something I don't do well. But I think I do a lot of things that pretty well. I can catch, throw the ball to second, call a game, get some hits and I'm good in the clubhouse. I don't make fun of other people for what they can't do. You have to live it to know how it feels, but it's always affected me."

Molina singled in the second inning Friday, then doubled in the fourth. With the Rangers tied at three with Boston in the fifth and struggling to find hits with runners in scoring position, Molina delivered the fifth grand slam of his career to the deepest part of the ballpark. He called the grand slam his "favorite" moment of the night because it put the Rangers ahead.

Then he led off the eighth with another long fly ball to center field that kicked off the glove of Eric Patterson. Molina had looked up at the ball going to first and slipped, injuring the quadriceps but kept pushing. The ball rolled into the triangle in center field and he reached third standing up. He came out during Chris Davis' at-bat. He will be re-evaluated on Saturday.

When he came off the field, it was to a dugout swarming with smiles and laughter, though nobody was laughing at Molina's cycle. They were laughing with him.

"We were very happy for Bengie," said 3B Michael Young. "He probably doesn't get many opportunities to hit for the cycle and I was just glad we were here to be able to shake his hand. He had a heck of a ballgame. He's been a heck of teammate. We were happy for him."


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Saturday, July 10, 2010

Monsters of Texas

http://www.amazon.com/Monsters-Texas-Ken-Gerhard/dp/1905723571/ctoc

Monsters of Texas

Monsters of Texas [Paperback]

Ken Gerhard (Author), Nick Redfern (Author)

 

Texas - or the Lone Star State, as it is affectionately and widely known - is the second largest U.S. state in both area and population, and contains both colorful and majestic landscapes that range from desert to plains, and forest to wild canyons. But that is not all: all across Texas there lurks a wide array of monsters, mysterious beasts and diabolical creatures that science tells us do not exist - but that a significant percentage of the good folk of Texas certainly know otherwise.


  • Paperback: 162 pages
  • Publisher: cfz (May 27, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1905723571
  • ISBN-13: 978-1905723577
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.1 x 0.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8.5 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)

 

 July 10, 2010          

www.coasttocoastam.com

Texas Monsters:

In the first half of the show, ufologist and cryptozoologistNick Redfern talked about his new book Monsters of Texasand shared tales of bizarre creatures reported in the Lone Star State. 
 
One cryptid that he discussed was the Texas Chupacabras, which Redfern noted has a number of distinct characteristics that set it apart from the entity in Puerto Rico that shares the name. For instance, the Texas Chupacabras has been reported as hairless, with shorter front legs that give it a hopping gait, and its top jaw hangs over its bottom jaw significantly. While some skeptics point to the lack of hair as a sign that the Texas Chupacabras is merely a dog with mange, Redfern dismissed this idea since, unlike dogs who have the affliction, the animal shows no sign of discomfort with being hairless. Although tests on recovered bodies of the creature show that the DNA is canid, the sheer number of bizarre recurring attributes suggest that the Texas Chupacabras is some kind of extreme mutation. "The big question is why this is happening and how," Redfern mused. 

"A lot of people don't realize that Houston had a precursor to the Mothman," Redfern said, as he shared the story of "The Batman" from the early 1950's. This "flying humanoid creature" created a frenzy in the city when it was seen "leaping around the rooftops of Houston late at night." Detailing another "man beast," he recounted the story of the Goat-Man of Lake Worth, an entity reported in the late 1960's that resembled the satyr of ancient mythology. According to Redfern, "local police actually took it very, very seriously" and even had a file on the Goat-Man sightings. Talking about werewolf reports in Texas, Redfern described the creatures as "man-like in appearance, with hair covered bodies, but with a face like a German Shepard." He observed that many werewolf witnesses report the feeling that the creature "was actually able to create fear" and that it would then "feed on that high state of emotion."  Other creatures covered by Redfern included Bigfoot, Thunderbirds, and "Phantom Black Dogs."

