I have two perennial New Year’s Resolutions. One is to stop embarrassing myself on this ridiculous blog, grow up, and make something of myself. The other is to read fifty books during the calendar year. […]
I have two perennial New Year’s Resolutions. One is to stop embarrassing myself on this ridiculous blog, grow up, and make something of myself. The other is to read fifty books during the calendar year. […]
“It is to be all made of fantasy, All made of passion and all made of wishes, All adoration, duty, and observance, All humbleness, all patience and impatience, All purity, all trial, all observance.” -Shakespeare, As […]
Geography of the outside world determines the geography of the inner. Earlier this week, Hurricane Sandy forever changed the geographies of New Jersey and New York, the twin homes of this author’s soul. Lives were […]
In the fraught relationship between film and literature, few events are rarer than a film adaptation that qualitatively surpasses its source material. Now, note the use of “literature” in the preceding sentence, as the bond […]
In the fall of 2012, just a few days shy of Halloween, two handsome graduate students entered Butler Library on the campus of Columbia University. They were never seen again. Based upon the extensive NYPD […]
In Episode #3 of the BPoFD Podcast, managing editor Carmen Petaccio sits down with fiction writer and bookseller Emily Simpson. Highlights include discussions on the best gift Emily ever received from a stalker at The Strand Bookstore, the Drunk […]
In Episode #2 of the BPoFD Podcast, managing editor Carmen Petaccio sits down with Sam Tacon of River City Extension. Highlights include tall tales of lunching with Jim James, photo-ops with Bam Margera, ruminations on Mitt Romney’s skin transplant, and Carmen […]
In the inaugural BPoFD Podcast, managing editor Carmen Petaccio sits down with writer-director Taylor Sardoni. Highlights include an insider’s look into the making of The Late 90’s Seattle Supersonics, an extensive examination of the upcoming Fall TV Season, reflections on […]
Cliche upholds that the human mind is “an excellent servant, but a terrible master.” In The Master, his first film since 2007’s redoubtable There Will Be Blood, writer-director Paul Thomas Anderson seeks to dramatize his and our ancient […]