At the moment, it seems like a vote-blog of short stories... nice, but what are you trying to do? What do you see it growing into? What's your aim with it?<p>It's hard to provide feedback without knowing what you're trying to achieve...
Whoo! Always fun to see a writing start-up.<p>The styling is blandly nice - that's a compliment. Reading your words feels nice. It could be better, but then it could always be better. I love the feel of the site.<p>What's the point? What do you offer that other sites don't offer? Right now it's nice but very, very generic.
I like the design but I didn't "get it" when I first landed on the page. After poking around for a few seconds, I saw what you're trying to do.<p>Why not throw up an "about"?
The sidebar font uses the same blue as the facebook "Log in with Facebook" above.
(1) This makes me think that clicking these links will ask me to log into Facebook
(2) Overall feels like you're phishing for my Facebook username/password. You need to explain what your site is before anyone will feel comfortable logging into Facebook via your site. Furthermore, WHY would I log into FB through your site? Are you going to pull in my friends list and send them spam on my behalf? Are you going to post in my activity feed? These are all questions that a user will have and you need to be very clear about upfront.
This is one of my first Rails apps with the user profiles powered completely by Facebook Connect. I used the Facebooker (<a href="http://facebooker.rubyforge.org/" rel="nofollow">http://facebooker.rubyforge.org/</a>) plugin, which was relatively painless to integrate into my app.
The overall appearance of the website is "confusingly similar" to that of typophile.com, which is a high profile and very active online community. If I would've just randomly came across it, I would've assumed it was a typophile spin-off.