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Results tagged “dogdays”
FRIDAY: >> The fun, free funk and soul dance party, Moneytown at Rock and Roll Hotel, is featuring a special guest DJ named Harry Hotter, which is reason enough in itself to check to it out just to see if he'll be dressing the part. DJ Nitekrawler will also be there as usual. 9:30 p.m. to close. And don't forget to check out our full preview of 1990s, who play downstairs with Red Romance and...
FRIDAY:
TUESDAY Tonight: a major opportunity for baseball buffs. Join Lawrence D. Hogan, author of the new National Geographic book Shades of Glory: The Negro Leagues and the Story of African-American Baseball, for a lecture with Hall of Famer Monte Irvin and current Negro League Baseball Players Association President Stanley Glenn. At the Grosvenor Auditorium of the National Geographic Society, 1600 M Street, NW. For tickets and pricing, head here. For literary snooty-pants types, two highfalutin...
We’re guessing that our readers probably have at least a passing familiarity with Ana Marie Cox and at least one of her two millennium straddling web-based glories: Suck and Wonkette. Well, Cox is leaving it all behind for content that won't be found in your RSS feed: her debut novel, Dog Days, is out and she will be dishing and signing tonight at Politics and Prose, 5015 Connecticut Ave. NW., 7 p.m.
The Post's Reliable Source confirms today the news that Ana Marie Cox will be officially leaving her gig as the voice behind Wonkette to better focus on writing a follow-up to her debut novel, Dog Days, which is due to be released tomorrow. Wonkette will live on, jointly helmed by David Lat, who earned notoriety through his Supreme Court blog Underneath Their Robes, and Alex Pareene, a 20-year-old NYU dropout. Cox's book, which is published...
With the double benefit of a long weekend and sunny skies, area residents return to work with spirits and energy restored. But that feeling may be fleeting -- transportation experts warn that the first Tuesday after Labor Day is often referred to as "Terrible Traffic Tuesday," or T3 for short. Sandwiched somewhere between Manic Monday and T.G.I.F., T3 is the day that workers hit the roads, students at local universities return to campus, and school...
Fall catalogs are quickly cramming our mailbox and "Back to Cool" commercials are again making schoolchildren cringe, but the frizz-inducing weather reminds us with a humid slap each morning that it's still summer. Celebrate the sweaty mess that is a D.C. summer at the Midcity Dog Days of August, a sidewalk sale and festival spanning the U and 14th Street NW corridors this Saturday and Sunday. More than 50 businesses are participating in the sixth...
We noted yesterday that Ana Marie Cox's novel "Dog Days" was pushed to an early 2006 release date. At the time, Cox had not responded to an e-mail from DCist; after having our post forwarded to her, she sent us a clarification:
The book was pushed back because I am a much slower writer than anyone thought possible. It turns out that making things up is harder than you'd think.
Thanks to a friend of DCist, who passed along the info that "Dog Days", the debut novel of Ana Marie Cox, has been moved from an October 2005 release back to January 2006. The word from Riverhead Books, Cox's publisher, is that she is "behind." But given the timing of the normal publishing cycle, "Dog Days" should have been sent to the printer some time in the next four weeks -- with the complete manuscript delivered for editing a month or so ago. Perhaps Riverhead are more liberal with their deadlines, but we wonder if the final draft turned in by Cox needed heavier editing than expected. Another possibility is that Riverhead have delayed the book's publication in order to drum up publicity independent of that other D.C. blogger-turned-author. Everything about this seems a little fishy, especially given Ana Marie Cox's month-long hiatus to write back in February. DCist emailed Ms. Cox directly, but has not received a reply.
