Friday, January 28, 2011

bookshops

Booksmith on Haight.  Aardvark on Church.  Graphic novels at Comix Experience on Divis.  The cozy corners of Green Apple.  A quiet afternoon in the poetry room at City Lights.  San Francisco is a mecca for book lovers.  You could spend days meandering through different bookshops, finding treasure at the bottom of a dusty stack, relaxing on battered sofas, attending readings, visiting cats, delving into a plethora of topics, discovering new writers and forgotten classics...

Adobe Book Shop, 16th Street, the Mission


Green Apple, Clement Street, Richmond

Red Hill Books, Cortland Avenue, Bernal Heights

Friday, January 21, 2011

Divisadero Street

A stroll along Divisadero...

                                  
   

                                      



 If you're hungry for a good cheap simple bacon 'n egg breakfast stop into Eddie's Cafe...

Sunday, January 16, 2011

The F Line


San Francisco is well known for its cable cars but it also has a unique collection of historic streetcars that run along the F Line on Market Street from the Embarcadero to Castro.  You will see red ones, yellow ones, blue ones, green ones, all painted the transit colours of some of the thirty North American cities that employed streamliner streetcars.  A non profit organization called Market Street Railway is dedicated to acquiring and restoring historic streetcars from around the world, and thanks to them we still have these old beauties plying the streets and adding their shuffling music to the urban mix.  


Number 162.  A double ended streetcar built for MUNI in 1914, one of only two survivors of a class of 125 cars.  It was retired in 1958 and spent 45 years at a railway museum before being reacquired in 2003.  Volunteers replaced the roof canvas and made repairs and it went back into service in 2008.
                                       
Number 1076.  This streetcar was built for Minneapolis-St. Paul in 1946.  It went to Newark, NJ in 1953 and ended up in San Francisco in 2004.  It is painted in the colours representing Washington DC transit.

Number 952.  This New Orleans "Streetcar Named Desire" was built in 1923.  It came to San Francisco in 1998 for the world premiere of Andre Previn's opera of the Tennessee Williams novel and has been in operation ever since.


Saturday, January 1, 2011

How Many Roads

Amoeba on Haight Street


Amoeba is a music lover's paradise.  When I go there I have an idea of certain CDs I'm looking for but always end up stumbling across stuff I hadn't heard of before.  While browsing around the soul section last month I noticed a new compilation on a British label called How Many Roads: Black America Sings Dylan.  It's a fantastic collection, it's like hearing all those songs again for the first time.  Here are a couple by Solomon Burke and The Staple Singers: