Decluttering

Another report from the decluttering front (can you stand it?) This the second to last major project … dealing with the craft bookcases outside the study. These hold books on Knitting/Needlework and Gardening and other misc household type books.  Also because this is the back hallway and separated from the “front” of the apartment by a curtain/rug (its a railroad), unfortunately it’s the one area where “things” pile up – like boxes and bags of well, you know, that sort of object that unless you have a place for it ends up in a box or bag for well, weeks sometimes. 

All of those objects are now dispersed to their proper places or thrown out or soon to be thrown out (in the case of MS and RSimple magazines that have to wait for recycling day on Wed). 

The fileboxes in the last photo are the previously mentioned recyclable mags and  magazines (ok, New Yorkers) that need to be culled and thrown out.  At some point I will get the complete DVD of all the New Yorkers but it’s not high on the list of expenditures at the moment.

And so the bookcases were reorganized and arranged .  These are bookcases bought at Gothic Cabinet Craft many many years ago and they have held up rather well.  The only problem is with the left bookcase and the heavy knitting books – two of the shelves had fallen due to the weight and the holes (where the pins holding the shelves are inserted) were now too large to hold them again.  So the shelves had to be rearranged – thus you see that small narrow shelf which actually works as it holds the precious and valuable Alice Starmore knitting/needlepoint books.   

So without further ado

From this…

 To this….

 

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green for a greenhouse

OHHH

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update

Apartment cure 2009 is almost over… (one minor chore and one two major left).  Some photos of the Den (Major makeover), study (clean up, declutter) and Kitchen (clean up/declutter and paint) are on Flickr.

And just in time for the garden.

We are having a very bizarre spring weatherwise – two weekends ago we had a heat wave in the 80s and low 90s even and then it dipped back thru the week to a week of rain and then a great weekend and this week a few days of 70s; then this weekend more rain and today in the 50s!  

Many plants in the garden are recovering from their winter sleep, however I am sad at the ones that have not survived.  This is the third full year on this garden.  After the first year of creation and initial foundation plants and then putting in perennials much too late, the second year about half of the perennials came back. That year the plants were put in earlier and now in the third year am seeing what works in this litltle microcosm. 

Unfortunately, my makeshift gate has been taken away and in light of continuing good will with the landlord, will not return; so the garden is thus WIDE open to any predator who may amble up the alleyway – which means, skunks (there is one that visits weekly during the summer), possums, racoons (!) and the neighborhood groundhogs.  

From the destruction in the first year (see posts from summer 2006) several plants went on the DO NOT PLANT BECAUSE THE GROUNDHOG WILL EAT list – of course many of my favorites – echinacea, daisies (!!), hollyhocks.  However, this year one of my black kittens (Tristan) is now a big 1.5 year old boy and LOVES to stay out at night.  Maybe he will help keep the groundhogs away?  Not that I want him to get in a fight with one – but just his presence?

I am not holding my breath.

Also I have much less financial resources this year to experiment on things that will be eaten.  I am sad that my favorite clematis has not appeared – and i know it was up much earlier last year.  I am going to keep my fingers crossed but try to find a replacement to put next to it to hopefully encourage it.  And then one order from my favorite place GRACEFUL GARDENS.  And a few more roses (can never have too many roses).  And seeds.  

so to keep you entertained, here is a photo during the brief bit of sunlight (?) we had today.  More here (Please ignore the seed pods – that’s the second batch of three billion that come down … sigh… one more rain and they should be done).

Garden 2009 05 17-29

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the Gardening Ravelry

Look! Keep Your Garden Organized

05_13_09_gardener_dashboard.jpgWhether you're rocking a full-fledged veggie garden in the backyard, have a stellar natural landscape in place of the front lawn, or are coaxing edibles and bee-friendly varietals from random containers on the porch, this online garden journal is for you.

Folia is an easy-to-use tool that's a cross between a wiki, a journal, a social network, a photo sharing site, and more: it's an all-in-one resource center for your garden.

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too true

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Tribute to James Lee Burke

My cousin Alafair Burke presented the GRAND MASTER award from the Mystery Writers of America to my cousin, her father, James Lee Burke last Thursday.  Below is the tribute she wrote to him which was included in the evening’s program.

You will never hear James Lee Burke speak at a conference about how to market a novel, how to brand one’s work, or the importance of co-op money to the success of one’s sales. My father talks about writing not as a commercial enterprise, nor even as a craft or as art, but as a destiny.

