viernes, 23 de septiembre de 2011

Book News


Book News and Reviews
BOOKS OF THE TIMES

‘Life Itself ’

The critic Roger Ebert and his wife, Chaz, at the Toronto International Film Festival this month.
Fred Thornhill/Reuters
The critic Roger Ebert and his wife, Chaz, at the Toronto International Film Festival this month.
In “Life Itself” the film critic Roger Ebert covers much career and personal ground, including the challenge of coping with cancer and disfiguring surgery.
MEDIA DECODER

Schwarzenegger to Publish Memoir

Arnold Schwarzenegger has made a deal to write a memoir, tentatively titled "Total Recall," and due for publication in Oct. 2012.
BOOKS OF THE TIMES
Charles Frazier

‘Nightwoods’

Charles Frazier’s new book, “Nightwoods,” set in the 1960s, recounts both a love story and a story of survival and endurance; mostly, though, it is a story about second chances.

Kindle Connects to Library E-Books

Amazon has significantly increased the potential visibility of library e-books by opening up its popular Kindle reading device to these books for the first time.
CHILDREN'S BOOKS

Picture Books About Girls Who Dress Up

“I Had a Favorite Dress” and “Birdie’s Big-Girl Dress” are two new picture books about girls and their cherished dresses.

Century After It Was Banned, Place of Honor for Twain Tale

“Eve’s Diary” was pulled from the shelves of a library in 1906 after trustees objected to illustrations of a naked Eve in Eden.
BOOKS OF THE TIMES
Daniel Yergin

‘The Quest’

In “The Quest: Energy, Security, and the Remaking of the Modern World,” Daniel Yergin returns to the topic of how energy policy is driving global change.
Kay Ryan, a former poet laureate of the United States and Pulitzer Prize winner, said the MacArthur grant provided a certain “mental ease.”

MacArthur Foundation Selects 22 ‘Geniuses’

The 22 recipients of the $500,000 “genius awards” selected by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation represent a broad swath of achievement in the arts and sciences.
BOOKS OF THE TIMES
Lee Child

‘The Affair’

In “The Affair,” the 16th book in the Reacher series, Lee Child gives his hero a back story.
Sunday Book Review

‘The Grief of Others’

Jon Klassen
Leah Hager Cohen’s fourth novel weaves a complex pattern of light and dark, happiness and grief, in a 21st-century version of the family chronicle.

‘Driving Home’

Jonathan Raban’s essays describe how he left England for a new life in Seattle.
H. G. Wells

‘A Man of Parts’

David Lodge’s novel is based on the life of H.G. Wells, writer, prophet, political thinker and lover.
Lily Tuck

‘I Married You for Happiness’

Lily Tuck’s novel traces the joys and the mysteries of a long marriage.
A refugee camp in Korem, Ethiopia, 1984.

‘Three Famines: Starvation and Politics’

When it comes to famine, Thomas Keneally finds natural forces less culpable than social injustice.

‘Is Marriage for White People?’

Why are black women much less likely to marry than white?

‘There but for the’

Ali Smith’s satire about a guest who refuses to leave is also a parable of contemporary life.
Surat, India, in 2005.

‘The Beautiful and the Damned: A Portrait of the New India’

Siddhartha Deb looks at how individual Indians are dealing with the country’s rapid change.

‘What It Is Like to Go to War’

A Vietnam veteran offers a deeply personal look at the ordeal of combat.
Roya Hakakian

‘Assassins of the Turquoise Palace’

The 1992 killings of four Iranian opposition leaders in Berlin implicated the highest levels of Iran’s leadership.

‘The Golden Empire’

Hugh Thomas continues his monumental account of the glory days of Spain.
Denis Johnson

‘Train Dreams’

A powerful American story of backwoods tragedy and isolation unfolds in Denis Johnson’s novella.
American Communists lining up for the May Day parade in Manhattan in 1935.

‘American Dreamers’

Michael Kazin extols the influence of the left’s reformers, radicals and idealists in shaping America.

‘Noon’

A young protagonist is caught between the worlds of India and Pakistan.
Children's Books

‘Wonderstruck’

Brian Selznick’s new book, which follows “The Invention of Hugo Cabret,” expands on his method.

‘Wildwood’

The Decemberists’ singer and songwriter, Colin Meloy, imagines a world that is part Portland, part fantasy.

‘The Fingertips of Duncan Dorfman’

The hero of Meg Wolitzer’s first young adult novel possesses a special power that gives him an unfair advantage in Scrabble.

‘The Flint Heart’

Katherine and John Paterson bring back a century-old fantasy classic.

Bookshelf: Fairy and Folk Tales

Children’s and young adult books about kings, orphans, dragons and mythological beasts.

