Monthly Archives

April 2013

Landmark Preservation, News

St. Ann’s Warehouse Again Seeking Approval to Build in Tobacco Warehouse

April 18, 2013

You may recall the lengthy legal battle over the St. Ann’s Warehouse theater’s attempt to build a new performance space inside the 19th century Tobacco Warehouse in the Fulton Ferry Historic District, which led to a court decision holding that the transfer of the Tobacco Warehouse space from Brooklyn Bridge Park had not been done according to law. This legal obstacle has now been overcome by a transfer of new land into the Park in exchange for the Tobacco Warehouse, and St. Ann’s has presented new plans (see image) for a performance space, community room, and lobby to be built inside the roofless shell of the Warehouse. You can read more about the planned new facility and see more images in Theatermania.

The design proposal by St. Ann’s was considered by the Executive Committee of Community Board 2 at its meeting this last week and will go to the full board on May 8.

Note: This post has been modified since original publication.


Source: Brooklyn Heights Blog
http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/57706

From the Web

Arts and Entertainment

Crown Heights Artist Brings Afro-Latina Voice to HBO Show “Habla Women”

April 18, 2013

 

Kadine Anckle in publicity still from “Habla Women”

For Brooklyn resident Kadine Anckle, her upcoming appearance on the most recent installment of HBO Latino’s “Habla” series is the latest development in a wild and wonderful journey that started far from this bustling borough she now calls home.

Born in Panama City, Panama, Anckle let her imagination soar as a child. But back then she never dreamed that she would one day trade the idyllic, grass-lined walk behind her grandmother’s house in Juan Díaz for the frenetic, people-filled streets of New York City… and a turn in front of the camera.

“I’ve always been on a path and never known really what it was or what it is supposed to be, but I certainly recognize that this show is a part of it,” Anckle explains. “I’m really honored and it feels good because it is just me being myself.”

The Brooklynite is one of 18 Latin talents featured on the show, entitled “Habla Women”, which debuts April 18 at 8 pm ET on HBO Latino and will also be available on HBO On Demand and HBO GO. The program, which marks the 10th anniversary of the “Habla” documentary series, is being billed by HBO as a “no-holds-barred installment” that will present a “uniquely Latina view of life by exploring the attitudes, perspectives and accomplishments of 16 exceptional Latin women and two Latinos living in the U.S.” A multitalented creative in her own right, Anckle joins a notable ensemble that includes actress Gina Rodriguez, Olympic boxer Marlen Esparza and chef Daisy Martinez.

As the only Afro-Latina to appear in “Habla Women”, Anckle is grateful she could give voice to an experience that is often overlooked in the United States. “When you take me in at face value, you think, ‘oh, she’s a black woman,’” Anckle notes. “But I was born and lived in Panama until I was 10 years old… I am a Latina and I get that it’s not what you expect, but it certainly is my reality.”

Anckle hopes that by sharing her story with a wider audience via “Habla Women”, she will not only be able to provide an explanation of the Afro-Latina experience for people who haven’t lived it – but also bolster the spirits of those who have. “It is a war cry for all the women who are like me because nobody pays attention to us,” Anckle says. “So many people just don’t know that we exist.”

Panama City, Panama. “La Central” photo by Kadine Anckle.

During her childhood days in Panama, Anckle longed to see faces like her own on television. “If you are growing up and you don’t see anybody that looks like you in any kind of media, then you start to think there is something wrong with you,” she says. When her family relocated to the United States, settling in the suburbs of Pennsylvania, Anckle was greeted by a supportive circle of relatives but still struggled with moments of self-doubt. “If there is a certain definition of what beautiful is and it doesn’t look anything like you… it messes with your self-esteem,” she recalls.

A gorgeous and gregarious woman who exudes confidence and charm, Anckle credits her family with giving her the strength to battle those insecurities and advance forward in the direction of her dreams. “I am my grandmothers’ granddaughter, I am my mother’s child, I am my sisters’ sister, that’s why I am who I am,” she says.

Raised by a mother who drilled the importance of education into her daughters’ heads, Anckle became an accomplished student at the Catholic high school she attended. Though Anckle still felt somewhat out of place, her mother constantly reminded her that all else was secondary to scholastic achievement, often chiding her that “a girl child is nothing without her education.” As she neared the end of high school, Anckle really found her groove and enthusiastically participated in student life – only to be told she couldn’t return for her senior year because her family could no longer afford tuition. It was a devastating moment in her life, but Kadine’s family stepped up to support her once again and she graduated from the public school with an academic record that earned her a scholarship to Pennsylvania State University.

