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  • AMERARCANA 2012: A Bird & Beckett Review - $15.00
    The Third Annual, featuring the words of Bill Berkson, Justin Desmangles, Joanne Kyger, Rodrigo Lira (translated by Rodrigo Olavarría & Thomas Rothe), Duncan McNaughton, Jackson Meazle, David Meltzer, Sarah Menefee, Jason Morris, Jeffrey Joe Nelson, Erik Noonan, Cedar Sigo, Will Skinker, Tisa Walden & the editor Nicholas James Whittington, with artwo […]
  • The Cuban Drumbeat, by Piero Gleijesis - $15.00
    In waging a long war against oppression and misery in the third world, Castro's Cuba sent more troops into battle on foreign soil in defense of besieged populations than all but the U.S., Russia and a few Western European countries. Gleijeses wonders what's next for a post-Castro Cuba. […]
  • Two Underdogs and a Cat, by Slavenka Drakulic - $17.00
    Drakulic, well known to readers of The Nation, the New York Times and the New York Review of Books, ponders the fate of the communist idea through three stories: "An Interview with The Oldest Dog in Bucharest," "A Guided Tour of the Museum of Communism" and "A Cat Keeper in Warsaw" […]
  1. Jerry Ferraz & Sterling Bunnell

    May 8, 2011 by Eric

    A BARD & A PHILOSOPHER

    Jerry Ferraz & Sterling Bunnell

    POETS! featured readers + open mic, twice monthly

    Monday, May 16th, 7:00 pm

    Jerry Ferraz was born and grew up over in Eureka Valley some years ago, let’s say in the early 1950s, round about this time of year… a San Franciscan to the core… though a much broader expanse of time and geography reverberates through him…

    Through the years, he’s recited his winding and enigmatic fables in verse and sung his lovely flamenco inflected songs in the cafes and bars, at the bus stops and construction sites, in the parks… trading in the poetic coin of the realm of philosophers and seers.  There really are precious few like him, and they’re scattered like jewels over centuries of tradition, across the seas and the continents.  He’s a poet for the ages, and we’re not hesitant to characterize him thus.  After ten-plus years of Bird & Beckett poetry readings, and four and a half decades of rambling the streets in this most beautiful of cities with a long succession of small, festooned guitars (the ones stickered with images and evocative phrases… “poets are good with their tongues”), Jerry rolls along…  Join us to raise a glass of good red wine to a true wearer of the troubadour’s mantel.

    This evening, Jerry has once again invited a long-time associate, a mentor, a falconer, a disperser of frogs, a sage, Sterling Bunnell to read with him.  Appropriately, Bunnell is credited with introducing the first living strain of Salvia divinorum, Diviner’s Sage, to the United States, on his return from a 1962 trip in the company of Michael McClure to Sierra Mazateca.  Sterling’s recent series of talks at the Humanist Hall in Oakland have been providing grist for the mill and food for thought to many, just a current manifestation of his continuing consideration of things as they are.

  2. Living to spite the devil

    April 11, 2011 by Eric

    here on the roof of hell…

    Thursday, April 14th, 7:00 pm
    Bird & Beckett Political Book Discussion Group

    This Month’s subject of discussion:

    All the Devils are Here: The Hidden History of the Financial Crisis

    Have a yen to hash out the cynical and self-serving machinations of the powerful? C’mon down!

    In its monthly meeting, a conclave of inquiring souls gathers to consider Bethany McLean & Joe Nocera’s investigation into a landscape of self congratulatory corruption.

    The authors take their title from Shakespeare’s The Tempest:  “Hell is empty, and all the devils are here.”

    To which Joe Thorn, neighborhood sage, might add Issa’s haiku:

    In this world
    We walk on the roof of hell
    Gazing at flowers

    Friday, April 15th, 5:30 to 8:00 pm
    jazz in the bookshop – a weekly communal shindig

    this week:

    Peterson – Prell – ? – Marabuto

    Guitarist Scott Foster is off at a conference of educators in Wisconsin — in the belly of the beast, as it were…

    so we’ll wait to be surprised to find who’s handling the chordal chores this week.

    No doubt, we’ll be in for another thrilling ride along the twisting bop turnpike…

    Sunday, April 17th, 4:30 & 5:30 pm (two sets)
    which way west? Sunday concert series

    This week:

    Quarteto sombra y luz

    Drifting and surging on a rhythmic current of samba, bolero, cumbia, flamenco… sounding the evocative melanges of afro-latino aural soundscapes that have cast their spells for countless generations…

    the musicians of Quarteto Sombra y Luz  – Sandy Cressman, Larry de la Cruz, Paul Mousavi and Dan Foltz – play amidst the supple shadow and blazing light of the music.

    Monday, April 18th, 7:00 pm
    POETS! featured readers plus open mic

    This session:

    Christina Fisher & Sunnylyn Thibodeaux

    A New Orleans poet stranded in San Francisco, a Floridian who followed the manatee’s siren song of poetics to migrate west… Thibodeaux and Fisher might be said to use poetry to ‘sound out those interiors the eye is unable to discern.’

    An open mic follows, molded by the instincts and inclinations of those present… Jerry Ferraz, bardic wonder and wanderer of these San Francisco streets, is ever your genial host and wielder of the clipboard…