Monthly Archive for January, 2012

Page 3 of 3

Martha Bayne Discusses The Soup & Bread Cookbook 2/9

Feb ’12
9
7:00 pm

Everybody loves soup. But why?

 

Sure, it’s nutritious, affordable, and infinitely variable. Soup can be a rustic meal in a bowl or a dainty palate cleanser. It can showcase the pure flavors of fresh spring peas or provide a last-ditch use for tired celery and the stalest bread. From borscht to pozole to udon, it’s the hallmark of home cooking across cultures. It soothes the sick, it nourishes the poor–and it can trick children into eating their veggies. And, alone among foods, a pot of soup can be a powerful tool to both draw people together and help them to reach out to others.

 

The Soup & Bread Cookbook, inspired by author Martha Bayne’s Soup & Bread series at Chicago’s Hideout, aims to explore this social role of soup, in the midst of a collection of terrific, affordable recipes from food activists, chefs, and others, providing a quirky exploration of the cultural history of soup–and its natural ally, bread–as a tool for both building community and fostering social justice.

 

The social functions of soup don’t stop at the soup kitchen door. Everyone’s familiar with the “stone soup” fable — the tale of a hungry town that feeds itself when every citizen contributes something to the pot. But have you heard about Re-Thinking Soup, a weekly free soup lunch started in Chicago by Sam Kass, the Obamas’ personal chef? Or about Empty Bowl, a nationwide grassroots effort to raise money for hunger relief by partnering with local arts groups?

 

Soup has a powerful effect on how people gather, eat, and share. A few years ago in Seattle, Knox Gardner had a brainstorm. Eating your way through a pot of soup day after day can get boring–why not get together and swap some with friends? The idea took off like chicken and noodles, and now neighbors across the country are getting together regularly for home-based “soup swaps,” with a date at the end of January annually designated (by soupswap.com) as National Soup Swap Day.

 

In Chicago, the arts collective InCUBATE uses soup as a microfunding tool. Each month since the Sunday Soup project launched in 2007, the group hosts a casual soup dinner for members and likeminded friends; the proceeds to go fund a different art project each month. And of course, soup can be a political statement: The radical volunteers of Food Not Bombs have been providing free vegetarian soup to the hungry as a protest against war and social injustice since 1980.

 

These are just a few examples of the stories Bayne wraps around a collection of delicious, accessible and tested soup recipes, the diversity of which epitomizes the wide-ranging potential of soup as a community building tool. “Celebrity” chef contributors share the pages with food activists, farmers, writers, soup geeks, and regular folks involved in grassroots food projects around the country.

For more info: soupandbread.net

One of the top ten essential cookbooks for fall 2011.
-Time Out Chicago

Beautifully written, generous and honest, the book looks at community building through lenses as various and diverse as the country has to offer. Bayne finds people of many kinds – immigrants, nuns, urban farmers, artists and activists – each using soup to bring people together and knit up what has become unraveled.

-Eiren Caffall, Tikkun Daily

Weekly Top 10 and 2011 Revenge of Print List

Before last week’s bestsellers, we just wanted to say we are really excited by everyone who participated in the 2011 Revenge of Print! Click here to download a list. Then print it out and fold it pamphlet style.

1. Henry and Glenn Forever Sticker Funbag by Igloo Tornado $5.00

2. Suspect Device #1 by Josh Bayer and Edwin Vazquez $6.00 – A turd in the hand is worth two in the Bushmiller….Josh Bayer and Edwin Vazquez assemble quite the goon squad to take old Nancy out for a night on the town. -EF – Work from: Jon Vermilea, Dane Martin, Elizabeth Bethea, Lizz Hickey, Nikki Burch, Brendan Leach, B Florio with M Note, Josh Burggraf, Jimmy Giegerich, J Hessig, Scalzo, M Sgier, Marina Gargarina, Leroy, V Kerlow, Sam Henderson, Anne Emond, Pat Aulisio, Tom Hart, Jude Killroy and Box Brown.