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arnold laine = lucifer sam: Cat burglar takes shine to washing-line underwear

http://www.reuters. com/article/ idUSTRE66730T201 00708?feedType= nl&feedName= usmorningdigest

via Rusty in Ohio: arnold laine = lucifer sam >a real life mashup...

Cat burglar takes shine to washing-line underwear

LONDON | Thu Jul 8, 2010 11:50am EDT

(Reuters) - A spate of thefts from gardens and washing lines in a southern English town had been puzzling police.

Socks, gloves, ladies underwear -- almost anything left unattended was fair game for the thief, especially the knickers, and the rate of offending was getting worse.

But now the culprit has been unmasked as a kleptomaniac cat with a generous nature.

Eager to please his new owners, Peter and Birgitt Weismantel, 13-year-old Oscar had been bringing home presents to the family home in Portswood, a suburb of the southern coastal town of Southampton.

"He started bringing socks home a few months ago and then gardening gloves which we tracked to our neighbor," his owner Peter Weismantel told the Southern Daily Echo newspaper.

"Then we had a situation in which he brought back young women's underwear," said Peter, 72.

"It began to escalate and I telephoned the police as people must have been missing clothes -- especially with women's underwear being taken."

The couple have been fostering Oscar from Southampton's Cats Protection charity since Christmas.

Since then he had also pinched builder's gloves, a knee-pad, a paint roller, rubber gloves, and 10 pairs of children's underpants.

On average he commits 10 robberies a day.

"He brings them back as presents," Birgitt told the Echo. "We can't give him back now as he makes such an effort with all these gifts. He's got a lovely personality and is a very loving cat.

"I think we fell in love with him before he started taking all these things," she added. "It was just so touching to see him come home every day with something for us."

Now the couple will adopt Oscar full time but they still have yet to devise a way to curb his criminal instincts.

"He's still doing it now," said Peter. "We are thinking of training him as Fagin!"

(Reporting by Deborah Cicurel; Editing by Steve Addison)

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Friday, July 9, 2010

Gylphi: Transgressive Culture (a new international journal & book series)

http://www.gylphi.co.uk/transgressive/index.php

 

About the Journal

Transgressive Culture (ISSN 2043-7102) is a new international journal to be published by Gylphi Limited. It concerns the limits – in all of their guises – and what lies beyond them. The journal aims include: (1) questioning the meaning and significance of transgressive culture; (2) understanding more deeply how this reflects on contemporary culture; and (3) offering an opportunity for transgressive culture to be more widely known through analysis of existing work and through generating new creative work. There are planned themed editions on addiction, sexual abuse, Hubert Selby Jr., Will Self, and J. G. Ballard.

Editorial Team

Editor

Jason Lee (University of Derby) 

Editorial Board

Feona Attwood (Sheffield Hallam University)
Charlie Blake (Liverpool Hope University)
Ken Gelder (University of Melbourne)
Paul Hegarty (University College Cork)
Mark Jancovich (UEA)
James Kincaid (University of Southern California)
Xavier Mendik (Brunel University)
Balan Muthurajah
Atte Oksanen (University of Tampere)
David Punter (University of Bristol)
Johnny Strike

Call for Submissions

The journal seeks to examine the boundaries of culture, both critically and creatively. Analysis of culture in all forms, including literature, art, film, media, and music, is welcome, with a focus primarily on the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, and the transnational. In terms of creative work, poetry, prose, screenwriting and writing for performance, non-fiction and, of course, work that transcends these boundaries is encouraged. Work needs to be informed by the ideas of key influential theorists of transgression, but this is not prescriptive. We encourage all writing that challenges norms and subverts expectations. Please send a 300-word outline of your work via email to Jason Lee (j.lee@derby.ac.uk).

