Things laneschronicles likes Explore more popular stuff on Tumblr →
-
-
Barney Rosset, 1922-2012
Barney Rosset, one of the most significant publishers of the 20th century, editor of Grove Press and The Evergreen Review, who fought censorship in famous legal battles over the publication of Lady Chatterley’s Lover and Tropic of Cancer, is dead at 89. Rosset introduced American readers to Samuel Beckett, Eugene Ionesco, Octavio Paz, Pablo Neruda, Jean Genet, Ismail Kadare and many others, published The Autobiography of Malcolm X, and was an important publisher of William Burroughs and many of the Beats. Loren Glass wrote about Rosset’s career in two pieces for us, [here] and [here], and mentions him in his review of Richard Seaver’s memoir, edited by Jeanette Seaver, [here]. Along with Seaver, Rosset was responsible for making the European, Latin American, and American avant-gardes available to generations of readers.
-
sergionavarrete reblogged keithcarsonisronaldstantonSource: The New York Times“Every time I read an article about conservatives being “pro- life” I am reminded of my brother who died of ALS at the age of 47. He spent the last 6 years of his life in nursing homes where the care, supervision and meals were abysmal. One of his former roommates was smoking a cigarette, fell asleep and burned to death because his diaper caught fire. Another roommate went home for the weekend to visit his mother and committed suicide in the garage of her home so that he wouldn’t have to return to the nursing home. I have to say that in all the years my brother was there I never once saw a group of conservatives out in front of the building shouting slogans about the sanctity of life and how all lives - no matter what age - are meaningful. I never once saw a group of evangelicals visiting with patients, pushing wheelchairs, or feeding the elderly residents. There were no Rick Santorums advocating on behalf of my brother who several years before had been a pro golfer and was still the father of two adorable young boys. When conservatives and evangelicals understand that ALL life really is sacred, including that of the elderly, the permanently disabled, the terminally ill, and the women and children who accidentally get bombed in the course of a war, then maybe I’ll listen to their opinions on contraceptives and/or abortion. For now, however, this is really just a politically heated argument about women’s reproductive rights and who gets to control those rights.”