“It’s crazy remembering what each traumatizing event felt like,” Anckle says. “Leaving Panama as a little kid was really traumatizing for me and then learning I was poor… and not finishing my senior year (at Catholic school). It was like the end of the world.”

Lisboa, Portugal. “Saudades” photo by Kadine Anckle.

With every struggle she encountered, however, Anckle’s family was there to reassure her that she would get through it. “We’re very spiritual people and we’re very faithful to that spirituality,” Anckle notes. “As a woman in her thirties, I definitely believe that there is something greater than me and I believe in the strength of the universe,” Anckle adds. “If you believe in yourself and in what you are supposed to be doing, then the entire universe conspires to bring that to you.”

Anckle reiterates this view when reflecting upon her participation in “Habla Women” and the opportunity it has given her to speak about the Afro-Latina experience. “It’s funny because when I went to college, I always believed I was supposed to be a voice,” she says. “I felt a responsibility to tell the truth and to speak on behalf of people who were silenced.” As such, she studied broadcast journalism, but instead of becoming a reporter in Pennsylvania, she wound up moving to New York and working behind the scenes as a television producer, director, writer and voice-over artist. It was through her work that Anckle eventually met Alberto Ferreras, creator and director of the “Habla” series, who reached out to her personally and encouraged her to audition for “Habla Women.”

“Everything has influenced everything and all of these things have brought me to this point,” notes Anckle, whose appearance on “Habla Women” marks her television feature debut. “Right now, I feel honored and blessed to be the person who is getting to speak on behalf of women who nobody even knew existed. What a great, amazing honor that is. Again, the entire universe conspires. It comes together in a way that you would never have expected.”

Ever mindful of how the past shapes the present, Anckle is grateful she moved to Brooklyn a decade ago, as it was here that she found a true sense of belonging. “Brooklyn is the place where I feel I can be 100% me,” explains Anckle, who shares an apartment in Crown Heights with her sister. “It doesn’t matter what kind of craziness I wear, what kind of crazy hairdo I’ve got going on, what kind of crazy comes out of my mouth… I fit in here.”

“Electric Exodus” mixed-media piece by Kadine Anckle.

It has been here in Brooklyn that Anckle has explored the many aspects of her creative talents more fully, even focusing on visual art when she was laid off from her job as a writer at MTV in 2011. “I ended up being at home making weird little art projects,” she explains. This creative outlet led to a three-month stay at the ARTEterra art residency in Portugal and a solo show of her work that Anckle organized in Crown Heights upon her return. “There is just a cool, artistic, free and expressive environment in Brooklyn overall – and especially in Crown Heights, at least in my experience,” Anckle notes.

As Anckle continues to embrace her uniqueness and make her dreams a reality, she hopes she can serve as an example for the many young women who are struggling to do the same. “There are so many girls growing up with complexes,“ Anckle says. “I just want people to understand that you can be beautiful in your own right… and you should never feel that you are not good enough.”

Panamanian Day Parade. Photo by Kadine Anckle.

“I am everything society says that someone like me could never be,” Anckle notes. “I am an Afro-Latina who has done and will continue to do things that defy expectations.”

“The little girl that walked in the tall grass is a ‘successful’ — for whatever that term means — artist in Brooklyn,” Anckle adds. “I’m sure there are so many people who had it so much harder than me, but I get to speak for us and that makes me very proud.”

From the Web

Books

Brooklyn Bugle Book Club: “The Dinner,” by Herman Koch

April 12, 2013

Image via Amazon.com

Do you think the Dutch have brought us only tulips, windmills and painters? (OK, and the tulip bubble.) I would have to add interesting modern novelists to that list, beginning with Harry Mulisch, whose novel “The Discovery of Heaven” is one of the most compelling books I’ve read. After reading “The Dinner” by Herman Koch I can conclude that Mulisch’s work is not a fluke.

As “The Dinner” opens, Paul and Claire are preparing for an evening out with Serge and Babette. It’s clear from the beginning that there is a history and a complex relationship between the two couples, as Paul has bridled at Serge’s initial suggestion that they meet for drinks nearby, rather than in the restaurant. Just what that history is, and how it bears on their past and present relationship, is slowly revealed during the course of the evening.

