A page from illustrator and cartoonist, Jillian Tamaki’s six-page spread in Print Magazine’s Trash issue. Tamaki walked through her neighborhood in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, and noted the trash she saw, as well as what it told her about the people and places that reside there. More here…

A page from illustrator and cartoonist, Jillian Tamaki’s six-page spread in Print Magazine’s Trash issue. Tamaki walked through her neighborhood in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, and noted the trash she saw, as well as what it told her about the people and places that reside there. More here…

When Martin Amis moved to Cobble Hill last year it was widely viewed by the press as an official imprimatur on Brooklyn’s status as the writing factory of America. Not that Brooklyn was ever short of writers – Walt Whitman used to edit the Brooklyn Eagle, and Norman Mailer held court in Brooklyn Heights for much of his life, alongside Truman Capote – but the phenomenon is now so pronounced that you could say, without exaggeration, that there are two principal avenues for would-be writers in America. The first is to swallow the exorbitant price tag for one of the country’s multiplying creative-writing courses (usually Masters of Fine Arts, or MFAs); the second is to move to Brooklyn.

“How Brooklyn became a writers’ mecca” by Aaron Hicklin

This is also a nice glimpse into the strange world of writer celebrity.