Current Photo Friday theme: Weird
“When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro.”
–Raoul Duke
alter-ego of Hunter S. Thompson
and inspiration for “Doonesbury’s” Uncle Duke
Who goes there? Please leave comments so (An Aries Knows)!
Current Photo Friday theme: Weird
“When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro.”
–Raoul Duke
alter-ego of Hunter S. Thompson
and inspiration for “Doonesbury’s” Uncle Duke
Current Photo Friday theme: Surface
Using a Hemingway title, this clean, well-lighted place, of which every surface delivered aesthetic pleasure the moment I walked inside, lingers in my memory 14 years later.
I’ll start this post with a link to an interview with author Lisa Alther because it might be of interest to writers and specifically to writers from the American South. It was of particular note to me because of my work in progress, which leads me to….
The writing below was originally posted to my LiveJournal in July 2009 (it had photos which are not included here). I figure as long as I’m rereading things to fix the attack code, I may share an occasional post in case you missed it the first time or maybe would enjoy remembering, as I do. It’s not lost on me that the Neverending Saga is portraying some of the things I speak of here.
Back when I was a wee young teen reading books from my parents’ library at a voracious rate, I loved any fiction or biographies that were about writers or artists or performers or crazy kids struggling to make it in the big city.
Everything seems romantic and exciting when your life experience is limited. Writers living in near poverty in Paris, gathering for drinks and conversation in a favorite little bar or bookstore. Artists bumping against each other in New York, competing for gallery space and reviews, little dreaming that together they were reshaping the entire concept of art. Actresses stunning the world in roles of a lifetime, then going mad for the love of great actors. Musical prodigies dying of disease and starvation at the hands of rivals who could never measure up to them. All of these brilliant, talented people with their connected lives, inspired and destroyed by one another–it was dazzling and enticing and larger than life to Wee Me.
Now that I’m older, I realize that most of those people–the real ones–probably had no idea what big lives they had. They probably got just as worn down by daily reality as anyone–the frustration of a colicky baby, the need to find enough fuel to get them through a harsh winter, the dozens of rejections that made them feel their work would never come to anything, physical limitations, familial obligations.
But sometimes the magic is so strong it breaks through our perspective of life as ordinary, mundane.
There’s a crowded little bookstore in the Faubourg Marigny where creative voices are always welcomed and nurtured by the owner. A reading is scheduled for a sultry May night. The usual smells permeate the streets of New Orleans–the river, the bars, the sweat and urine and sick of tourists, the droppings of mules. Dough frying and crawfish simmering. I’m a little tired and overheated after a long day, so I persuade my friend and writing partner Timothy to take a cab with me to the bookstore. Earlier, we saw our friends walking. They decide to stop for drinks along the way, so we get there just before them.
The store is hot, even hotter because we all stand close among the stacks, or get brushed by people on their way to the back of the shop, where a few bottles of wine have been opened. A couple of red plastic plates hold crackers and pretzels. Most of those will be eaten by two or three men who probably missed lunch and are overdue for dinner.
The reading is kicked off by the dynamic Theresa Davis. She mesmerizes me. Others I can’t hear because late arrivals whisper and rustle and cause people around me to shift, blocking the opening that allowed me to see and listen to the readers. A couple of writers reinforce my conviction that I should never read my work aloud–some of us just don’t have the voice or the skill to do right by our stories. As the event ends, the air is so thick with humidity and performance anxiety that I have to get out of there. I can’t breathe.
I stumble outside, inhaling, craving air conditioning, and hear someone call my name. Catty-cornered from the bookstore is a restaurant with benches on the sidewalk around it. Without my glasses and in the dim street light, only my familiarity with their voices enables me to recognize Rhonda and Lindsey. I cross to them. A waiter has come from the restaurant and persuaded them to accept a hookah. It’s my first experience with this, though I decide it’s really not that different from the water pipes of my distant youth. I don’t smoke cigarettes anymore, but I enjoy the scent and taste of the hookah’s sour apple tobacco.
The mouthpiece is passed among us. Not all of us smoke. We’re passing time, waiting for Trebor and Timothy. We decide we’ll all meet at a Middle Eastern restaurant around the corner. I go with the first group, and once inside, I sit with Rob, Melissa, ‘Nathan, and Dan. The restaurant is busy, but not too noisy, and it’s easy to hear their banter. I’m laughing a lot, as anyone would be with this group.
Lindsey and Rhonda come in with Mike and Jeffrey. They put two tables together–close to us, but not close enough for our conversations to intersect. There are bursts of laughter from their table, and I feel utterly content to know that all these people I enjoy and admire are getting to know one another and form new friendships.