The restaurant’s dining room is the main stage, but the four central actors, depending on their states of mind, sometimes leave. We follow the rather unreliable narrator, Paul, into the men’s and women’s toilets (he’s in search of his wife) and then further, into the garden. In the course of the book Koch raises issues of loyalty and betrayal in the most challenging of circumstances: when is it right to protect a child from the consequences of his actions? All four of the main characters struggle with the choice, and their mental states fluctuate from calm to furious to distraught. Structuring such a story around an elaborate meal in a fashionable restaurant is an original choice. It works surprisingly well and the mysteries are unravelled and everyone’s true nature is revealed.

I read “The Dinner” in a hard copy and, unusually for a fiction book, one aspect of the volume’s design has stayed with me. The endpapers are a vivid red with just a hint of blue, and the pages are sized so that the endpapers outline the text. That red frame suffused my consciousness while I was reading and coming to grips with the story, underlining the eerie aspects. (I expect to come back to this theme as I continue to read books on an e-reader.) While “The Dinner” is an extremely well-written book and I definitely recommend reading it the issues Koch forces the reader to confront are visceral, and the book can be so painful to read that I could only do it in small bursts.

In her review of “The Dinner” in the New York Times Book Review, Claire Messud suggests that Americans won’t read a novel when they don’t like a character. I didn’t like Paul’s acts, and he’s increasingly revealed to be an unpleasant character. But even Paul had to face reality, and I found the way that Koch made him do so to be compelling. Do you agree? Let us know in the comments.

Have a book you want me to know about? Email me at asbowie@gmail.com. I also blog about metrics here.

From the Web

BHnCiXgCYAAlGX2
News

Tale of the Tweets: Marty Markowitz’s Final State of the Borough Address

April 11, 2013

Marty Markowitz’s final State of the Borough address was staged as a faux talk show and featured guest appearances by Larry King, Tony Danza, Pat Kiernan and Sunny Anderson. We also learned that the famous Coney Island parachute jump has received $2 million in funding to have its lighting restored.

(In honor of Marty’s final SOTB we’ve included a “Throwback Thursday” video of him above.)

And now, the rest of the story:

Marty’s Final State of the Borough

Storified by Brooklyn Bugle· Thu, Apr 11 2013 19:21:41

Setting up for the 2013 and last State of the Borough address by @MartyMarkowitz in the @barclayscenter. #Brooklyn pic.twitter.com/drkanVJXtIAndrew Pavia
Waiting for #MartyMarkowitz pic.twitter.com/M3O6NV44XtMark S. Weprin
At the Brooklyn State of the Borough at Barclay’s Center. Brooklyn Tabernacle Choir about to perform. #SOTB pic.twitter.com/ar7kfjVFtNnatebliss
Backstage at Barclays Center where I’m doing an "In the Papers" segment at @MartyMarkowitz State of the Borough. pic.twitter.com/afeDXqk8g9Pat Kiernan
The Brooklyn Tabernacle Choir kicks off my final State of the Borough at Barclays Center pic.twitter.com/isXPqeVbpdMarty Markowitz
The Brooklyn Tabernacle Choir kicks off my final State of the Borough at Barclays Center pic.twitter.com/isXPqeVbpdMarty Markowitz
.@BTChoir performs @barclayscenter 4 @martymarkowitz’s final state of the borough. brooklyn definitely in the house. pic.twitter.com/jY4xXk5tfkterence kelly
2013 State of the Borough address commences @BarclaysCenter @MartyMarkowitz @ Barclays Center instagram.com/p/X-16nuN7hr/The Brooklyn Brewery
Attending Marty’s last party. Great show so far! @MartyMarkowitz #Brooklyn #martysparty pic.twitter.com/IfTruivRaEKyle Kimball
@MissAmerica is getting Brooklyn excited for @MartyMarkowitz’s last State of the Borough @BarclaysCenter #SOTBBK Independent TV
@MissAmerica is getting Brooklyn excited for @MartyMarkowitz’s last State of the Borough @BarclaysCenter #SOTBBK Independent TV
it’s @martymarkowitz’s world, we just living in it. take a victory lap, my good man #sotb pic.twitter.com/ip1MeTaZuBterence kelly
it’s @martymarkowitz’s world, we just living in it. take a victory lap, my good man #sotb pic.twitter.com/ip1MeTaZuBterence kelly
@MartyMarkowitz "Brooklyn: where legends are made and dreams come true" @barclayscenterYosef Kramer
@TonyDanza is the boss! #SOTBBK Independent TV
Tough to see him but #Martymarkowitz state of the borough address. Like a rock concert! pic.twitter.com/S1DDPAO88nSteven Cohen
Tony Danza brings down the house introducing @MartyMarkowitz for his final State of the Borough @barclayscenter pic.twitter.com/WVn4SLdq06Brad Lander
@BrooklynNets #BlackoutBrooklyn 4/20! You heard what @MartyMarkowitz said about orange & blue #SOTBBK Independent TV
Mallory Hagan@missUsa introduces @MartyMarkowitz #SOTB2013 pic.twitter.com/XbjQSRB7w5Brian Vines
#MartyMarkowitz droppin Knowledge at is #StateoftheBoroughAddress pic.twitter.com/kMCYzLlfhZsenatorparker
And we’re under way #SOTBMarty Markowitz
#TonyDanza rappin at #MartyMarkowitz #StateoftheBoroughAddress #BarclayCenter #whowouldathunkit pic.twitter.com/IZr165epwisenatorparker
Big crowd @barclayscenter for @MartyMarkowitz final State of the Borough. I’m expecting dancing elephants. pic.twitter.com/tHuLiLNHawBrad Lander
#Brooklyn Borough Pres @MartyMarkowitz holding his final State of the Borough @barclayscenter pic.twitter.com/EtWEBtQapUJeanine Ramirez
Tony Danza rapping in the House of Jay-Z. @S_C_ @TonyDanza @MartyMarkowitz @barclayscenter #SOTB pic.twitter.com/mmTIyXLfgXKyle Kimball
Tony Danza rapping in the House of Jay-Z. @S_C_ @TonyDanza @MartyMarkowitz @barclayscenter #SOTB pic.twitter.com/mmTIyXLfgXKyle Kimball
Thnx to @MartyMarkowitz for the Brooklyn #techtriangle shoutout at the #sotb2013!Stephen Levin
Well-deserved shout-out for our seat-mate, Navy Yard CEO Andrew Kimball @BLDG92 Manufacturing grows in Brooklyn #sotb pic.twitter.com/SKU5mMftNWBrad Lander
@MartyMarkowitz#SOTB How’s Bklyn doing?Marty says Silicon Valley is so over! It’s DUMBO, Coney Island, Nets, Cyclones and the IslandersPat Tinto
Brooklyn Tech Triangle shout out at @MartyMarkowitz’s State of the Borough! cc: downtownbklyn bldg92 @… instagram.com/p/X-4d3ePXXI/DUMBO, Brooklyn
@MartyMarkowitz just announced @TropfestUSA coming to #Brooklyn at the #StateoftheBorough ! @johnpolsonJennifer Stybel
.@MartyMarkowitz praises Mayor Bloomberg’s commitment to public schools, but his salute to @uft’s Mike Mulgrew draws far bigger applause.Brad Lander
@BrooklynNets @MartyMarkowitz state of borough address more students in BK than Cambridge! #hellobrooklynRyan Scott
Marty has announced the relighting of the iconic landmark Parachute Jump. Coming this summer! Thanks, @MartyMarkowitz! #SOTBConey Island
"Brooklyn is more than a freakin’ tree" @MartyMarkowitz #sotb2013 #SOTBKyle Kimball
@MartyMarkowitz sotb @barclayscenter ! Make sure you visit the restaurants and bars in the neighborhood after the speech! @nfbidCarlo Scissura
@martymarkowitz put on a white sports coat as several fireworks went off pic.twitter.com/IrRcbmLlaCAaron Short
