- Off Topic Post-The Life of Maria Callas: an animated journey through her life, loves and art
- Because This Photo of Edna St. Vincent Millay Will Always Be Extraordinary…
- Daily Diversion #267: Historical Marker
- Birthday Books
- Daily Diversion #268: Birthday Kettle
- Daily Diversion #269: Empty Nest
- “You and your Nero Wolfe recipes!”
- Hey, Georgie! It’s Your Birthday!
- Writers in Art: Caricature of W. Somerset Maugham
- Artistic Interpretations of The Tempest: #7-‘Miranda’ by Frederick Goodall
Category Archives: Blogging
June Round-Up: Eight Cool Posts
Dear Readers: Thanks for Being Awesome!
I recently noticed that A Small Press Life’s stats look great.
Thanks to everyone who is a part of this weird little community.
We…
are…
nothing…
without…
you.

THANK YOU!
Goodbye, Grandpa! Rest in Peace.
Right now, there are no words. I should be back in a couple of days.
Clyde Austen
(1 May 1927-15 May 2015)

My Grandpa. 1946.
The Great Villain Blogathon
I’m taking part in this year’s The Great Villain Blogathon. My review of Blanche Fury (1948), starring Valerie Hobson and Stewart Granger, is up on my blog Font and Frock.
Illicit Love is a Killing Thing

Valerie Hobson and Stewart Granger in Blanche Fury (1948)
Introducing Our Newest Feature, Merrily I Read!
Musty-smelling old books are my jam. The ones I like best have beautiful designs carved into worn hardbacks, patterned endpapers, and thick pages sporadically covered with obscure marginalia. They come with secret histories, impenetrable and mysterious pedigrees of ownership that are all but untraceable. The physical books are weighty, concrete treasures unto themselves. But what of their contents?
They vary, of course, from the sublime to the mundane, from classics to curiosity pieces. All are miniature time capsules. For that alone they have value.
In related news: I want to read all of these books. Maybe you do, too. What an impossible dream to have, my friends! It’s never going to happen.
I won’t stop buying them, though, as they are so lovely, enlightening, enchanting, entertaining, affordable, plentiful…
Thus was born the idea for the newest regular feature on A Small Press Life.

Louise Tiffany Reading by Louis Comfort Tiffany, 1888. Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Introducing Merrily I Read:
It’s simple, really: follow me as I read and review a musty-smelling old book, a few chapters at a time, from start to finish. I’ll not be reading ahead–my impressions will be fresh, off-the-cuff, and (hopefully) witty and intelligent. What say you, dear readers? Shall we throw the spotlight, once again and however briefly, on some fine, fun, and largely forgotten old books?
Let’s do this thing!
Book #1: Girl About Town by Katherine Pent.
Young Lady in 1866
I adore this painting; in fact, it is my favourite by Manet. A beautifully framed copy hangs in my dining room.
Why post it today?
The cold, the cold!
It’s far below zero–the chilliest temperature of the season. Since this painting makes me feel happy, content, and warm, I thought you might enjoy it, too.

Young Lady in 1866 by Édouard Manet. The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Me, Myself and I: The Writer(s) of Font and Frock
Want to learn more about our new sister site? Go here!
On its placid surface, Font and Frock seems like a pretty straightforward project. It is dedicated to four dazzling F-words: film, fashion, [flash] fiction, and feminism. Dig a little deeper, though, and you’ll find, reverberating from its core, a bit of experimental weirdness.
What does this mean?
To find out, let’s head behind the scenes with a partial transcript from our most recent staff meeting.
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A Small Press Life: January News and Notes
Greetings, lovely readers! I promise to keep this post short and painless.
- On Monday, I am announcing an exciting giveaway. It will open that day and run through the end of the month. Stay tuned: it is a good one!
- [R]evolving Incarnations returns in February. If you haven’t participated, what are you waiting for? Shoot me an email at onetrackmuse@gmail.com to join in the fun!
- After a nearly two-year hiatus, I am going to start doing book reviews again. Yay!
- In case you haven’t noticed, my new blog, Font and Frock, officially launches the week of the 18th. In the meantime, there are a few posts up/bells and whistles on the sidebar. Feel free to have a look around and let me know what you think!
- Fossil Lake II: The Refossiling will be out in a few weeks. I will keep you posted!
Thank you!
Font and Frock: What’s in a Name?
Here’s a bit of info about my soon-to-officially-launch new blog!
What are your favourite words?
I love serendipitous, melancholy, and fortuitous.
Adamantine, sliver, and succor.
And, oh, perhaps a hundred others. They inevitably change with the finesse or jolt of a passing mood.
Words are surprising things, the way that they latch hold of our imaginations.
Some visit but a moment; others stay for a lifetime.
At the top of my list?
FROCK.
Always.
Aside from its dictionary definition(s), and the fact that it is fun to say, the word conjures up, for me, a kaleidoscope of vivid images that have less to do with fact, and more to do with feeling.
Frock is bold, artistic, spirited, rebellious, chic, and imaginative. It is, in short, the heart of this endeavor.
What of the front half of the name?
Font is the foundation upon which everything is built.
It embraces my love of language, of writing, of communication.
Font
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