About the Book Series

This new and groundbreaking book series examines the trans-disciplinary area of transgression. Transgression, in this context, means the breaking of social, moral, and legal boundaries. This series focuses primarily on culture, but its scope goes beyond this. Sometimes transgression appears to be controversial, and yet transgression is frequently today absorbed by the mainstream. Many societies, both in the East and West, appear to be obsessed with this form of behaviour, with activities such as crime and addiction, dominating the news media. Whether this is actually led by a media seeking sensationalist stories to pump up sales, or is part of a deeper, darker, psychological need is an important question. In cultural theory, some highly influential thinkers, such as Nietzsche, Foucault, and Bataille, among others, are synonymous with transgression, and have been used by scholars to analyse transgression. Again, this has to lead to transgression being absorbed within mainstream culture. Degree programmes at mainstream universities include many courses in this area. The boundaries are blurring concerning what it means to 'transgress'. Ironically, perhaps, 'normality' is now transgression. Recent cultural theorists, such as Terry Eagleton and Slavoj Žižek, have examined transgression and 'evil' in contemporary culture. While 'evil' has relevance here, to call anything 'evil' lends it a power, and gives it a status beyond its reality. So, studying transgression actually diffuses some of its so-called power, hence a series such as this has both a scholarly and social and political value. Simply put, when boundaries are crossed by culture, frequently this reinforces the ideological norm. This series, therefore, fulfils a deep need in academic discourse, and beyond. From serial killers in real life, or in literature or television, such as American Psycho and the US television show Dexter, to paedophiles in the media and popular culture, and other forms of behaviour deemed to be anathema, this area both fascinates, and repulses societies, audiences, and individuals.

With a focus, primarily on culture, there is a crossover with the social sciences, particularly anthropology, sociology, history and social psychology. This series, therefore, welcomes work across the humanities, arts, and social sciences. 'Transgressive Culture' offers readers and writers the opportunity to explore these subjects in depth.

About the Editor

The editor, Jason Lee, is a world-authority on transgression, with work translated into six languages. He is Head of Film and Media with Creative and Professional Writing, and Assistant Head of Humanities/Assistant Dean, at the University of Derby. Among other work, he is the author ofPervasive Perversions: Child Sexual Abuse in Media/Culture(London: Free Association Books, 2005). According to James Kincaid, Aerol Arnold Professor of English, at the University of Southern California, the leading international expert in this field during the 1980s and 1990s, Jason Lee's work is 'the finest to appear on the subject'. Cambria Press published Lee's Celebrity, Paedophilia and Ideology in American Culture in 2009, and are publishing an edited collection by him on addiction and obsession in 2010. He is editor of the international journal Transgressive Culture.

Forthcoming Books

Literature, Women and their Addictions: A Comparative Analysis

Nycole Prowse (American University in Dubai)

Addiction, Modernity and Urban Space

Christopher Smith (University of Pennsylvania)

Media Technologies, Japan, and Transgression

Adam Stapleton (University of Western Sydney)

Hedonism and Transgression in British Cinema since 1960

Felix Thompson (University of Derby)

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Thursday, July 8, 2010

Del Shannon - New Orleans (Mardi Gras)/I Think I Love You/Gemini - 1968 (from original vinyl)

Del Shannon - New Orleans (Mardi Gras) - 1968 (from original vinyl)

artmaniac53 | January 03, 2009

LP:The Further Adventures Of Charles Westover
Label:Liberty Records INC. Stereo LST-7539
1968
Los Angeles,California,U.S.A.
This is the psychedelic album of Del Shannon and an all time favorite one for me.It's a kind of music that i can hear on and on!
The song dedicated to my friend Christoforos who gave me material from his jurney last year in New Orleans (lucky man!)
Thanks for visiting this channel.
Enjoy this fantastic song!

(or watch this song at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O2pnq51VjQ0 )


I Think I Love You _ Del Shannon





Del Shannon-Gemini

From the 1968 album`The Further Adventures of Charles Westover`

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Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Food Renegade: Sugar: The Bitter Truth

http://www.foodrenegade.com/sugar-the-bitter-truth/

Food Renegade

Sugar: The Bitter Truth

Tuesday, July 06th, 2010 | Author: KristenM  | 

Last month, I shared two great videos which busted the Cholesterol Myth. After writing the post, I got a flood of emails. The typical comment? “If saturated fat and cholesterol don’t cause heart disease, what does?”

I’ve answered that question here at Food Renegade often enough, so I didn’t feel immediately compelled to write a separate post answering that good (but beaten to death) question. But today (thanks to blogger Ed Bruske @ The Slow Cook) I discovered a video presentation that answers the question quite nicely.

It’s a talk given by Dr. Robert H. Lustig, MD, a UCSF Professor of Pediatrics in the Division of Endocrinology called “Sugar: The Bitter Truth.” The reasons I love this talk? First: the man’s a doctor at a prestigious university teaching and doing research in the field of endocrinology. If anyone is qualified to speak authoritatively on this subject, it would be him. So, if your friends or your family don’t want to hear it from you, other bloggers, science journalists like Gary Taubes, or those in the alternative medicine community, perhaps they’ll actually listen to him. Second: He tackles not just heart disease, but diabetes, obesity, and high-blood pressure. In other words, he shows the connection between dietary intake of sugar (specifically acute fructose) and the root causes of these diseases of industrialization.

 Someone truly on the Real Food bandwagon wouldn’t stop at fructose. They’d start discussing dietary ratios of Omega-3 to Omega-6 fats and point out the protective quality of pre-industrial, traditional foods. They’d make a case not just for a high fat diet, but eating quality fats gleaned from a natural banqueting table (i.e. wild-caught seafoodgrass-fed meatsraw &pastured dairy). They might even point out the dangers of consuming grains, particularlyimproperly prepared grains. They’d emphasize the need for eating living and fermented foodsto support proper digestion and mental health.

Dr. Lustig doesn’t do any of that. And maybe that’s another reason I like this talk. The man is not on the Real Food bandwagon. He’s on the Science bandwagon, basically asking “what does the science really show?” So to listen to his talk, you don’t have to have a completely different food worldview. His science is accessible even to those in love with the Standard American Diet, those who have no objection to the industrialization of our food supply. It’s just plain old science, debunking the cholesterol & saturated fat myths, pointing out the dangers of our excessively high sugar consumption.

Hopefully, it can serve as a wake up call that can start others on the journey to eating Real Food. But, in the very least, it can answer that singular question, “Well, if it’s not cholesterol and saturated fat, what does cause heart disease?”

 

 

 

Robert H. Lustig, MD, UCSF Professor of Pediatrics in the Division of Endocrinology, explores the damage

caused by sugary foods. He argues that fructose (too much) and fiber (not enough) appear to be cornerstones of the obesity epidemic through their effects on insulin. Series: UCSF Mini Medical School for the Public [7/2009] [Health and Medicine] [Show ID: 16717]

Download this video for offline viewing.

LICENSE: Creative Commons (Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works).

For more information about this license, please read: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/.

Download High Quality MP4 Learn more

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Cheng Yen: “Happiness does not come from having much, but from being attached to little.”

http://tinybuddha.com/quotes/july-6-2010/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_mediu...

“Happiness does not come from having much, but from being attached to little.” -Cheng Yen

You can’t hold onto this moment. You can fill with whatever you choose–people, places, things, and dreams. But the only thing that’s certain in life is that the next moment is uncertain. Sometimes it will look a lot like the one before; sometimes it will look completely different.

You can never predict what you’ll gain and lose. That doesn’t have to be frightening–not if you use this as motivation to fully experience and enjoy what’s in front of you.

Notice the joy in your day instead of dwelling on yesterday’s pain. Experience the beauty of the world around you instead of worrying it won’t be there tomorrow. Give yourself credit for all that you’ve done instead of questioning whether it’s enough. Appreciate and enjoy the people you love instead of drowning in petty dramas.

Live this moment like it’s a gift, not a given and then embrace the next one.

This moment will never come again, and it’s yours to fully enjoy.

Photo here

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Monday, July 5, 2010

diskursdisko: The Spaghetti Western Inventory

http://www.diskursdisko.de/2010/07/spaghetti-western-inventory/?utm_source=fe...


The Spaghetti Western Inventory

Alle Themen / Style & Design

Manchmal frage ich mich trotz aller Skepsis dann doch, ob es in dieser Welt so etwas wie höhere Mächte, Synchronizität oder ähnliches geben könnte. Bedingt durch meine extrem grosse Freude am Konsolenwestern Red Dead Redemption habe ich meine bislang recht ausgeprägte Abneigung gegen alles, was mit Cowboys zu tun hat, überwunden, bin über meinen Schatten gesprungen und habe mir ein paar Spaghettiwestern angesehen — denn: John Wayne geht gar nicht, ob mit oder ohne Red Dead.

Sergio Leone musste es also sein: A Fistful Of DollarsFor A Few Dollars More, und — last but by no means least — The Good, The Bad & The Ugly. Und was ist passiert? Der feine Herr hat sich verliebt, ganz besonders in den letzteren Titel, der sich nunmehr zu meinen absoluten Lieblingsfilmen einreiht. Wie es mit solchen Dingen eben so läuft, hat sich daraus in letzter Zeit eine kleine Obsession entwickelt — meine Facebook-Freunde werden es am EliWallach-Profilbild gemerkt haben.

Nun schickte mir Max Dalton, den ich hier schon Mal im Interview hatte, gestern Abend eine Mail mit Glückwünschen zum aktuellen WM-Status der deutschen Mannschaft (nach wie vor nicht so ganz mein Interessengebiet) und einem Link zu seinem neuesten Plakat: The Spaghetti Western Inventory. Als hätte er meine Gedanken gelesen, Fussball hin, Fussball her.

Awesome.

Vincent Wilkie hat diesen tollen Beitrag verfasst. In seiner Freizeit ist er Musiker, Webdesigner und DJ.

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The Independent: Notes from the underground: A fresh breed of literary magazines

http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/features/notes-from-the...

 

Notes from the underground: A fresh breed of literary magazines

 

Mixing DIY ethics, rock'n'roll and searing new writing, a fresh breed of literary magazines is breathing life into the publishing industry, says Rob Sharp

On the write track: Jacob Denno's 'Popshot'

On the write track: Jacob Denno's 'Popshot'

 

There's an empty slot on the bookshelf between your pristine copies of McSweeney's Quarterly Concern and Granta.

 

You'd be forgiven for believing, what with all the nay-saying surrounding the publishing industry, that the best use for the space is as a cubby hole for your shiny new iPad. Think again. Stemming from the edgiest enclaves of the book-loving universe, a glut of new literary magazines is giving a home to freshman writing and established prose. From the cool, rock'n'roll aesthetic of Pen Pusher, to the DIY origins of Litro and the fizzing poetry-illustration formula of Popshot, bookworms are corkscrewing into virgin habitats everywhere.

"There has been a great resurgence in magazines looking at the same literary areas," says Craig Taylor, author and editor of Five Dials, launched by Hamish Hamilton in June 2008 to showcase short fiction, essays, letters, poetry and reportage. While the magazine is distributed via email, its founders intend it to be flexibly consumed – either printed out or viewed electronically. "As conventional magazines are dying out, or chasing celebrity, there's an excellent little gap in the market," continues Taylor. "I went to NatWest the other day and their in-house magazine had the same celebrities on the cover as all of the weekend colour supplements. I remember standing there and thinking, 'thank God I don't have to be the same as everyone else, schmooze the PRs, play the game'. It's a great time to be doing something different."

