March 20, 2010
UTNE READER

From the Stacks: July 28, 2006

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Utne receives some 1,200 magazines, newsletters, journals, weeklies, and zines. Add in hundreds of books, CDs, and DVDs, and it's a flood of media that lines the walls of our library and piles high on our desks. All the ideas, people, and stories inspire lively daily chatter, but they can't all fit into our bimonthly magazine. So we share the gems here in our weekly editions of 'From the Stacks.' Check in every Friday for the freshest highlights of the independent and alternative media.

RELATED CONTENT

Good Medicine, created by the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, focuses less on pharmaceuticals than diet and nutrition. Flipping through, one gets the message that food can be the difference between long-term illness and health. The Summer issue appears to have a pro-animal theme to it, with a piece about vegan athletes speaking to Congress and another imploring readers to help end animal testing. In the cover story on the cancer risks of eating grilled chicken, ?Playing With Fire,? author Jennifer Reilly rules out grilled, fried, and undercooked chicken, leaving the reader with a few healthy grilling recipes, including veggie burgers and 'barbecue vegetable brochettes.' -- Suzanne Lindgren

Those interested in the 'Korean American experience' might pick up KoreAm Journal, a glossy that seems able to transcend age and gender by covering topics that reflect an audience with diverse interests. From blind dates and new movies to updates on the continuing tensions between North and South Korea, the magazine runs the gamut of concerns. In a poignant feature excerpted from Brenda Paik Sunoo's Seaweed and Shamans: Inheriting the Gifts of Grief, the author tells of the death of her artistic teenage son, Tommy. Sunoo discusses the unexpected benefits she encountered as she healed, such as the honor of one of her son's friends having a drawing of Tommy's tattooed on his torso. -- Suzanne Lindgren

My favorite thing to do when visiting a new city is to pick up the local alternative weekly. Not only does it tell me which bands are in town and what restaurants to hit, it also helps shed light on the locals and the issues they're probably talking about. We get stacks of weeklies from all over the country at Utne, so I didn't need to venture to Detroit to enjoy Metro Times. The alt-weekly's July 12th cover story, sprawled in black and white with Technicolor splashes in the headline, is 'Color Commentary,' a look at the melding of race and music in the Motor City. The featured dialogue between two musicians, Panamanian-born Mary Ramirez, guitarist for the rock/soul Detroit Cobras, and Amp Fiddler, an African-American funk musician, uncovers differing opinions on how and if the music scene should be racially integrated. -- Rachel Anderson

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