Amazon.com Inc.
MP3 Maniacs Go Wild for Wagner (As In, Vahg-ner)
The most popular artists today on Amazon’s new mp3 download service are, in order: read more »
MondoWeiss
Goodbye, Coliseum! Beloved Bookstore Breathes Final Gasp
Giuliani Leads Spitzer
How to Get Out of Iraq
P.S. Baer also said that the Iran situation threatens to set off world war.
The Dick Cheney Literature, C'ted.
Toni Schlesinger: Back In Print

It should be noted that the original cover, from the spring Princeton Architectural Press catalog, is comparatively more tame. Just a doorbell smack in the middle of a blue cover. This new and improved version, which hits stores next month, should appeal more to the Sex and the City box set contingent.
But you can't judge a book by the cover, and inside there numerous columns aggregated by chapter titles like "utopia," "haunted," and "fantastic." Fantastic!- Michael Calderone Full release from the publisher is after the jump. read more »
Oh, Seth Is A Real-Estate Novelist
So begins the jacket copy on Seth Margolis' Closing Costs, the latest real-estate potboiler.

Coming in August.
Cunning real-estate super agent Lucinda Wells knows that location is everything, and she uses her knowledge to control the fate of New York's high society. Embezzlement, forgery, dot-com busts--these are the scandals that pepper the lives of the city's major players who are vying for the best locations. Only Lucinda knows how to expose their weaknesses and play them off against each other.Bonus dirty excerpt:In Closing Costs, Seth Margolis weaves together three stories in a sizzling tale that captures the devastating and blissful effects--from renovating a classic and dealing with contractors to the agony of giving up a home--of the market's twists and turns.
Only the occasional groan from the man indicated that he was awake and deriving pleasure from the exercise--that, and an impressively durable erection. Whether the woman was deriving any satisfaction was hard to tell, as a glistening mass of ...Hokay, kids! Wait till August 8th for the rest! read more » - Tom McGeveran
I'm an R6B. What Are You?
Here at the Real Estate we always have a hard time balancing your interest in neighborhood issues and city planning against the unbelievably impenetrable jargon of the field.
Which is why we found ourselves thumbing through, then reading almost cover-to-cover, the City Planning Commission's Zoning Handbook, released this week.
Along with The Works, the book by economic development veep Kate Ascher, the book is kind of essential to understanding the physical shape of New York neighborhoods.
Pages and pages in the front of the book take obscure zoning classifications with names that sound like droid lot-numbers and describe in plain language the character and objectives of each zoning class, complete with diagrams and pictures showing existing streets that exemplify the zone type.
Then the book goes through specific entries on different special zoning districts, and explains in as clear language as we've read how zoning changes are made law.
You can get a copy through the Department of City Planning's bookstore at 22 Reade Street, or order it on the DCP web site ($24.00 / $18.00 each for 10 or more copies).
Sample page after the jump. read more »
- Tom McGeveranAir Spitzer
The ad guy, Jimmy Siegel, also writes thrillers, but doesn't seem to have any political experience. He's best known for selling a product that every consumer advocating lawman can stand behind: credit cards. He made Visa ads for BBDO, including that Bob Dole spot, but left the agency after it lost the Visa contract last fall.
By going outside the usual field of political admakers, Spitzer will probably retain more control of the content -- he's known as a demanding client who, at one point, wrote his own ads -- and again demonstrates his skepticism of the way politics is normally done, something he demonstrated in his quick, early, unvetted selection of David Paterson as his running mate, and in his decision last year to place a round of robo-calls to voters.
All that is solid, melts in the square
"[H]ere it was acting just like the many despotic regimes it covers so well around the world, regimes to which the British feel so superior, regimes that deny that their people are a public and deny that their city streets are public space."See, who says that Times Square isn't edgy anymore? (Dissent) -Michael Calderone read more »
Enough With The Plantations...
No One Worth Knowing?
read more » Hillary vs. Santorum on Parenting
"It takes a village, Rick, don't forget that," Clinton called out, according to the Associated Press.
"It takes a family," he countered.
"Of course, a family is part of a village!" she replied. read more »
The two, the AP reports, continued on in opposite directions.Obvious Fraud Debunked!
Hollywood Gale Brewer
Brewer tells us Williams's forthcoming film, The Night Listener, "has something to do with libraries."
The Booklist review of the Armistead Maupin novel it's based on begins, "Gay novelist Gabriel Noone is blue since his spouse, Jess, decamped to pursue his bliss among San Francisco's leather men."
OK. read more »
"They were very nice and gave a contribution to the block association," Brewer said.












