Novel Songs
A Terned Production
Playlists torn from the pages of paperbacks.
On break until the fall (Formerly 10-11 AM Saturdays on WMFO.)

Here’s a picture of me and Bob in Munich. It makes me think of the mutual respect that we had for each other, which is what you really need in order to have a successful collaboration. It’s rare to come across someone like that, someone whom you want to devote yourself to shooting over a long period of time.
More photos of Bob Marley by Kate Simon here.
The Visible Man by Chuck Klosterman on Novel Songs
A Listening Companion
The Invisible Man - Elvis Costello
Be Here Now - George Harrison
You Can’t Do That - Beatles
I Want You (She’s So Heavy) - The Beatles
The Beatles - Daniel Johnston
Two of Us - Aimee Mann and Michael Penn
Feathers From Your Tree - Blue Cheer
The Hills Have Eyes - Electric Wizard
Invisible Hands - Joseph Arthur
To Be Invisible - Gladys Knight and The Pips
(Source: , via annie)
For Whom The Bell Tolls By Ernest Hemingway on Novel Songs
A Listening Companion
Look On Down from the Bridge - Mazzy Star
Brothers Under the Bridge - Bruce Springsteen
The Bridge - Neil Young
Still in Town - Johnny Cash
Bridge Over Troubled Water - Simon and Garfunkel
The Bridge - Elton John
Love Minus Zeron (No Limit) - Bob Dylan
Mood to Burn Bridges - Neko Case
Erie Canal - The Kingston Trio
On A Little Bamboo Bridge - Louis Armstrong
Burning Bridges - Glen Campbell
Ode to Billie Joe - Bobbie Gentry
Love this.
Lucky Jim for Penguin Essentials
(Source: adorablyvulgar, via aconybell)
a bright wall in a dark room.: Reviews as Other People: Sex and the City 2 (2010)
Sex and the City 2: The Sun Also Sets
by Ernest Hemingway
There is sand stretching in between the dunes like a spine as far as the eye can see and a camel in the middle of it. Two camels, or three. The camels walk slowly. I do not think they have ever had to run away from anything.
I like them. The camels. I like them because they walk with something you could call a stateliness. An elegance in the face of extreme heat, of the stench of something rotting closer than is comfortable but not in the line of sight.
For Whom The Bell Tolls
Show scheduled for today is Ernest Hemingway’s “For Whom The Bell Tolls.”
We are having some technical difficulties at WMFO so the show may be delayed or postponed until next week.
