San Francisco Review of Whatever
@sfreviewofwhatever.bsky.social
490 followers 33 following 110 posts
In print only ⚫️ Issue Two is here ⚫️ Subscriptions are available at the link below 🌝 Everyone is a critic ⚫️ sfreview.org
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sfreviewofwhatever.bsky.social
Sophia Wang is a mother, a mammal, and a person who knows about bioengineering human breast milk. In “Mama Mammalian” she examines breastfeeding as work, as pleasure, and as a beautiful supply chain of two. Featuring Summoners Cards by Craig Calderwood (@craigcalderwood.bsky.social).
Photograph of an artwork by Craig Calderwood: blue and lavender puffy paint overtop a fully-obscured Magic the Gathering card. The top half looks like a crystal, and the bottom half reads "Mommy Milky," "14," and features a drip of sparkly milk. Tomato pink background with black outlined rectangles and black and blue text within: 
“For me, pumping is a fun, weird activity. I’m getting milked! With the milking contraption attached to my nipples, I am the scientist-farmer observing myself as experimental subject or dairy animal, operating a pump to extract one of the most fundamental foods on the planet, so elemental they call it liquid gold.”
SOPHIA WANG, MAMA MAMMALIAN
Reposted by San Francisco Review of Whatever
ellipticalnight.bsky.social
"Make money, they all say. But I like stuff money can't buy. Getting out of my head. Reading, writing, drawing. Imagining that this place is special and mine. I can leave at any time."

Rod Roland in @sfreviewofwhatever.bsky.social
Reposted by San Francisco Review of Whatever
sfreviewofwhatever.bsky.social
Wow contacting you about product photography
sfreviewofwhatever.bsky.social
In “We Portrait Together,” Anne Walsh (A) reviews IF AN ELSEWHERE (The Burrow), a layered, allegorical collaboration between artist Cybele Lyle (C) and poet Jocelyn Saidenberg (J). Walsh’s idiosyncratic and loving tactics demonstrate that “there are so many ways to write and read.”
Photograph showing a car dashboard with a phone attached to it. On the phone screen is a playlist by Anne Walsh titled IAE. On the dash screen behind it is more information about the track that's playing. Tomato pink background with black outlined rectangles and black and blue text within: 
“A reads IF AN ELSEWHERE (The Burrow) out loud to her phone. She doesn’t rehearse. J’s enjambment is its own inside-outside problem, an ontological straddle, she realizes. A word belonging to those preceding it doesn’t any more, it jumps context, it unbelongs itself, then togethers with the next.”
ANNE WALSH, WE PORTRAIT TOGETHER
sfreviewofwhatever.bsky.social
In “The Magic Is Here, I Saw It,” poet Christina Svenson delivers an efflorescent review of Soft Core, the novel by performer and local hero, Brittany Newell.

To read SAN FRANCISCO REVIEW OF THREE BOOKS SO FAR, order Issue Two here: sfrw.square.site/product/issu...
Photo of a cluster of white and magenta flowers. Their outer petals look like velvet and the inner ones look wet Tomato pink background with black outlined rectangles and black and blue text within: 
“Soft Core is devotional in its attention to the Bay Area’s nooks and crannies, turning them over and over like beads on a rosary. In this process, San Francisco becomes a place for looking and never finding, because there was never an object to discover in the first place.”
CHRISTINA SVENSON
THE MAGIC IS HERE, I SAW IT
Reposted by San Francisco Review of Whatever
jwlrt.bsky.social
"The energy of San Francisco is always directed outward, never to return. It would be too much for a city to keep."

❤️ Rod Roland's review (history, memoir) of skateboarding in the new @sfreviewofwhatever.bsky.social
sfreviewofwhatever.bsky.social
Might be nice to get a lobotomy and then go look
sfreviewofwhatever.bsky.social
“I Feel Safe in San Francisco” is a delicate, ranging, topographic memoir by skateboarder-poet Rod Roland, featuring photography by Reggie Guerrero (@meadowy.bsky.social) and a new poem by Tenaya Nasser-Frederick and Rod Roland.
Street scene: An empty sidewalk with a pink vertical bollard, a building with two doors behind it, and black and peach checkerboard tiling. Tomato pink background with black outlined rectangles and black and blue text within: 
I don’t think skateboarding is a cure for anything. It’s more a do or don’t thing. I feel self-conscious writing about it instead of doing it. That’s just how it’s done. If you aren’t trying, then you’re not skating. 
I’m not so worried about being judged by other fifty-year-old skateboarders reading this. Fuck you. No, I’m kidding. But seriously, why don’t you try and write a review of San Francisco and skateboarding. 
Rod Roland, I Feel Safe in San Francisco
sfreviewofwhatever.bsky.social
SFRW’s resident Ad Reinhardt (if he were more Ohioan), Kate Rhoades (@katerhoades.bsky.social) made another cartoon about the kinds of objects you might encounter in an art gallery.

To read SAN FRANCISCO REVIEW OF ART, order Issue Two here: sfrw.square.site/product/issu...
A part of a larger cartoon. There’s a bull in a suit holding a beverage and saying “Lars, the show is a hit! Why so grouchy?” And an unseen Lars replies “Nobody gets it, man!”
sfreviewofwhatever.bsky.social
Do you have a question to ask Bea, for possible inclusion in the next issue? Send it to [email protected].
sfreviewofwhatever.bsky.social
By way of A Streetcar Named Desire and The Simpsons, Beatrice Kilat (@beatrick.bsky.social) weighs the risks and chances for love in her debut column: “Ask Bea.” She also considers the chihuahua.

To read SOME GOOD ADVICE, order Issue Two here: sfrw.square.site/product/issu...
Tomato pink background with black outlined rectangles and black and blue text within: 
Williams kept waiting to wake up feeling different and instead kept waking up as himself. In his wigged-out state, he drank and ate too much, behaved poorly, leaned into cynicism, withdrew from friends and the world at large.
Taunted by the now frictionless experience of his success, he left his home and found friction out in the world. You know, the joys and bothers and ‘stuff’ that happens when we let other people into our lives. Which is what reminded me of you.
Beatrice Kilat, Ask Bea
Do you need help? Ask Bea. Bea’s areas of expertise (ongoing): dogs money life, death closet space ceramics utensils kitchens time management having a drink putting it down want vs. need upkeep (general)
Email: whoever@sfreview.org Subject line: Please Advise
sfreviewofwhatever.bsky.social
In “Escolar: Creation of Space,” Cole Hersey visits an art gallery in a shipping container in the suburbs. Our penchant for shipping container topics carries on.

To read SAN FRANCISCO REVIEW OF LAND USE, order Issue Two here: sfrw.square.site/product/issu...
Photograph of a yard: in the foreground is a cactus, behind that, a shed and a house, and behind that, a green shipping container with the letter S visible. Tomato pink background with black outlined rectangles and black and blue text within: 
A sprawling and quiet vision of the American Dream is being built here. In other words, it’s the suburbs—a place built for single families, not communities. And yet, heading deeper into the neighborhood, up the street on the left, with no fence or barrier to obstruct one’s view, there is Escolar: a garden, a home, and a white-walled gallery inside an old green shipping container.
Cole Hersey, Escolar: Creation of Space
Reposted by San Francisco Review of Whatever
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"Generally I find it easy to have an opinion than not. They come unbidden, like all the rest of the senses." Our comrades at @sfreviewofwhatever.bsky.social, we at ORB see you:
sfreviewofwhatever.bsky.social
And subscriptions and website orders are packed up to go out next week :) Order here to get in on that: sfrw.square.site
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As of later today when I get my act over to the East Bay, SFRW Issue Two will be in stock at: Black Bird Bookstore and Cafe, Et al. books, Green Apple on the Park, Park Life, Scenic Routes Community Bicycle Center, East Bay Booksellers, Pegasus Books (downtown Berkeley), and Bathers Library