3. Hound and the Musch by Scott Roberts $6.00

4. Under the Radar #39 $5.99

5. Ganges #4 by Kevin Huizenga $7.95 – The lucid insanity of insomnia fuels Huizenga’s understated formalist finesse. Glenn Ganges, suburban everyman, falls prey to a eye-pleasing array of graphic tricks and a 1 a.m. sense of humor that would keep me up at night thinking about it too. -EF

6. Bad Day #12 – a culture magazine.
7. Du Manger En Canne by R. Suicide $5.00 – loppy botulistic potted meat from the Mille Putois Laboratory, getting busy making it’s own gravy.

8. Grantland #1 $25.00 – Well, finally we got a few of these in for long enough that I can put them up on the webstore. Grantland #1 is the McSweeney’s launch of a physical sports magazine geared for folks who like multiform sports, McSweeney’s writers and blogs you can hold. You know who you are. -EF

9. Hark A Vagrant by Kate Beaton $19.95

10. My Aim is True #2 by Carrie $1.00

New Stuff This Week

Free Ice Cream and Other Cartoons You Could Have Drawn by Sam Henderson (Wow Cool) $3.00 – The cartoonist who gets our vote for “Most Likely to Make You Laugh Aloud Even If You’re By Yourself” is back with his first comic since Magic Whistle #11 in 2008. Hurrah!

Zines & Zine-Related Books
Curioddity #2 Movie Reviews of All 51 Disney Animated Films in 160 Characters…by Curiouser Jane $2.00
Caboose #8 reDraft Picks by Liz Mason $1.00 – As in like, this stuff was originally on my blog. And then I picked those pieces to be the ones I’d put in this zine. And then I redrafted them, just for you. You want to read this. Correction: I want you to want to read this. -LM
Boob Lightening by Cooper Lee Hilfman Whittlesey  $4.00
Zines by Emily Larned: Muffin Bones #20 or Basil is Dying $2.00, Wanna Trade $2.00
Show Me The Money #36 $2.50
Unholy Bow by Terence Hannum $10.00
Idiotas Nouveau by Oceguera Fancisco Cornero $3.00
Chomp #1 $9.00
Learning to Surf #1 by Mike Faloon $3.00
KerBloom #93 Nov Dec 11 by Artnoose $2.00
Are Snakes Necessary by Matthew Thurber & IMA Pelican $6.00
Indigo #18 by Michelle Aiello $4.00
Mish Libs #1 Original Word Games by Michelle Aiello $2.00
Truckface #15 by LB $3.00 – She teaches during the year and zines during the summer. Always compelling.

Comics & Comix
Gaylord Phoenix #6 by Edie Fake $4.00 – A new issue from one-third of the Quimby’s staff!
Curio Cabinet #5 Nov 11 by John Brodowski (Secret Acres) $8.00
Rom #1 by Josh Bayer $5.00
Suspect Device #1 by Josh Bayer and Edwin Vazquez $6.00
Naughty Han Song by Jim Stoten (Landfill) $12.00
Some Approaching End by Jaakko Pallasvuo $15.00
Suburban Blight #10 $1.00
Total Screen by Henry James Glover $4.00
Moxie Morons by Talya Modlin $7.00
Ain’t Say Who by Talya Modlin $5.00
Mad Monk The Rise to Power and Death of Rasputin by Talya Modlin $5.00
Car Bren by Carrie Bren $4.00
Thinger Dingers  by JT Yost (Birdcage) $3.00
Study Group Magazine #1 win 12 by Zack Soto $12.00
Ghost Attack #1, #4 and Fall 2009 by Zack Soto $5.00 each
Unforgiving Blade of Conon #1 by Josh Bayer et al. $4.00
Mini Kus #5 Future Is Now by Leo Kivro et al. $3.00
End of The Fucking World Part 3 by Charles Forsman $1.00

Graphic Novels and Trade Paperbacks
Pippas Arctic Adventure the Blue X Affair by Pippa Wolfie $7.00
Green Monk by Brandon Dayton $5.99
Aftershock Artists Respond to Disaster in Japan by Adam ED Pasion $10.00 – Work from Noah Van Sciver, Ben Snakepit and more.
Regalia by Eliza Frye $25.00
Avoid Disappointment and Future Regret by Swanson & Behr $12.00

Art & Design Books
Typo Graphy Sketch Books by Heller et al. (Princeton Arch) $40.00