Dejar de fumar podría mejorar la memoria


Dejar de fumar podría mejorar la memoria

Los que fuman tienen más problemas para recordar las tareas, sugiere un pequeño estudio
Robert Preidt
Traducido del inglés: jueves, 22 de septiembre, 2011
Imagen de noticias HealthDay
Temas relacionados en MedlinePlus
MIÉRCOLES, 21 de septiembre (HealthDay News) -- Además de los muchos y bien conocidos beneficios de salud de dejar de fumar, los investigadores ahora han descubierto otro buen motivo para abandonar el hábito: podría ayudar a mejorar la memoria cotidiana.
El equipo de la Universidad de Northumbria en Newcastle, Reino Unido, administró pruebas de memoria a 27 fumadores, 18 ex fumadores y 24 personas que nunca habían fumado. En la prueba, tenían que recordar hacer las tareas asignadas en distintos lugares del campus universitario.
Los fumadores apenas recordaron 59 por ciento de las tareas, frente a 74 por ciento en los ex fumadores y 81 por ciento en los que nunca habían fumado.
"Ya sabemos que dejar de fumar tiene inmensos beneficios de salud para el cuerpo, pero este estudio también muestra cómo dejar de fumar puede tener... beneficios para la función cognitiva [del cerebro]", señaló en un comunicado de prensa de la Northumbria el investigador Tom Heffernan, del Grupo de Investigación Colaborativa sobre las Drogas y el Alcohol de la universidad.
Apuntó que este es el primer estudio en examinar el efecto que dejar de fumar tiene sobre la memoria.
"Dado que hay hasta diez millones de fumadores en R.U. y hasta 45 millones en EE. UU., es importante comprender los efectos que fumar tiene sobre la función cognitiva cotidiana, de la cual la memoria prospectiva es un excelente ejemplo", señaló Heffernan.
El estudio se publicó en línea como adelanto de su aparición en una próxima edición impresa de la revista Drug and Alcohol Dependence.

Artículo por HealthDay, traducido por Hispanicare
FUENTE: Northumbria University, news release, Sept. 20, 2011
HealthDay

Estampas de china . Odisea 2008


En la búsqueda efectuada en bibliotecas digitales de todo el mundo y en webs especializadas, se consiguen en muchas ocasiones libros e imágenes muy interesantes, y que quedan relegadas al olvido para la mayoría, bien por no conocer la manera de acceder a ellas o lo más frecuente porque ni siquiera se conoce su existencia.

Pretendo al respecto mostrar aquí algunas de esas obras e imágenes y remitir al lector a su fuente original para que caso de interesarle el tema, pueda ampliar sus conocimientos.

Todas las sugerencias y críticas constructivas serán bienvenidas, al igual que sus comentarios.

Saludos




VIERNES 23 DE SEPTIEMBRE DE 2011

ESTAMPAS DE CHINA

En marzo de 2009 les edite un post titulado “Paisajes y costumbres de la China Imperial” ENLACE , en el cual basándonos en dos obras de mediados del siglo XIX les presente grabados en blanco y negro realizados a plumilla, hoy en esta entrada avanzaremos un poco en el tiempo y veremos escenas de paisajes, tipos y costumbres de la China de principios del siglo XX, utilizando también dos libros, ambos guías de viaje de la época.

El primero es China ENLACE en una edición de 1910, escrita por Lena E. Johnston, ilustrado con 12 laminas de Norman H. Hardy, les expongo a continuación la mayoría, para conocer el titulo pasen el cursor sobre la imagen, para ampliar pulsen sobre ella.

001-Pesca con cormoranes-China 1910- Norman H. Hardy

002-Carretilla-China 1910- Norman H. Hardy

003-Chica con niño-China 1910- Norman H. Hardy

004-Jovenes Manchu-China 1910- Norman H. Hardy

005-Una calle de ciudad-China 1910- Norman H. Hardy

006-Un patio-China 1910- Norman H. Hardy

007- Un coolie anciano-China 1910- Norman H. Hardy

008-En el puerto de Hong Kong-China 1910- Norman H. Hardy

009-En la escuela-China 1910- Norman H. Hardy

010-Niños alrededor de un puesto de dulces-China 1910- Norman H. Hardy

El segundo con el mismo título China ENLACE es una edición de 1909, escrita por Sir Henry Arthur Blake, y con 16 ilustraciones de Mortimer Menpes, veamos algunas de sus láminas.

011-Un zapatero-China 1909- Mortimer Menpes

012- Un estudiante-China 1909- Mortimer Menpes

013- Shampanes-China 1909- Mortimer Menpes

014- Palillos-China 1909- Mortimer Menpes

015- Camino al mercado-China 1909- Mortimer Menpes

016- Un abuelo-China 1909- Mortimer Menpes

017- Una casa de veraneo-China 1909- Mortimer Menpes

018-Una joven china-China 1909- Mortimer Menpes

019-Tipica escena callejera-China 1909- Mortimer Menpes

020-Un templo-China 1909- Mortimer Menpes

He recortado el sobrante de los originales, corregido contraste y enmarcado en blanco.

