Drink Your Books
This fall, we’re intoxicated by words.
Table of Contents: | Headout Picks
November 19th, 2008
Vamp Flick Fan Fic | OMG! Twilight’s coming. And we’ve got the fan mail to prove it.0 comments
November 12th, 2008
Tired Of Turkey? | Order yourself an alternabird this Thanksgiving.0 comments
November 5th, 2008
Banned: Nov. 4 08 | We’re officially voting these words out of office.4 comments
October 29th, 2008
Death Match | Two nights. Three Halloween movies. Which one will scare the most crap out of you?0 comments
October 22nd, 2008
You’re A Lebowski, I’m A Lebowski | Fuck it, Dude, let’s go bowling…for a cause.3 comments
October 15th, 2008
Shape up or ship out! | And Headout Picks2 comments
October 8th, 2008
Great Moments in Educational Kids Music0 comments
September 24th, 2008
Up, Chuck! | Let’s throw Palahniuk on the big screen. Again.0 comments
September 17th, 2008
Trashtastic | Our Brit intern seeks out the essence of pale American rubbish.0 comments
September 10th, 2008
Filmmaking With Braaains | Forget High-School Musical—these teens made their own zombie movie.2 comments
![]() IMAGE: waltonportfolio.com |
[October 1st, 2008] It’s book season. Recent weeks have seen the national launch of big-name titles from bigwig publishers like Scribner and Knopf with more coming in October. Translation? Even as we speak, eager bibliophiles in darkened apartments across the country are shunning the cold, gray light of autumn and settling themselves into squashy armchairs, hardbacks in hand. But wait. Something’s missing.
Ah, yes. Alcohol. Specifically wine. Because nothing complements Melville like Malbec, Rilke like Riesling, Zola like zinfandel (and pretension like pinot). But pairing books with wines can be tricky, so WW asked Kimberly Bernosky and Brian Dooley of Portland wine bar Noble Rot (2724 SE Ankeny St., 233-1999, noblerotpdx.com) to give us a leg up. With their help, we matched three exciting new book releases with regional wines to suit them. So now you, too, can drink your books.
^Headout Picks
THURSDAY OCT. 2
[WORDS] RICHARD LEAKEY
The paleoanthropologist talks population (control). See page 27 for a Q&A. Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, 1037 SW Broadway, 232-2300. 7 pm. $38.25-$55. All ages.
FRIDAY
OCT. 3
[SCREEN] APPALOOSA
Ed Harris directs himself as a gunslinger. He and Viggo Mortensen are terrific—so comedically calibrated that even Renée Zellweger’s scrunchy face can’t get between them. Century 16 Cedar Hills Crossing, 3200 SW Hocken Ave., Beaverton, 520-0892. $9.25.
[STAGE] DEAD FUNNY
Third Rail Rep’s tragicomedy about a failing marriage and dead comedians. World Trade Center, 121 SW Salmon St., 753-0565. 7:30 pm Thursdays-Saturdays, 2 pm Sundays. Closes Oct. 26. $16-$29.
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[MUSIC] HORSE FEATHERS, DOLOREAN
The string-loving local trio celebrates the release of its beautifully lush new album. Holocene, 1001 SE Morrison St., 239-7639. 9 pm. 21+.
SATURDAY
OCT. 4
[SCREEN] H.P. LOVECRAFT FILM FEST
More hideous squid-beasts reach out with their unspeakable tentacles from a place beyond time. They come bearing T-shirts. Hollywood Theatre, 4122 NE Sandy Blvd., 281-4215. Friday-Sunday, Oct. 3-5. Day pass $15-$18, weekend pass $46.
[BENEFIT] WINI’S VAMPIRE BALL
Get your vamp on to benefit a local woman with the nerve-attacking, light-sensitivity-producing disease porphyria—a.k.a. “vampire disease.” Village Ballroom, 700 NE Dekum St. 8 pm. $21. Tickets and info at forwini.com.
MONDAY
OCT. 6
[MUSIC] SIGUR RÓS
Iceland’s most pretentious and epic band (sorry, Björk) brings heaps of reverb, falsetto and syrupy strings to the Schnitz. Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, 1037 SW Broadway, 248-4335. 8 pm. $35.75-$53.
TUESDAY
OCT. 7
[DANCE] INBAL PINTO DANCE
Israel’s theatrical Inbal Pinto Dance Company returns to PDX with Shaker, a kind of winter wonderland set inside an oversized snow globe. Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, 1037 SW Broadway, 790-2787. 7:30 pm. $20-$50.
[MUSIC] CUT COPY
Don’t believe that Aussies have more fun? Cut Copy has enough electro love songs to turn the whole house into believers. Hawthorne Theatre, 3862 SE Hawthorne Blvd., 233-7100. 9 pm. $18 advance, $20 day of show. All ages.
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