Childrens Books
Keep Our Secrets by Jordan Crane (McSweeneys) $15.95 – To be read in a whisper. For best results read with a hairdryer and adult supervision. Heat affected

DIY
Marijuana Made Simple: A Beginners Guide to Growing Like a Pro by Mediman (Green candy) $18.00
Medical Marijuana 101 by Martin, Rosenthal et al. (Quick) $14.95
Essential Urban Farmer by Carptener & Rosenthal (Penguin) $25.00

Fiction
Party Wolves In My Skull by Michael Allen Rose (Eraserhead) $16.58 – Part of the New Bizarro Author Series. Local author.
Blueprint of the Afterlife by Ryan Boudinot (BC) $14.00
My Fathers House by Ben Tanzer $9.95
While Mortals Sleep SC by Kurt Vonnegut (Dial) $16.00
Wild Abandon by Joe Dunthorne (Random) $25.00

Mayhem, Miscreants, Memoirs & Misc
Build Your Own President 2012: 1000 Possibilities No Real Solutions by Swanson & Behr $12.00
My Inventions and Other Writings by Nikola Tesla (Penguin) $15.00 – He was a genius. And sort of bat shit crazy too.

Politics & Revolution
Pity the Billionaire by Thomas Frank (Metropolit) $25.00

Music Books
Dirty Deeds: My Life Inside and Outside of ACDC by Mark Evans (Bazillion Points0 $19.95
Alan Lomax: The Man Who Recorded the World by Jon Szwed (Penguin) $20.00

Magazines
Fortean Times #283 Feb 12 $11.99
Backwoodsman vol 33 #1 Jan Feb 12 $4.95
2600 Hacker Quarterly vol 28 #4 $6.25
Dwell Feb 12 $5.99
Sneaker Freaker #22 $14.50
COG Magazine #11 $6.00
Pin Up America Jan 12 #7 $5.99
ArtForum Jan 12 $10.00
Hi Fructose #22 $6.95
Raw Vision #74 $14.00
Decibel #88 Feb 12 $4.95
Dazed & Confused vol 3 #5 Jan 12 $9.99
Wire #335 Jan 12 $10.99
Mojo Specials: The Smiths, The Stone Roses and 100 Greatest British Indie Records of All Time $12.50
Ghetto Blaster #30 $3.95
The Fifth Estate vol 47 #1 #386 Spr 12 $4.00
Monocle Alpino #4 Win 11 12 $8.00
Z Magazine Jan 12 $4.95
In These Times Jan 12 $3.50
Dissent Win 12 $10.00

Lit Journals, Chap Books & Poetry
The Believer #86 Jan 12 Bishopric $8.00
Monster Hands by Xavier M. and Sara Drake $1.00
Madison Review vol 33 #1 Fall 11 $8.00
Fourteen Hills vol 18 #1 2012 $9.00
Feathertale Review #8 $10.00
Bomb #118 Win 12 $7.95
Charleston #1 selected poems and writings by Thomas Fricilone $1.00

Sex & Sexy
B Magazine #1 $8.99
All American Guys #2 $9.99 – Hey dude. You’re not talking about soccer practice at all, are you?

DB Burkeman and Martha Cooper at The Maxwell Colette Gallery For “STUCK UP”

Jan ’12
21
1:00 pm

Maxwell Colette Gallery invites you Saturday, January 21st from 1pm – 3pm for a special book-signing event with DB Burkeman and Martha Cooper. This event is being held in conjunction with the exhibition STUCK UP: A Selected History of Alternative & Pop Culture Told Through Stickers. This museum-quality traveling exhibition comes from Burkeman’s extensive personal collection and is featured in his book Stickers: Stuck-Up Piece of Crap: From Punk Rock to Contemporary Art.

Note this event is not at Quimby’s. It’s at the Maxwell Colette Gallery at 908 N. Ashland Avenue in Chicago. For more information go to www.maxwellcolette.com or email gallery@maxwellcolette.com.

The book will be available for advance purchase here at Quimby’s Bookstore or you may purchase a copy of the book at the event. Limited quantities of the book are available though. If you are unable to purchase a book in advance, you may RSVP prior to the event to request a book reservation. Please send reservation requests, including your name and contact information, to gallery@maxwellcolette.com.

