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T H I S+W E E K Forbidden island:
Cuba libre!
Irish idyll
D E P A R T M E N T S The Surreal Gourmet
Postmark
Passages:
Readers' Tips and Tales
A letter to the Editor
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - L A S T + W E E K Saturday, May 24 Praise the Titanic!
A full list of all
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BY HERB CAEN | when Caen passed away in February, the residents of San Francisco poured into the streets to mourn him and honor his life's work. To them, Caen represented the city and everything they loved about it. Starting in 1938, when the San Francisco Chronicle replaced the young newspaperman's radio column with his around-the-city items, Caen pumped out an astonishing 1,000 words per day for over 50 years. And he fiercely adhered to deadlines. Caen could romanticize the city, but he also could be brutal. He was the city's inner conscience and its bard. This book is one of several collections of his better columns. Through his daily musings Caen managed to record San Francisco's rich and varied history -- and to capture its spirit and soul. Select
BY LURREE MILLER | san Francisco has served as host city to a wide and varied spectrum of literary talent, from Mark Twain and Robert Louis Stevenson to Armistead Maupin and Amy Tan. Robert Frost, Shirley Jackson and Alice B. Toklas were San Francisco natives. The city nurtured the Beat movement and the literary antics of the Merry Pranksters. "Literary Hills of San Francisco" is a short but sweet guidebook to the city, explaining neighborhood by neighborhood where these writers lived and passed their time. Each chapter concludes with a one-hour walking tour complete with map and points of literary and historical interest. Select
BY ARMISTEAD MAUPIN | "tales of the City" is the first of six novels chronicling the adventures and lives of the tenants of 28 Barbary Lane. Published in 1976, the novel began as a newspaper serial and ended up being made into a TV miniseries. Maupin unravels the lives of his characters in an honest but compassionate way, and his love for San Francisco fills the spaces between every line. In language that's witty and concise, Maupin's depiction of San Francisco in the 1970s -- its romantic hot spots and quirky, spiritual culture -- is unmatched in its accuracy and style. Select June 3, 1997 |
W A N D E R L U S T |
A R C H I V E S N E W S L E T T E R T A B L E T A L K M A R K E T P L A C E |