These publications spawn from creative hubs, like Soho members' clubs (as in the The Drawbridge) or publishing houses, as with Five Dials, or the minds of former publishing nine-to-fivers, like Anna Goodall, the editor of Pen Pusher. This handsome magazine was founded in January 2006 by Goodall, a former Phaidon Press employee and her ex-colleagues Felicity Cloake and Hape Mueller. The first issue was launched three months later, and they have since showcased up-and-coming writers and poets like John Osborne (not that one), Joe Dunthorne and Luke Kennard.

"A lot of people who work in publishing are dissatisfied," says Goodall. "Many of us got into it thinking it would be creative, but it actually isn't, and it's frustrating because you come into close contact with a lot of people who are doing creative jobs, and that can be quite annoying. So some friends and I had an idea to give people an outlet. The first issue was mostly our friends. It was saddle-stitched; it wasn't photocopied but it had that kind of look." Goodall convinced Ricky Wilson, lead singer of Kaiser Chiefs and, lesser known, a talented graphic designer, to design Pen Pusher's distinctive monochrome nib logo. Such connections help the magazine target a younger audience. "It's a niche market, definitely," she continues. "It appeals to young people with an interest in literature looking to get published. People starting out aren't going to get something into The Paris Review." That said, at least two of its former contributors – Pia Chatterjee and Nikesh Shukla – have gone on to secure agents and publishing deals directly as a result of appearing in Pen Pusher.

Indeed, the editors of these fledgling organs claim that low budgets spur inventiveness. While Five Dials' inaugural issue contained an 1852 letter from Flaubert to Louise Colet, the first in a series of "exemplar letters", in more recent times it has juxtaposed articles on gangster rap with more high-brow fare. "It's good to try to challenge the more established magazines," says Taylor. "They don't always deserve to be there. You need newer titles with new ideas; there needs to be movement in that world. We are trying to show you can still have Susan Sontag alongside NWA, a huge mix of writers and topics. At worst, people aren't reading literary magazines because they don't think they're fun. We have to hustle and the stakes aren't as high. A lot of the more traditional magazines are wedded to a certain aesthetic and it's fun not having to pay attention."

Litro is similarly democratic. Its inaugural editor, south London resident Mike Fell, launched the magazine in 2005 as a folded sheet of photocopied paper with a single story that he distributed on Friday mornings outside Tube stations. It is now owned by the publishinghouse Ocean Media, after Fell met the company's publisher, Eric Akoto, at a London book fair. The free magazine is now distributed monthly in print and online, containing four or fiveshort stories, flash fiction and poetry. Recent contributors have included writers, novelists and playwrights such as Etgar Keret, Benjamin Zephaniah, Glyn Maxwell and Yiyun Li. "It's about the shape of a brochure and has a few ads every time; that's how we survive," says editor Sophie Lewis. "It's not over-slick, but is attractive and it has hidden depths."

Inventiveness comes in the selection of words and design, as well as the marriage between them. This is especially true of Popshot, founded in October 2008 by 22-year-old Jacob Denno, which has full-page illustrations and modern typography. Published twice a year, it mixes illustration, design and contemporary poetry. The latest edition contains the work of poets Jack Stannard (Vogue thinks he's someone to watch this year) and Inua Ellams, fresh from a one-man-show at the National Theatre, as well as Helen Mort (five-times Foyle Young Poets of the Year winner).

"When we first had the idea of creating Popshot, we wanted to reach an audience that many of the poetry magazines weren't reaching," says Denno. "Personally, I have a strong interest in poetry and I still find it hard to stomach those poetry magazines that continue to print pages upon pages of poetry in Times New Roman on book paper stock. Design plays a gigantic part in packaging up something as more desirable. The process of breaking up a text with photographs, illustrations or even just well-placed paragraph breaks, can make it so much easier to digest. We are more likely to pay attention to a publication, a product or even a person, if they are packaged well. This is even more applicable when it comes to poetry or literature, which in the past have largely overlooked design. In order to engage with younger audiences, poetry and literature has to think about how to present itself. In my opinion the old phrase 'don't judge a book by its cover' is absolute nonsense. Always judge a book by its cover."

Whatever their eventual success, all of these magazines embrace, rather than eschew, new technologies – something some of the old guard within the literary world are keen to avoid. Most of them have well-designed websites wholeheartedly vaunting their connections to social networking in order to aid subscriptions and spoken-word events – at music festivals and at one-offs – which help to boost their readership. "The flexibility is pretty cool," concludes Taylor. "I read some things on an iPhone and it's fine but it's not like I'm only going to read things on there. There's a false divide in people's minds between electronic and paper and it's just not the case. People read in different ways at different times. You read on the Tube in one way; in bed another. There is a better way of not preaching to people that the revolution is going to leave them behind." The same could be said for the fiction itself. If it's unpretentious, flexible, accessible and young – is there anything not to like?

New Word Order: The Hot Lit List

Stingray

Each issue is organised around an appropriate theme, like "community" or "travel". Founding editor Melanie Venables set up the magazine last year on a small budget with a spoken-word launch event. A biannual publication, the first issue came out in December, the latest is available now from independent bookshops for a suggested donation of £2. It features poetry, reportage, fiction and illustration. The next issue contains pieces on wild-flower erotica, translations of the diaries of a Hungarian writer living in Paris in the 1930s, and an article on Voyager Syndrome, or mental disorders related to travel.

Gutter

A Scottish new-writing magazine, founded in August 2009 by its current co-editors Adrian Searle and Colin Begg, both graduates of the University of Glasgow's Masters in creativewriting. 'Gutter' is £5.99 per issue and is published twice a year. It contains new fiction – short stories, novel extracts – poetry and irreverent cartoons from writers and illustrators either born or living in Scotland. It just enjoyed a sell-out showcase at Glasgow literary festival Aye Write!, while in April Alan Bissett, author of 'Death of a Ladies' Man' and multi-tasking performer, hosted an evening at the National Library of Scotland in Edinburgh.

The Drawbridge

Set up in 2006 by a group of friends who regularly socialise at the Soho literary drinking den Blacks. The magazine is £2.90, and is quarterly. It showcases short stories, essays, photographs and drawings dedicated to a different theme – recent choices have been "ego", "horror", "silence" and "first love". It takes the format of a full-colour newspaper (though doesn't have any news or reviews). Recently, contributor Etgar Keret interviewed Jonathan Safran Foer as part of Jewish Book Week.

Ambit

'Ambit', while not new, still wields influence over younger agenda-setting magazines. Founded in 1959 by Dr Martin Bax, it once held a competition to find the best story or poem written under the influence of drugs and had its funding revoked as a result (in the end, the winning piece was penned by a woman on the contraceptive pill). Published quarterly, each issue of 'Ambit' costs £7 for 96 pages, roughly a third poetry, prose and illustrations each.

Alumni range from William Burroughs to Jonathan Lethem; poetry has been contributed by Fleur Adcock, Peter Porter and Judy Brown. J G Ballard's late 1960s condensed novels first appeared in 'Ambit'; Carol Ann Duffy also edited the poetry pages while Eduardo Paolozzi and David Hockney have had their art published on its pages.

'Gutter', which celebrates new Scottish writing'Gutter', which celebrates new Scottish writing

A typically boldly designed page from 'Stingray'A typically boldly designed page from 'Stingray'

The nib logo of 'Pen Pusher' was designed by Kaiser Chiefs' front man, Ricky WilsonThe nib logo of 'Pen Pusher' was designed by Kaiser Chiefs' front man, Ricky Wilson

Founded in 1959 'Ambit' has provided a benchmark for the new breed of literary magazineFounded in 1959 'Ambit' has provided a benchmark for the new breed of literary magazine

'Litro' started life as a sheet of folded, photocopied paper'Litro' started life as a sheet of folded, photocopied paper

 

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