Here’s more info about the show itself that’s at the gallery from the gallery’s website:

STUCK UP: A Selected History of Alternative & Pop Culture Told Through Stickers.
January 20, 2012 – March 3, 2012
Opening Reception: Friday, January 20th from 6pm – 10pm.
Book Signing: Saturday, January 21st from 1pm – 3pm.

Maxwell Colette Gallery and DB Burkeman are excited to present STUCK UP: A Selected History of Alternative & Pop Culture Told Through Stickers. This museum-quality traveling exhibition, curated by Burkeman from his extensive personal collection, provides an unparalleled opportunity to explore the expanding role that stickers have played in popular culture over the past four decades. ‘STUCK UP…’ features stickers from Street Art legends (Banksy, Barry McGee, Shepard Fairey, Space Invader, KAWS), and internationally lauded contemporary artists (Andy Warhol, Jenny Holzer, Keith Haring, Damien Hirst, Tom Sachs) shown side by side with anonymous stickers peeled from the streets of NYC.

On Friday, January 20th Maxwell Colette Gallery and DB Burkeman will host the exhibition’s opening reception from 6pm – 10pm. Then on Saturday, January 21st the gallery will host a book signing from 1pm – 3pm featuring DB Burkeman and the celebrated photographer, author, and self- described sticker thief Martha Cooper. Concurrent with these happenings, the gallery will present a selection of new sticker-based collage work from the ever-talented Chris Mendoza, and will showcase an incarnation of ‘Slap Happy’, the charity sticker invitational that made its debut as a part of SCOPE 2011 in Miami. This will be the only place outside of that art fair where the limited edition stickers and signed black books from the project will be available to view and purchase in person.

Maxwell Colette Gallery
908 N Ashland Ave | Chicago, IL | 60622
312.496.3153

Weekly Top 10

Happy 2012! Here’s last weeks bestsellers.

1. Tales Designed to Thrizzle #7 by Michael Kupperman (Fantagraphics) $4.95 – I’m sorry, these comics are going to thrizzle you whether you wanna be thrizzled or not. -EF

2.  Best American Comics 2011 ed. by Alison Bechdel et al. (HM) $25.00 – Showcases the work of both established and up-and-coming contributors.

3. Just Kids by Patti Smith (Ecco) $16.00

4. Juxtapoz #132 Jan 12 $5.99

5. OK OK You Smote Me Stories by Al Burian (Quimby’s Exclusive) $3.00 – Quimby’s alum and international zine curmudgeon Al Burian has crafted a new zine exclusively for the store, the second in our “Quimby’s Exclusive” line of periodicals. In OK OK You Smote Me, Al takes us around the corner to his mayhem-prone stint on Wicker Park’s Dean Street, unhexing his way-too-hexed apartment and watching the tumult as Old Chicago takes a scraggly, low-level “stand” against encroaching yuppie “neighborhood improvement”. Compelling, humorous and wistful, with that trademark Burn Collector balance of heart and snark. -EF

6. So This Is What Its Come To: A Comic Zine About the Trials and Tribulations of OK Cupid by Liz Prince, Leslie Perrine, Kettner and Ramsey Everydaypants $3.00

7. The Death Ray by Dan Clowes (D&Q) $19.95 – Coming-of-age-as-comic-book-parable-told-as-comic-book. Another Clowes mindfuck, conveniently in gorgeous hardcover. -EF

8. Girls On Girls #1 Zine and CD: Girls Singing Songs About Girls by Amara Leipzig and Isabella Rotman $5.00

9. We Should: A Selective Guide to Chicago by Laura Szumowski $7.95

10. The Field Guide to the Aliens of Star Trek The Next Generation Season One by Joshua Chapman $2.00 – Liz got so nerded up about this one she entered it into our database as “Field Guide to the Aliens of TNG S1” so when I looked up simply “Star Trek” it was not to be found because I had failed to enter the correct nerd code. I imagine this will provoke a similar reaction in some of you and you will rip into this reprint of 7th Grader Joshua Chapman’s obsessive cataloguing of the “Next Gen” alien species, complete with pictures and a star rating system. -EF