Sunday, February 21, 2016

Follow Spin on Instagram.....

.....@spyridon.spin.nicon

 Hello loyal readers (a humble Thank You to you both),

As you may already know, I'm no social media maven. And, as you can tell from this blog, I'm not really a heavy poster. That being said, with some worthwhile encouragement from my good man, Eirik Johnson, I've taken to Instagram. I like that it's image driven, and the ease and simplicity appeal to me. It's been said, "A picture is worth a thousand words." I agree. And what's nice, is that on Instagram, you can also write a thousand words (well, I haven't exactly tried, but I think you can include quite a bit in your caption) - which also appeals to me.

So, if you're reading this, and you have an Instagram account, please follow me on Instagram (@spyridon.spin.nicon). I'm not going to abandon the blog - it's still my placeholder on the mighty, mighty interwebs. But, I'm a lot more likely to push information into the ether on Instagram because of it's aforementioned ease and simplicity. 

Tuesday, January 5, 2016

The Hustle

I think it can safely be said that "Boys in the Boat" got a lot of local (and national) love over the past couple years. Readers connected with the story, the historical context, and the fact that it was set in our very own Seattle. I'd like to recommend another Seattle-based book that received significantly less shine, but is easily as worthy. It is also about a team, but it is also about so much more. The book is called "The Hustle" by Doug Merlino. While in middle school, Merlino played local rec league basketball on a purposefully integrated team. Twenty years later, he tracks down all of his former teammates after learning that one of them has been brutally murdered. In examining the trajectory of the members of this 1986 team, Merlino takes a deep look at race, class, education, neighbor-hood, opportunity, and growing up in a city that is more segregated that we like to admit. If it were up to me, "The Hustle" would be required reading for all Seattle high schools, as well as part of the freshman reading list at University of Washington.