Archive | October 2008

WINSOME | Lensey Namioka

WINSOME | Lensey Namioka

She excelled in mathematics when she attended elementary school in Cambridge, Mass. Her classmates thought she was weird for her unique academic ability.

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Posted in Community News, News, Profiles, Vol 27 No 41 | 10/4 - 10/100 Comments

IMAGINATIVE | Philip Lee

IMAGINATIVE | Philip Lee

Philip Lee is no stranger to the publishing business. Beginning in 1977, for seven years, throughout high school and college, he worked in a number of bookstores. Another seven was spent in marketing in the magazine publishing business at Conde Nast Publications in New York. He has worked for Glamour, Mademoiselle, Vanity Fair and GQ magazines. However, despite greatly enjoying the business, Lee wanted to work somewhere that reflected his culture.

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Posted in Community News, News, Profiles, Vol 27 No 41 | 10/4 - 10/100 Comments

CREATIVE | Aki Sogabe

CREATIVE | Aki Sogabe

Who could have imagined that a little girl in Japan experimenting with paper cutting would one day grow up to illustrate books and exhibit works of art in America? Aki Sogabe has dared to give voice to her artistic passion, transforming everyday images and forms into a beautiful collection of work that spans decades and oceans.

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Posted in Community News, News, Profiles, Vol 27 No 41 | 10/4 - 10/100 Comments

INDISPENSABLE | Gary Luke

INDISPENSABLE | Gary Luke

Meander through the aisles of your corner bookstore, and you’re bound to come across some intriguing titles. “The Best Places to Kiss in the Northwest,” “The Cancer Lifeline Cookbook,” or how about “Sleeping Bag Yoga”? These books share a common thread beyond just challenging convention. What may not be so apparent is that the person putting out these covers is Asian American.

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Posted in Community News, News, Profiles, Vol 27 No 41 | 10/4 - 10/100 Comments

DRIVEN | Peter Bacho

DRIVEN | Peter Bacho

Novelist and teacher Peter Bacho believes everybody has a story to tell. The Filipino American recalls his own humble beginnings, growing up poor in Seattle’s Central District in the 1950s. A juris doctorate, a master’s degree and two award-winning novels later, Bacho is now being honored as a pioneer who paved the way for Asian Americans in literature.

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Posted in Community News, News, Profiles, Vol 27 No 41 | 10/4 - 10/100 Comments

SHARP | Mayumi Tsutakawa

SHARP | Mayumi Tsutakawa

Seattle has no shortage of people who are well known within the arts community. The International District in particular has a number of outstanding leaders in the Asian American community. But both these communities owe a debt of gratitude to Mayumi Tsutakawa.

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Posted in Community News, News, Profiles, Vol 27 No 41 | 10/4 - 10/100 Comments

Instant Gratification — Play brings sexy back to Seattle

Instant Gratification — Play brings sexy back to Seattle

There is nothing like sex in Seattle on a Friday night: especially when you’re watching it live on stage.

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Posted in Community News, Features, News, Vol 27 No 41 | 10/4 - 10/100 Comments

Growing Pains — Teacher matures along with her students

Growing Pains — Teacher matures along with her students

Author Sarah Shun-Lien Bynum knows how complicated growing up can be. Her first novel, National Book Award finalist “Madeleine is Sleeping,” explored the turbulent, often surreal world of adolescence. There, Bynum revealed the tragedy that can hide behind the physical or hormonal changes that put an end to childhood. Far too many of us want to stay children, want to stay unformed and unfocused as adults, escaping into a private void we mistakenly call “freedom.”

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Posted in Arts & Entertainment, On the Shelf, Reviews, Vol 27 No 41 | 10/4 - 10/100 Comments

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