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Posts Tagged ‘Portland’

My reasons for participating in both the Scissortail Creative Writing Festival and the Arkansas Literary Festival were not purely literary. They were also culinary.

I knew that by spending ten days in Oklahoma and Arkansas I would not only meet fellow writers and readers, which I did, but that I would also enjoy some fine barbecue, which I also did. I gave presentations related to Fighters & Writers three times during my miniature Southern tour, but had barbecue in half a dozen different places. Indeed, the main reason my wife and I stopped in Arkadelphia was because our Arkansas guidebook proclaimed a joint there, Allen’s BBQ, to be the best in the state. Folks in Little Rock disagreed. Some said Famous Dave’s was superior (even though it’s a franchise operation headquartered in Minnesota); others pointed to Sims (which has local roots). We tried both. I won’t say which I think is number one because I think it would take more than one meal at each restaurant to judge fairly. If I get another chance to do further research, I’ll surely take it. (Ron Settlers, proprietor of Sims, told us that the reason we can’t get comparable ribs in Portland, Oregon, is because proper preparation requires the hickory wood that grows in the South.)

Appropriately enough, Rex Nelson, the moderator of my Saturday afternoon session at the Arkansas Literary Festival, writes about barbecue, boxing, books and other shared interest at his blog, Southern Fried.

Discussing boxing and books with Rex Nelson at the Arkansas Literary Festival, April 9, 2011

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As a still relatively new holiday, Martin Luther King, Jr., Day has yet to develop its widely recognized celebratory routines. Thanksgiving involves a feast; Christmas, a tree and gifts; the Fourth of July, fireworks. Is MLK Day set aside for remembering and reflection, or is it a time for public service? I confess I don’t know the best way to commemorate the great man’s achievements. (In Portland, Oregon, options include listening to speeches and going to the zoo for free.)

I do know that my most memorable MLK Day so far occurred in the last January of my years in New York. The Brooklyn Academy of Music arranged a program of events culminating in a concert by Mavis Staples, who sang songs from her then-still-new recording We’ll Never Turn Back, along with Staple Singers classics. King inspired the Staple Singers, who started to sing “freedom songs” in the 1960s. She wanted We’ll Never Turn Back to convey the same message as those anthems from the civil rights movement: “We’ve got to keep pushing to make the world a better place.” Having people like Mavis Staples making beautiful music does precisely that, I believe (and her fine 2010 follow-up, You Are Not Alone, backs me up).

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The organizers of Wordstock have invited me to read from Fighters & Writers at “the Pacific Northwest’s largest book festival,” which is slated to occur October 9 and 10, 2010, at the Oregon Convention Center in Portland.

Details to follow…

[UPDATE: See "Wordstock Schedule" for more information.]

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Fighters & Writers is now available from the kind of stores where I like to shop – independent booksellers in the city where I live, such as:

Annie Bloom’s Books

7834 SW Capitol Hwy.

Portland, OR 97219

503-246-0053

Looking Glass Bookstore

7983 SE 13th Ave.

Portland, OR 97202

503-227-4760

Wallace Books

7241 SE Milwaukie Ave.

Portland, OR 97202

503-235-7350

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