Trebor and Tim finally enter the restaurant. This is a dinner we’ve tried to have for two years, and I join the two of them at our table. I’m enchanted all over again by Trebor. We jump from subject to subject, and he always has something intelligent, provocative, or entertaining to share. Occasionally I throw in a comment, but really, I’m happy to sit back, savor my grilled vegetables and basmati rice topped with feta cheese, and listen to two people who make me think and laugh and feel wonderful life from the ends of my hair to the tips of my toes.
It’s only later, much later, that I step outside the memory of those moments and realize that they are, in fact, made of that big magic that some biographer or storyteller of the future might put in a book. I have no idea which artist or writer or photographer or musician among us will be the principal and who makes up the supporting cast. But I dream that some young reader invited into this night will have lit within her the vision of a life made of creative work that she loves and gifted friends to illuminate the path to her dreams.
One of the reasons I went out of town last month, and the main reason I picked that date, is because it was the final performance of Lynne’s granddaughter Lila playing the role of Elle Woods in Legally Blonde: The Musical JR. Lila and the entire cast were so good, and of course, if you’ve ever seen the movie Legally Blonde, you know how fun the story is.
First time as part of an indoor audience for me (I was vaccinated, boostered, and masked, and I made sure I was Covid-negative before I left Houston) since I saw Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker with Tom and Lynne maybe in February of 2020. Then the world went mad. Being there was a bit of a challenge, but thanks to Lynne and family, as well as Tom and Debby on the phone, I made it and was able to lose myself in the play that night.
I know what you really want me to tell you. Was the chihuahua Bruiser Woods in the show? Yes. A shelter dog played the part of Bruiser and became available for adoption after her big acting debut. In addition, “Rufus,” portrayed by the dog of someone connected to the play, was also there.
SPOILER ALERT! All turns out well for Rufus and and Paulette thanks to Elle’s quick legal analysis.
What a fun production with a talented cast. I’m so glad I got to see it. I hope Lila has many more theatrical opportunities like this.
TBH, I always had a sense there might be pink fashion in Lila’s future. Oh my God! Oh my God!*
Lila at around eight months.
*That’s a lyric from the musical’s first song.
Current Photo Friday theme: Technology
I’m just sitting here watching the wheels go round and round…
In case you can’t read the author names on the silk scarf: Elizabethan Barrett Browning, Charlotte Brontë, Samuel L. Clemens, T.S. Eliot, Robert Frost, Ernest Hemingway, Henry James, John Keats, Rudyard Kipling, William Somerset Maugham, John Milton, Eugene O’Neill, Edgar Allan Poe, Henry David Thoreau, Walt Whitman, Oscar Wilde, Virginia Woolf (and I’m still trying to decipher others, with thanks to Timothy for Charles Dickens and Tom for Charlotte Brontë)
May is “Get Caught Reading Month,” and while June doesn’t begin until Wednesday, I’m pretty sure I won’t finish the 500-page book I’m reading by then (I’m not quite halfway through it).
Though I didn’t get a lot of reading done in May (I made progress writing the Neverending Saga!), here are the writers who kept me company through the month.
Small-town magic happens to three “accidental” visitors in these Three Left Turns to Nowhere novellas, one each from ‘Nathan Burgoine, J. Marshall Freeman, and Jeffrey Ricker.
The Devil’s Bones is the twenty-first novel in Carolyn Haines’s Sarah Booth Delaney Mysteries. There is no shortage of suspects as deaths and mishaps pile up during a girlfriends’ weekend in Lucedale, Mississippi.
A short novella (No. 21.5) from the Sarah Booth Delaney Mysteries includes a found child, a mystery from the past, and a bit of magic.
A Garland of Bones, set just before Christmas in Columbus, Mississippi, tells the story of Sarah Booth Delaney, with her lover and their friends, mired deep in the vindictive acts of a group of cheating couples and social climbers.
Independent Bones presents a group of murders connected to domestic violence and toxic masculinity, while the favorite humans and animals of Sarah Booth’s world provide insights, friendship, and romance.
I read the fourth book in Carolyn Haines’s Pluto’s Snitch Series, A Visitation of Angels. Pluto’s Snitch is a detective agency formed just after World War I, but there’s a twist–the two partners, Raissa and Reginald, investigate crimes involving the paranormal, including hauntings, possession, and the occult. This latest offering has some badass, or maybe just bad, angels, and an evil man who holds a town in his grip.
That catches me up on the many Haines novels I’d downloaded during the part of the pandemic when I wasn’t reading. Good thing there’s another Sarah Booth Delaney mystery coming out in June, because I want more!
Finally, sending birthday wishes to one of the extraordinary people from my past. I doubt you’ll ever see this, but if good thoughts bring happiness, you’ll have a happy birthday.
Me and Jack just want to stare into space and are not feeling the posting vibe today. ALTHOUGH, let me note, today is Rhonda’s birthday, and we hope to be celebrating it this weekend. It’s also Star Wars day, which is always fun on social media, especially animals dressed as characters from the films. Those are fun and good things.