"I don’t know how Eric matches this" says CM Vinny Gentile as the #sotb converts to fireworks, lightships & Brooklyn Tonight variety show.Brad Lander
The State of the Borough is now a talk show, hosted by @MartyMarkowitz #Brooklyn instagram.com/p/X-9XqGoaY8/L. Joy Williams
Brooklyn tonight and I’m your host…by the time we’re done I might be on late night! #sotbMarty Markowitz
Brooklyn tonight and I’m your host…by the time we’re done I might be on late night! #sotbMarty Markowitz
Do you think Brooklyn is the best baby name ever? Definitely best out of the 5 boroughs in our opinion! #SOTBBK Independent TV
#Brooklyn Tonight with @MartyMarkowitz … State of the Borough Address at the #Barclays pic.twitter.com/9dnsPcV1WCChelsia Rose Marcius
"Take your woman to spumoni gardens!" #sotbClayton Parker
@CatGreenleaf + @MartyMarkowitz = fun times on #SOTBBK Independent TV
@PatKiernan reads @MartyMarkowitz’s greatest hits from the NY dailies. #SOTBBK Independent TV
Watch out @patkiernan, @martymarkowitz wants your job pic.twitter.com/oaZphzBUpFAaron Short
@patkiernan now reading embarrassing @MartyMarkowitz headlines. Marty is sniping, and it’s getting raw, angry, weird and awkward. I like it.Aaron Short
OK, I’ve given up tweeting the @MartyMarkowitz #sotb Variety Show. No way my twitter stream can match the reality. pic.twitter.com/p5BlM1JXlcBrad Lander
A highlight of @MartyMarkowitz state of the borough address. Brooklyn’s Clown Price headline immortalized pic.twitter.com/GjLkd72m2aRich Calder
@DaleTalde & @sunnyanderson representing Brooklyn’s diverse culinary scene at #SOTB. Now currently craving Talde’s halo halo.BK Independent TV
@MartyMarkowitz just shot off fireworks in @BarclaysCenter and Nets championship banners shockingly survived pic.twitter.com/bxkdoI3yUNRich Calder
Stopped by the @barclayscenter earlier this evening to hear @martymarkowitz give his State of the Borough address. What a beautiful buildingAdolfo Carrion, Jr
Look who I’m seated next to at @martymarkowitz’s State of the Boro address! @StephenLevin33 & I are comparing tweets. campl.us/oA2JDavid G. Greenfield
Thank you @MartyMarkowitz for your many shout outs to @BrooklynChamber At the sotb @barclayscenterCarlo Scissura
@MartyMarkowitz talk show schtick at Borough Address tonight could land him a steady BCAT gig if he’s lucky pic.twitter.com/9iy8Ymx0evRich Calder
Omg @martymarkowitz has a spoof film reel w/Do the Right Thing in it! #hilarious! #StateofTheBrooklynBoroughAddress Bourough #BarclaysCenterJanell Hazelwood
At the amazing State of Boro address by #MartyMarkowitz Makes me wonder why Mom and Dad ever left #BrooklynMark S. Weprin
Just helped Brooklyn Borough prez @MartyMarkowitz do his last State of the Borough address turned talk show! #honored pic.twitter.com/4z0ssp8RjPSunny Anderson
#Absolove creative #sotb address @ #BarclaysCenter. If u live or from #BK #getinvolved. Don’t c many #youngprofessionals here. Learned alot!Janell Hazelwood
Ok, I’ll give @MartyMarkowitz props on the pre-filmed Tony Manero Saturday Night Fever routine strutting 86th St. pic.twitter.com/NENPapsAXBRich Calder
Parachute Jump gets $2 million lighting upgrade soa.li/Q2xVxkh Pimp my Parachute Jump!! Thanks @MartyMarkowitz it looks incredible!Dirty Martini
state of the borough #brooklyn via @martymarkowitz #sotb #live vine.co/v/btUdEuLx3PBSarkis Kalashian
Journalist and author @ayanamathis just left the stage. Special greeting from @larryking #media #powerwomen #icons #sotb #BK #martymarkowitzJanell Hazelwood
@kingsthings gives @MartyMarkowitz tips on being a talk show host – suspenders. #SOTBBK Independent TV
And now @MartyMarkowitz has me crying #brooklynL. Joy Williams
"To every Brooklynite, you are the mustard on a Nathan’s hotdog.. you make Brooklyn Brooklyn!" @MartyMarkowitz #sotbAmira Ibrahim
Eric Adams with @martymarkowitz counting down the days left in the borough presidency #SOTB2013 pic.twitter.com/TAuBLIusF3Brian Vines
wow #sotb “@aaronshortstory: Tony Danza is now going to rap for @MartyMarkowitz”The Brooklyn Bugle
“Everything I did was out of love for Brooklyn.” -@MartyMarkowitz, a great final State of the Borough Address. Thanks for watching! #SOTBBK Independent TV
Happy trails to you, Mr. Borough President! @martymarkowitz pic.twitter.com/NGKAswgUanStephen Levin
Brief video of tonight’s @MartyMarkowitz State of the Borough Address for those who can’t be there live. #sotb youtube.com/watch?v=nIId8L…Brooklyn Spoke
@MartyMarkowitz #sotb 1hr+ speech, 1hr talk show, some entertaining, heartfelt moments but profoundly self-indulgent 2 #HungryFolkLeftEarlyNorman Oder
@MartyMarkowitz really knows how to throw an after party… #Barclays #Brooklyn w @pearlgabel pic.twitter.com/kv9CXHchJGChelsia Rose Marcius