Saludos.

Movie Reviews


Movie Reviews

Brad Pitt in
MOVIE REVIEW | 'MONEYBALL'

Throwing a Digital-Age Curveball

By MANOHLA DARGIS
Brad Pitt plays Billy Beane, the baseball executive who challenged traditions of the game, in "Moneyball."
Tom Cullen, left, as Russell, and Chris New as Glen, in
MOVIE REVIEW | 'WEEKEND'

A Morning After That Turns Into a Dance of Discovery

By A. O. SCOTT
"Weekend," directed by Andrew Haigh, is one of those rare films that address the complex entanglements of love and sex honestly.
ADVERTISEMENT
Gerard Butler as Sam Childers, a former drug dealer who un-dergoes a religious conversion, in
MOVIE REVIEW | 'MACHINE GUN PREACHER'

Good Works With a Bad Attitude

By A. O. SCOTT
A former drug dealer, Sam Childers underwent a religious conversion. But it may be that, in movie terms, Mr. Childers's story is too true to be good.
Taylor Lautner and Lily Collins, on the run in
MOVIE REVIEW | 'ABDUCTION'

At Least His Abs Get a Workout

By STEPHEN HOLDEN
Taylor Lautner stars in "Abduction." There is also a plot, of sorts.
MOVIE REVIEW | 'PEARL JAM TWENTY'

A Sound Reverberating Far Beyond Seattle

By ANDY WEBSTER
Cameron Crowe's documentary about the band Pearl Jam honors its two-decade career.
Form left, Michael Angarano, Kyle Gallner and Nicholas Braun as teenagers trapped by a fanatical preacher in
MOVIE REVIEW | 'RED STATE'

Director Hates Stupidity, Hypocrisy and Critics

By A. O. SCOTT
Kevin Smith's "Red State" is a horror-action move, but what it does best is talk.
A trombonist from the Kashmere Stage Band.
MOVIE REVIEW | 'THUNDER SOUL'

From a School Band, Soul and Funk, and Heart

By JEANNETTE CATSOULIS
"Thunder Soul" features a Houston high-school music director who turned his school's band into a celebrated funk institution.
From left, Catherine, William, Barbara, Carl and Jonathan Colby in
MOVIE REVIEW | 'THE MAN NOBODY KNEW'

Son Takes His Famous Father Out of the Shadows

By ANDY WEBSTER
"The Man Nobody Knew," a documentary by Carl Colby about his father, the elusive C.I.A. chief William Colby.
Ellen Barkin portrays a newly retired actress who moves to a secluded cabin in the country in Cam Archer's
MOVIE REVIEW | '___ YEAR'

Away From the Limelight and Losing Her Grip

By MANOHLA DARGIS
In "___ Year," Ellen Barkin plays a fading actress who comes to terms with retirement.

News & Features

In
ARTS & LEISURE

And Now a Word From the Director

By MANOHLA DARGIS
When Lars von Trier said he was a Nazi, he was on the brink of getting the best reviews of his career for "Melancholia," which is coming to the New York Film Festival.
Tom Cullen, far left, as Russell, and Chris New as Glen, getting to know each other in
ARTS & LEISURE

Romance and Reflection, Hand in Hand

By DENNIS LIM
"Weekend," Andrew Haigh's new film, is about a relationship between two gay men. But whether or not it is a "gay film" depends on how you look at it.
William F. May.

William F. May, 95, Dies; Helped Found Film Society

By WILLIAM GRIMES
Mr. May, who led the American Can Company for 15 years, was also a longtime board member of The New York Times.

DVD

Orson Welles in
THE NEW SEASON DVDS

Movies That Said, 'Look What I Can Do'

By CHARLES TAYLOR and STEPHANIE ZACHAREK
Newly released DVDs include "Citizen Kane," "Going Places" and "Birth of a Nation."

Photos & Video

The New Season: Movies
Profiles of Ryan Gosling and Kirsten Dunst, a look at breakthrough performances, a schedule of fall films and more.
VIDEO: Critics' Picks: 'A Face in the Crowd'
A. O. Scott examines the creation of a media sensation in Elia Kazan's film.
VIDEO: Interview: Andrew Haigh
Andrew Haigh, the writer and director of "Weekend," discusses his film.
INTERACTIVE FEATURE:Faces to Watch
Five performers from this season of fall movies find themselves on the verge.
Jean Dujardin and Berenice Bejo in
SLIDE SHOW: Reasons to Stay In the Dark
A look at some of the films releasing this fall.

Showtimes & Tickets