On the flip side, the date is a somber one for me. We lost a friend to AIDS on May 4 in 1995, and for most of my life, the date has meant the shootings at Kent State in 1970. There’s a 1981 made-for-TV-movie about the incident based on the book by James Michener which I read back then. It was depressing and maddening. The movie was filmed near the town(s) where I lived in Alabama, and someone we knew was in it. I’ve seen it only once before, so I watched a copy on YouTube tonight that’s poor quality for some of the sound and some of the night scenes.
That incident was a perfect storm, and I feel like over the decades, we’ve seen too many of those. It makes me sad when I read people on social media from around the world who say they’re afraid to visit the U.S. anymore. Some countries issue travel advisories to their citizens about coming here because of gun violence, and travelers are warned:
The small-town girl who tried to process Kent State in 1970 could never have predicted this is where we’d be now.
I was purging some things from a footlocker and consolidating some things from my parents to put in there, when I found these tiny gifts tucked inside. I’d long wondered where they were! They’re beautiful, beaded bookmarks made by Tom’s mother for each of us, and I photographed them next to some novels you may remember.
This book turned twenty in October of last year. HOW IS THAT TRUE?
Meanwhile, this denim-clad dude turns twenty in January of next year. My gosh, TJB would be paying some steep tuition to put both Daniel and Adam through college.
As for April reading, I sure didn’t meet the number I read in March. I spent a lot of time working on the fifth book in the Neverending Saga, plus we spent more time with friends in April than in previous months, so I’m not mad.
Here’s the April book report.
One of the few books I read in 2020 was Barbara Neely’s Blanche on the Lam, the first in a series of four that I bought and downloaded as ebooks. Though I hadn’t previously heard of her, when Neely died in March 2020, many writers and booksellers whose accounts I follow on social media mentioned her and piqued my interest in her work. I enjoyed that first book, but like so many others in the TBR pile, the series fell victim to my pandemic non-reading issue.
I decided to make the rest of the Blanche books part of my April reading. Blanche White is a middle-aged, dark-skinned Black woman who juggles her job as a domestic worker with raising her late sister’s children, maintaining a network of friends, being wary of but not hopeless about romance, and doing a bit of amateur sleuthing. The books are somewhat light on the mysteries but rich in commentary about social and political issues such as violence against women, racism, class boundaries, and sexism.
I love Donna Leon’s Commissario Guido Brunetti series’ characters and their relationships. I feel like Venice is another character. I’m always happy to visit it all again in her mysteries. She never disappoints.
I think I have two more to read in Leon’s series; I’m trying to make them last a bit longer.
I read the tenth (most recent, from 2019) in Alan Bradley’s Flavia de Luce series. Flavia is always a delight, and the new private investigation firm opened by her ‘tween self with her father’s loyal friend and servant Arthur Dogger will hopefully keep this series going, though Bradley has made no promises.
I also read some nonfiction.
Published in 2017, reading it post-2020 election was a bit surreal. A mix of memoir and optimism about our potential as a nation and as citizens.
Back to The Illustrated Crystallary Oracle Cards because this is one of my favorite things lately. No surprise since I love stones, crystals, and minerals.
One of the first gifts of a crystal I was ever given was by Princess Patti: a rose quartz heart. In honor of friendship and connection, I’m sharing this card with you today. I think the message is one any of us may need to hear from time to time.
I see this as: Don’t deny yourself all the love that comes your way all the time because you are waiting for only one kind of love in one kind of way from one kind of source.
I need all these books, especially the ones with pictures, because my brain’s encyclopedia region is full of other people’s song lyrics. And trivia about musicians.
Today is a Full Moon, which had me thinking how full moons are a time of completion, and that reminded me of this book. I first posted it back in March of last year and shared one of the writing prompts. I’m personally invested in what I’m writing now, and I get “prompts” from so many sources–a few I can recall off hand are a perfume bottle, a song (lots of these), an ornament, a recipe, a scrap of fabric, an old car–but I remember well what it’s like to feel blank and frustrated when I want to write.
Even if you don’t write, if your stories are in your mind and not put to paper, maybe you feel like indulging your imagination. Here’s the beginning of a story from the book:
For the past six months, this had been his block. The acoustics were perfect, the foot traffic not too heavy or light, and there was plenty of room on the sidewalk for Jonas and his…
Your next word hopefully gives you an image that fires up your curiosity to figure out who Jonas is and what he’s doing. Things you might consider are imagery (what do you see? hear? smell? taste? touch?), motive, and conflict. Imagine it, write it, dream it–and by the way, I hear dreams on this full pink moon may be important.
Photo by Christophe Lehenaff/Getty Images