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Home > 3 for Free

3 for Free [1]

by
Staff
May/June 2011 [2]
5.1.11

1. The quarterly short fiction magazine Electric Literature recently launched the oral-storytelling Web site Broadcastr (beta.broadcastr.com [3]). Visitors can navigate across a Google map to hear place-based tales from around the globe, from the heights of Machu Picchu to the streets of Israel. After setting up a free account, users can create playlists and add stories of their own—recorded on the site or uploaded from elsewhere—then include a photo and pin the tale on the world map. There’s a social-networking aspect to the project too—users can follow fellow storytellers and make connections by commenting on posts. In the words of the magazine’s cofounder Andy Hunter, the site is “like a museum tour of the entire world.”

2. Write Rhymes (www.writerhymes.com [4]), a pared-down, no-frills Web site designed by Foursquare staffer Matthew Healy, does essentially one thing: It finds rhymes. Poets can enter text into a box, then option-click a word to produce a bubble of its rhyming counterparts, broken down by number of syllables. Clicking one of the offered words adds it to the text box, which can be saved as a text file or printed on the spot.

3. Minnesota Center for Book Arts (www.mnbookarts.org [5]), the largest institution of its kind in the nation, offers visitors a glimpse of the craft of bookmaking—from papermaking to letterpress printing to hand binding—seven days a week in downtown Minneapolis. Located in the Open Book Building, a space it shares with Loft Literary Center and the indie press Milkweed Editions, the MCBA houses studio space, a bindery, and gallery space for rotating exhibitions, all of which are free to the public.


Source URL:https://www.pw.org/content/3_for_free_3

Links
[1] https://www.pw.org/content/3_for_free_3 [2] https://www.pw.org/content/mayjune_2011 [3] http://beta.broadcastr.com [4] http://www.writerhymes.com [5] http://www.mnbookarts.org