From the Web

Around Brooklyn

Broker aptsandlofts Expands Purview In Cobble Hill Market

April 7, 2013

Real estate broker aptsandlofts.com, which recently opened its second brick-and-mortar office in Cobble Hill at 236 Court Street, is making good on the burgeoning residential market in the neighborhood. The firm reports that within the last three months it has hired a dozen new agents—a rate of one new hire per week.

Founder & prez David Maundrell notes, “We are seeing a notable increase in interest from agents looking to join the team as a way to further expand their professional business in the Brooklyn area.” aptsandlofts.com was founded in 2002 with a focus on Brooklyn and Queens, and currently consults about 35 new residential developments (3,000+ units) rising in NYC. It plans to hire a total of 43 agents in Cobble Hill over the next year.


Source: Cobble Hill Blog
http://cobblehillblog.com/archives/8247

From the Web

Brooklyn Heights, Celebrity Residents

The Lena Dunham Effect: Brooklyn Heights’ Resident Fosters Boom In Greenpoint

April 7, 2013

Lena Dunham—2012 BHB Top 10 honoree and creator, star, writer, et al, of HBO’s “Girls”—may lead a quiet existence at her Mansion House digs in Brooklyn Heights, but apparently she’s having such an impact on pop culture that a boom is taking place in once-sleepy Greenpoint, Brooklyn, the setting of the hipster series.

Stories have appeared in both The Real Deal and Crain’s New York Business over the past few weeks about the impact of Dunham’s hit show on the nabe. The former notes, “Exposure has boosted the neighborhood’s rental market,” quoting David Behin of brokerage MNS: “We get more and more calls there for rentals every day,” while the residential sales market is also seeing an uptick.

It doesn’t hurt that the area is seeing “a slew of new residential buildings, including two massive rental projects,” with plans for two more large rez developments in the works.

Crain’s, meanwhile, documents the Dunham effect via an increase in foot traffic, focused around coffee joint Café Grumpy—where Dunham’s character Hannah Horvath works: “The hit HBO show is boosting foot traffic on Manhattan and Nassau avenues and Franklin Street, Greenpoint’s main drags, and pumping cash into the local economy. (In addition) some longtime residents fear it is also drawing more people into the neighborhood and emboldening more landlords to boost rents.”

Crain’s continues, “Like it or not, what’s undeniable is that images of Greenpoint’s shops, restaurants, streets and people beamed into millions of homes around the globe are having an impact on the area that was once primarily known for its large Polish population.”

In Brooklyn Heights, meanwhile, our slew of celeb residents—including Paul Giamati, Björk, Nate Silver and various writers and artists—perhaps offers the opposite effect, providing a quiet refuge for name brands, where they can blend in with the overall fabric of the nabe. Doesn’t that make Heightsters the true hipsters, eh?


Source: Brooklyn Heights Blog
http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/57110

From the Web

Around Brooklyn

Carroll Gardens’ Good Food Closing After 85 Years

April 6, 2013

At the end of this month, Italian Superette Good Food will shut down after 85 years in business. Located in Carroll Gardens at 431 Court Street (between 3rd and 4th Place), the store has supplied fresh mozzarella, Italian sausages, olives and other Italian delicacies, along with a deli and meat counter. Good Food also carried everything from canned goods to cleaning products and everything in between.

Pardon Me For Asking blog adds that the business first belonged to the Bruno brothers, relatives of NY City Office Of Emergency Management Commissioner Joseph Bruno. Then brothers Mike and Allegrino Sale bought the supermarket and the building, and have managed it for the past 35 years.

Pardon Me—which interviewed the owners—also reports that representatives of Investors Bank have made the brothers “an offer they could not refuse” for the property. The Jersey-based bank will open a branch at the location.


Source: Cobble Hill Blog
http://cobblehillblog.com/archives/8240

From the Web

Books

Brooklyn Bugle Book Club: “Why Be Happy When You Could Be Normal?” by Jeannette Winterson

April 6, 2013

Image via Amazon.com

It’s clear from Jeannette Winterson’s memoir of her childhood that Winterson could not predict what she was going to find when she came home after school each day. Sometimes she was fed and housed; other times she was locked in the coal cellar. More than once she spent the night on the stoop, locked out. Winterson was adopted as an infant and she was an only child. It’s evident to the reader that she was eventually emotionally abandoned and functionally neglected by her emotionally unstable adoptive parents. She captures the emotional distance by almost always referring to her adoptive mother as “Mrs. Winterson.” Mrs. Winterson was working class and a member of a Pentecostal church; somewhere along the way, Winterson believes, Mrs. Winterson gave up sex, along with most other pleasures in this world. Winterson’s father was there but seems to have been dominated by his wife. There’s a lot of disturbing behavior described here.

Writing now, looking back, Winterson understands that the lost love of two sets of parents cost her the ability to love. And that in turn acted as a magnifier, turning all stumbling blocks into intractable problems. But somehow Winterson found her way to safety. Physically, the first of those places was her local public library. Winterson read – all books were forbidden in the house – starting with prose, working her way though what the Accrington Public Library considered English Literature, in alphabetical order. Eventually she found her way to poetry. Still later she discovered the writers, many of them female, who were not to be found on that shelf.

Winterson is too good a writer to say it straight out, but it was in the library that she first found the order missing in her life. And it’s where she first found out about the world, beyond what she had learned reading English Literature.

‘Whenever I am troubled,’ said the librarian, ‘I think about the Dewey decimal system.’

‘Then what happens?’ asked the junior [librarian], rather overawed.

‘Then I understand that trouble is just something that has been filed in the wrong place. That is what Jung was explaining of course — as the chaos of our unconscious contents strive to find their rightful place in the index of consciousness.”

The junior was silent.

I said, ‘Who is Jung?’

‘That is not for now,’ said the librarian. ‘And in any case not English Literature A-Z.’

This conversation occurred shortly after one of her teachers, discovering that Winterson is living in a car, gives her a room. And a front-door key. From that unlikley spot Winterson found her way forward: through Oxford, to a writing career, and living a life with love – tentative, hesitant, frightening but real – as part of it. It’s by no means an easy story to read, and there is no simple happy ending, but it is a story as full of humor and sadness and hope as life itself can be.

Do you agree? Let us know what you think in the comments.

Have a book you want me to know about? Email me at asbowie@gmail.com. I also blog about metrics here.

From the Web

News

Tale of the Tweets: Democratic Mayoral Forum At St. Francis College

April 3, 2013

The Brooklyn Reform Coalition hosted a Mayoral Forum at St. Francis College Wednesday night featuring most Democratic candidates.

Here are some selected tweets from event attendees:

Reform 2013 at St. Francis College

Candidates for NYC Mayor meet in Brooklyn Heights

Storified by Brooklyn Bugle· Wed, Apr 03 2013 18:23:49

Line is still around the block in downtown Brooklyn. The NYC Mayoral Forum is about to begin! #Reform2013Nikole
Big Brooklyn #Reform2013 crowd at #nyc2013 mayoral forum. pic.twitter.com/Owzl1fjtArEleanor’s Legacy
Almost all the candidates at the forum #reform2013 pic.twitter.com/WGV5C45JvtRKhalid
First question is about financial bribery in all chambers of govt. @JohnLiu2013 starts off. #reform2013 pic.twitter.com/dsXNE76FH2Voice of Dissidence
People protesting against Mayoral candidate @ChrisCQuinn outside the #Brooklyn #Reform2013 mayoral forum. twitpic.com/cgrij1Brooklyn Politics
The gloves are coming off between sal+Christine+bill #reform2013 pic.twitter.com/eUgURpWzrnRKhalid
Standing room only NYC Mayoral candidates forum 180 Remsen twitpic.com/cgrl2dgilly youner
.@Quinn4NY pushes for grants, not loans, for small businesses hurt by Sandy, gets loud round of applause #reform2013David W. Chen
Was the Barclay Center worth all the public subsidy that was surrendered? The answer is no. @JohnCLiu #Reform2013New Kings Democrats
.@JohnLiu2013 fires up #reform2013 crowd by criticizing "so-called" Atlantic Yards project and empty promises of housing and jobsDavid W. Chen
.@JohnLiu2013 fires up #reform2013 crowd by criticizing "so-called" Atlantic Yards project and empty promises of housing and jobsDavid W. Chen
Hello Brooklyn Reform Coalition! #reform2013 pic.twitter.com/8u9GrdFe2PNew Kings Democrats
When I am mayor, I’ll lead the charge to get the federal government back into the mass transit business. #Reform2013Bill de Blasio
Everyone’s still here! #reform2013 pic.twitter.com/grBsXFdrqKNew Kings Democrats
#LICH nurses at Mayoral Forum. Sent questions about what candidates will do to #savelich #open4care #reform2013 pic.twitter.com/PbnX38halMmichelle green
Called for moratorium of school closures, co-locations. No more shell games with schoolkids and teachers. #Reform2013John C. Liu
. @BillThompsonNYC gets fired up over term limits, saying it was about "self interest" #reform2013David W. Chen
Argument that financial crisis necessitated or compelled a third term and justified subverting will of the people? Outrageous. #Reform2013John C. Liu
@PBProject #Reform2013 PB question should have been applied to City wide budget. All candidates support on some levelFred Wolf
Mayoral forum held in #Brooklyn with @ChrisCQuinn @deBlasioNYC @JohnCLiu @BillThompsonNYC #reform2013 pic.twitter.com/falmHmHHO4Andrew Pavia
#reform2013 pic.twitter.com/pH4LgsskyINew Kings Democrats
lots of people want to talk with candidates after forum #reform2013 pic.twitter.com/Pimyq56moyRKhalid
#reform2013 who won? @JohnLiu2013 by a big margin. Thompson 2nd, @SalAlbanese2013 & @deBlasioNYC equally intelligent. @Quinn4NY on defensiveJacob Kornbluh
@YouEnjoyFred we agree, but glad to see the support for #ParticipatoryBudgeting and #PBNYC at #Reform2013!PBP
A living wage is good, but in tandem with affordable healthcare, MTA fares, schools, CUNY, housing. Cost of Living keeps rising. #reform2013Occu{Co}py
A reform Mayor is no substitute for popular power. #reform2013Occu{Co}py
A reform Mayor is no substitute for popular power. #reform2013Occu{Co}py
So glad you asked this Matt! MT @GreenHappenings: Happy all mayoral candidates agree partic budgeting is smart and works! #reform2013 #pbnycBrad Lander
Thompson, Blasio and Liu r FUMING against Quinn 4 AGAIN saying she won’t respect referendums. Loud applause! #reform2013yonifrier
MT @occucopy: Protecting small biz from a Wall St Mayor is important, but if they provide good jobs. #Coops offer an answer. #reform2013Steve Wong
NYC Mayoral Forum in Brooklyn #teamdeblasio instagram.com/p/XqgOqoAVr8/Jason F. Reischel


Source: Brooklyn Heights Blog
http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/57073

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Around Brooklyn

CHA Goes on Full Frontal Assault To #SaveLICH

April 1, 2013

Cobble Hill Association president Roy Sloane released a video today produced the the organization to raise awareness about the fight to save Long Island College Hospital.

In a letter to the press this morning he writes:

As you all all aware, SUNY Downstate is moving forward with it’s plans to close LICH to convert it’s real estate valued at $500 to $800 million into cash to prop up the immense loses at SUNY Downstate. Since the beginnIng of this crisis, I have asked every doctor, nurse, EMT, ambulance driver and paramedic this question: “Will people die?”

The answer from every single professional that I have asked is “Yes!” To dramatize this danger, the Cobble Hill Association has created a TV commercial called “LICH Two Minutes to Live” and will be launching our campaign on of thirty second spots on NEW YORK ONE this week.

This proposed closure of our hospital represents a grave danger for for all the nearly 1 million people who live, work, shop, and play in Downtown Brooklyn but most especially for the residents of the surrounding communities who depend on Long Island College Hospital for critical emergency care. Going further to get to another hospital spells disaster or death for many stroke, cardiac and accident victims.

The CHA provided two documents along with the video:

LICH-Seven Key Points Fact Sheet by info1139

LICH and SUNY Facts Provided by CHA (1)


Source: Cobble Hill Blog
http://cobblehillblog.com/archives/8223

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