If one looked only at early and recent years, his career might indeed feel inevitable. He published his first short story when he was nineteen years old and completed his first novel when he was twenty-three. Upon the publication of his debut, Half of Paradise, the New York Times Book Review declared him “a writer to be taken absolutely seriously.” By the time he was thirty-four, he had published two more novels, To the Bright and Shining Sun and Lay Down My Sword and Shield. Now, nearly forty years later, he is the best-selling author of twenty-seven novels and two short-story collections. He is a two-time winner of the Edgar Award. His flawed but noble New Iberia sheriff’s deputy, Dave Robicheaux, has been portrayed on film by two of a generation’s best actors, Alec Baldwin and Tommy Lee Jones.

But to equate writing as a destiny with the inevitability of a career is to ignore the years between the beginning and the recent and to conflate obsession with fate. My father published three novels by my second birthday, but The Lost Get Back Boogie, which was supposed to be his fourth, was rejected more than 100 times over nine years. And, at least as he describes it, the book wasn’t merely rejected. It was trashed. Literally. Mutilated pages would be returned in the mail, marred by whisky rings, cigarette burns, and ballpoint-pen-inflicted stab holes.

But although jobs and habits can be quit, an obsession cannot. My father became convinced he might never see his name on another hardback again, but he continued to write, and he did so without question. When a rejection came in the mail, he gave himself a 36-hour window to get the manuscript back on its way to another editor.

That ten-year period when James Lee Burke was out of print is now legendary inspiration for a new generation of writers, but I witnessed it firsthand. Against all reason, in a house packed with children, he constructed a desk with cinder block legs and a door for a top. After work, he wrote every single day at a manual Royal typewriter. On weekends, my mother would take us to the library and the mall, no-cost time suckers that bought my father some quiet time at home. The rejections kept coming, and new work continued to be produced.

His agent at William Morris was long gone, but he’d found a loyal, hardworking, and similarly unfazed advocate in agent Philip Spitzer, who finally had some good news. The Lost Get Back Boogie was still collecting rejections, but a newer manuscript, Two for Texas, would be published as a paperback original in 1982. My father kept writing. Three years later, LSU Press published a collection of his short stories entitled The Convict. He kept writing. A year later, the seemingly impossible happened: thanks again to LSU Press, The Lost Get Back Boogie wiped off the cigarette ash and whisky stains and became his fifth novel. We were still broke, but my father was in hardback again. And, of course, he kept writing. Then in 1984, on a vacation in Montana, family friend Rick DeMarinis suggested that he write a crime novel. In 1987, with the publication of The Neon Rain, readers finally met Vietnam Vet and recovering alcoholic Dave Robicheaux.

“You write it a day at a time and let God be the measure of its worth,” my father wrote for the New York Times’ Writers on Writing series. “You let the score take care of itself; and most important, you never lose faith in your vision… A real writer is driven both by obsession and a secret vanity, namely that he has a perfect vision of the truth, in the same way that the camera lens can close perfectly on a piece of the external world. If the writer does not convey that vision to someone else, his talent turns to a self-consuming bitterness.”

Readers who have read even a few James Lee Burke stories will recognize his vision on the page. It is a vision of honorable but flawed men challenged by an arbitrary and sometimes cruel fate. It is a vision of a specific but somehow transcendent era and region, a dying way of life in the south that tells a broader story about a decent but imperfect country savaged by mega-corporations, polluters, and a callous government. His vision was clear even in his debut novel, whose themes provoked a comparison from the Times to the works of Hemingway, Sartre, and Camus, where “man is doomed by no fatal flaw of character but by the simple fact of being born.”

And perhaps no stories tapped into his vision more aggressively than those that emerged from Katrina and its aftermath. When levees failed and the images of dark faces pleading for help on rooftops became salient reminders of an inept and indifferent political administration and broken government, many of us might have paused before allowing those stories to penetrate our fiction. But my father, not stopping to worry about the hate mail that would follow, embraced the role of narrative documentarian. “New Orleans was a poem, man,” a character recalls in his story, Jesus Out to Sea, “a song in your heart that never died. I only got one regret. Nobody ever bothered to explain why nobody ever came for us.” Tin Roof Blowdown was not just the next book in the Robicheaux series, but a tribute to a beautiful and forsaken city, “killed three times, and not just by the forces of nature.”

The content and tone of my father’s post-Katrina work are unsurprising given his view of the writing process. He believes that his talent was not earned but was given to him for a specific purpose. He believes that the characters about whom he writes are not created by him, but live within the unconscious, waiting for their discovery. He does not outline and rarely sees beyond the next two scenes as he writes. He wrote about post-Katrina Louisiana because he was meant to.

In this particular case, succumbing to destiny appears to have worked out. Although nowhere near the end of his career, my father already enjoys a long list of successes: a Breadloaf Fellowship (1970), a Southern Federation of State Arts Agencies grant (1977), a Guggenheim Fellowship (1989), two Edgar awards (1989 and 1997), and, tonight, a well-deserved Grand Master Award that I’m lucky enough to be a small part of. Dave Robicheaux has twice been brought to film, and Two for Texas, the book that relaunched his writing career, was produced for television by TNT. He enjoys a few simple indulgences: his homes in Montana and Louisiana, his horses Missy and Santa Fe, and a sword once wielded in the Civil War by my great, great grandfather, Lieutenant Robert S. Perry of the 8th Louisiana infantry of the Confederate Army.

But commercial success was not inevitable. Without a dogged agent, without LSU Press, without a friend who suggested, What about crime fiction?, without a working wife who also got those batty kids out of the house on the weekends, it might have all been different. We may not have been blown away by the poetry of twenty-seven James Lee Burke novels, losing ourselves in green-gold hazes over the bayou or in the shadows of cottonwoods lining the Bitterroot, or have befriended Dave Robicheaux, Clete Purcell, and Billy Bob Holland. But my father would still be writing.

Dad, none of it has gone unnoticed. Congratulations.


Alafair Burke || Author of Angel’s Tip.

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still here

2009 02 25 002

ok… so one post or two in a few months does not a blog make… i know, i know.

just sticking my head in here to say, no i have not wandered off to Ireland or Scotland (oh HOW i wish) but am in the midst of a major cleansing/decluttering/clearing out phase – something that has been on the back burner for a few years and for some reason – in the middle of Feb it moved to the forefront… so lots of throwing out, clearing out, reorganizing going on.

blogging will resume … soon. 

2009 02 12 004

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refuges

There are two means of refuge from the miseries of life:
music and cats.

Albert Schweitzer

Life has been a bit stressful lately – domestic problems (as in housing).  It’s been a rough beginning to this year.  January was all about helping family members including a move into what turned out to be an illegal apartment necessitating putting all belongings in storage.  And there were other things – no heat for the entire MLK weekend and then again the first week of this month.  This month has been all about stress over domestic stuff. 

One side effect of all the stress has been a HUGE bout of spring cleaning – as in take everything off the pantry shelves and throw out bags and bags of expired or old food and line the shelves and wash and put back everything and clean/dust/polish everything on all the kitchen shelves and all the pictures and windows and mirrors and lamps and bookshelves and all furniture and the floors and wash all the bed linens (duvets, blankets, pillows) etc.

And back to the piano – after 13 months of not playing – and have been playing 4–5 hours a day since the beginning of the month.  It was rough going at the beginning as my eyes and ears were way ahead of my fingers.   But four weeks on, the chops are coming back….and now thought is going to execution much more easily.  

And also now after a bit of a hiatus am full of knitting startitis…. too many things are calling to be started or finished.  so off i go to work on one of them.

As for the cats, well, how to imagine life without them?

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12-25-08


  Ladies' View, Ring of Kerry, Ireland June 2008

Once in royal Davids city,
Stood a lowly cattle shed,
Where a mother laid her Baby,
In a manger for His bed:
Mary was that mother mild,
Jesus Christ, her little Child.

He came down to earth from heaven,
Who is God and Lord of all,
And His shelter was a stable,
And His cradle was a stall:
With the poor, and mean, and lowly,
Lived on earth our Saviour holy.

For He is our childhood's pattern;
Day by day, like us, He grew;
He was little, weak, and helpless,
Tears and smiles, like us He knew;
And He cares when we are sad,
And he shares when we are glad.

And our eyes at last shall see Him,
Through His own redeeming love;
For that Child so dear and gentle,
Is our Lord in heaven above:
And He leads His children on,
To the place where He is gone.

Merry Christmas!

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Happy Birthday Bogie


As with so many Hollywood legends, there are a lot of dubious stories about Humphrey Bogart. The New York Times reported three years ago that he was actually born on January 23, 1899, rather than Christmas Day as Warner Brothers publicity had it. One widely held belief places him as the original model for the Gerber Baby Food infant (his mother, a successful magazine illustrator, actually drew for a far lesser-known company). Many sources credit his trademark scarred, partially paralyzed lip and resulting lisp on a World War I combat mission aboard the vessel “Leviathan,” although it’s just as likely to have come from being busted in the mouth by a shackled Navy prisoner he was escorting or simply from a large wood splinter at the age of 12. A current furniture company ad even identifies him erroneously with the art deco style of the 30s, when in fact he didn’t reach major stardom until the 40s in films that generally placed him in the shadowy world of urban streets and dingy offices.

Happy Birthday Bogie on TCM 12–25–08

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