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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Dan Webster

This individual is no longer an employee with The Spokesman-Review.

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A&E >  Entertainment

‘Friend’s Wedding’ A Bright Romance

In "My Best Friend's Wedding," director P.J. Hogan ("Muriel's Wedding") expertly adapted Ronald Bass' screenplay by making sure the musical score works in concert with the film's enduring sense of irony and by pulling fine performances from Julia Roberts and a talented supporting cast (especially Cameron Diaz and Rupert Everett). The result of Hogan's efforts is one of the brightest movie romances in years.
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George & Mertie’s Offering Awards

Mertie Duncan and George Thomas, co-publisher's of the monthly literary "microzine" George & Mertie's Place ("Spokane's only") are now offering awards for best-of-issue submissions. Winner of the Doctor Richard Diver Best of Issue Award for June is Scott Poole for his poem "The Spokane Angels." Poole, a graduate student in creative writing program at Eastern Washington University, earned $10 for his efforts. The award, not to mention the money, is justified. Unlike the majority of poetry, which so often indulges in either doggerel about nature or literary allusions that only Ph.D.s in Chaucer can understand, Poole's poems (he has two in the issue) combine real-life issues (poverty, aging, insecurity, sadness) with such literary tools as irony, hyperbole and absurdist metaphor and simile.
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Good Or Bad, Most Couples Don’t Take Divorce Lightly

Here's a couple of random thoughts to get us in the mood for today's topic: marriage and divorce. According to George Bernard Shaw, marriage is "an institution which is popular because it combines the maximum of temptation with the maximum of opportunity." Which leads, of course, to the flip side of the relationship.
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Author’s Overnight Success Took 8 Years

There are many definitions of the term overnight success. Some of us think of, say, the singer Jewel, who has had a couple of hit songs and ample radio and MTV play despite being just 23. Karen Kijewski, who tells interviewers only that she is in her 50s, has her own definition. The author of the Kat Colorado mystery series, who will read from her new book "Kat Scratch Fever" in Spokane on Wednesday (see box), utilizes time and experience as a theme in doing so. In an interview with the Sacramento Bee, Kijewski explained how she'd spent years bartending and writing part-time. Then, after learning about a contest for first-time mystery novelists, she entered. And won. The prize was $10,000 and a promise of publication. Her first book, "Kat Walk," started things off. But it took six years and two more books before she was able finally to become a full-time writer. "I won three awards with 'Kat Walk,"' Kijewski told Bee writer Dixie Reid. "It put me on the map. So after eight years of incredibly hard work, I became an overnight success." Of cold seats and stuff Walla Walla author Bob Storch writes of his life growing up in the Northwest in two volumes of self-published memoirs, "A Cold Seat on a Frosty Morning" and "How I Lost My Place at the Table." "A Cold Seat" can be found at Auntie's Bookstore and at the downtown Made in Washington store. To order the second, contact either location. Storch's daughter Molly reports that some 400 copies of the books have sold. A Portland mystery Fans of Portland author Vince Kohler will be glad to know that he has another Eldon Larkin mystery out. "Raven's Widow" (St. Martin's Press, 255 pages, $22.95) features Larkin leaving Oregon for Alaska where he plans to fish and relax. Only problem is, he soon finds himself hip-deep in murder. Kohler's previous Larkin novels include "Banjo Boy," "Rainy North Woods" and "Rising Dog."
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Seattle Film Fest Chooses Brit Comedy A Favorite

There is no such thing as one film festival. The 23rd Seattle International Film Festival, which ended its 25-day run last Sunday, was evidence of that. Your experience depended on what you saw. And since the festival boasted 190-odd feature films and shorts in all, chances are that most people saw something different. Consider the differences between the festival as seen by those who purchased full-series passes, a majority of whom saw 60 or more films (at least two saw more than 135), and the regular festival-goers, who likely saw many fewer.
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Cowboy Character Captures Author’s Interest Once More

When novelist Randall Beth Platt talks about her favorite protagonist, you get the feeling she's talking about somebody real. Sometimes it seems as if Royal Leckner is - real, that is. A rancher living in the Walla Walla/Milton-Freewater area around the turn of the century, Royal is the main character in two of Platt's novels. The first was "The Four Arrows Fe-As-Ko" and, most recently, Royal showed up in "The Royalscope Fe-As-Ko," from which Platt will read on Wednesday at Auntie's (see Reader Board below).
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Give Dad A Reference Book On Father’s Day

Hallmark holidays are always a puzzle. What's the perfect Valentine's Day gift? Flowers? What should you give Mother for Mother's Day? Everlasting love and affection? And then there's Dad. Don't worry about him, though, because DK Publishing has his number.
A&E >  Entertainment

‘I Love You’ Revisits Familiar Allen Territory

If you're a Woody Allen fan, there are times when you suspect the man can do anything. Then you come to your senses. "Interiors" and "September" proved that straight drama is sometimes beyond his reach. And now, if "Everyone Says I Love You" is any indication, Allen probably shouldn't attempt to make any more musicals.
A&E >  Entertainment

Seattle Film Fest Gives A Special Kind Of Thrill

Two weekends down, 10 days to go and 74-odd films yet to see. We're three-fifths of the way through the 23rd Seattle International Film Festival, and some of us are getting a bit punchy. Maybe what's getting to us is the long hours spent watching dancing images of light waft through the darkened interiors of aging theaters. Maybe it's the uncompromising hardness of the seats in those same theaters. Could be it's just the 600-mile drive from Spokane to Seattle and back.
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Readers Can Relate To ‘Stuff’

Did you know... It takes half a pound of fertilizers and pesticides to produce one pound of Colombian coffee beans. The coffee picker who harvests those beans gets paid less than $1 a day. While 40 percent of the paper stock on which The Spokesman-Review is printed is recycled, the remainder comes from fresh wood pulp.
A&E >  Entertainment

Film Fest Audiences Miss Sunshine But Earn Rewards

Last weekend was one of those magical times in Seattle when the sun was out, the air was warm and the blue sky competed for attention with the snow-tipped peaks of both the Olympics and Mount Rainier. Not that I saw much of it. When the Seattle International Film Festival is in session, I see mostly the dark insides of Capitol Hill movie theaters. The 10 films I saw on the opening weekend of SIFF 23 led me to believe that this year's lineup of 190 movies might be better than normal. And the descriptions of films that play today through Sunday only add to that feeling.