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Tuesday, April 15, 2008

Can I tell you about the joy of making stuff grow?
A little viola patch for B, planted around some newish clematis:

Some lady fern fronds:

A red begonia in my lonely hanging basket:

Some bleeding heart buds:

The first flowering vinca vine:

Mini-hyacinth village:


Gah! More reading stuff once I wash the dirt from my hands.

Wednesday, April 09, 2008

The long lost Prog Lady is back on the scene with a new radio program called No Pussyfooting out of East Village radio. As she says:

"It's mostly prog rock. Tune in if you're
interested! If you like the show, it'd be great if you could subscribe
to my podcast. To do so, you'll probably have to set up an account on
the station website (it's no big deal) then click on the podcast
button on my page. It'll give you a code for you to copy. If you use
itunes, go to "Advanced" then "subscribe to podcast" and just paste in
the code. OR you can just stream the show by clicking on "listen to
the most recent show." I hope that this makes sense. Please let your
friends know too!"

Go to it and let my favorite lady make your ears happy.

Tuesday, April 08, 2008

In the middle

I am in the middle of at least 3 books right now and nothing is really holding my attention. Maybe I have reader's fatigue. Doing best is A Tramp Abroad by Mark Twain, but it is so episodic that I can't quite get sucked in. I am, however, enjoying the many 100-year-old ethnic jokes buried within. I'd write one out for you except that each is almost an entire chapter long and no less enjoyable for it.

I found this book in a stash of my old library (now scattered across the quad-state area) at my parents' house after living through the horror of forgetting a book for my trip. Luckily, among the King and Kingston there were a few books I never got around to. From the orange dot on the front page and the general good condition, I believe this copy was from a PPL sale maybe eight or nine years ago. Besides the desire to reorganize all those books next time I return to the Rox, I am left with one question: Why did I rebuy all that Evelyn Waugh?

The library is beckoning. I paid the $40 fine and now I am ready to search and click my way to a ridculous list of choices. Any suggestions? Nothing over 40 years old please. In fact, how about nothing over 5 years old.

Edited to Add: Extra points if I can get it from the library.

Monday, April 07, 2008

Let's pretend it is nice out...

The only daffodil that bloomed, much to B's disappointment:


The first little sprig of cat mint, which does indeed attract cats, but none that can't be scared away (yet):


Some pretty primroses from the Greenmarket. I became obsessed with these while in London. They are everywhere there in the early Spring:


Some clematis bravely trying to scale first the stick and then the chain link in order to get to the delicious, delicious sun:



And watching over it all (including my neighbor's mess) is the freecycled owl lantern:



Who wants to have a garden party?

Tuesday, April 01, 2008

Dear Brother Man,

A few days ago you would have turned 24, but I think you may have liked April Fool’s better. Also, since I was hanging at our parents’ house on your actual birthday there was no way I would have been able to compose a letter to you and keep my own sanity. Posting it here would have been impossible as well with the dial-up and all. They still keep the computer you built downstairs, even though the insides have been redone a few times and the monitor is the one you brought back from college. Everything went out of date so fast and you aren’t here to keep us current; I hate having part of my heart stuck in the heat of that August night forever.

I still feel part of myself pulling away to find that piece, always searching for you. It feels like my rib cage is cracked, hanging open and my guts are straining to get out and smack you in the face. All that love has turned into something heavy and black. That makes me so tired.

Still angry,
Your sister

Thursday, March 27, 2008

Loom. The word of the month for March, so poetically defined by Noah Webster (the link leads to a great site for browsing on a gloomy day). I have been running all around on days off, scheduled and otherwise, hopping trains and spending money. Actually, when I put it that way, it sounds kind of fun!

Here are some things that are worth your time:

A tale of "old man" friendship gone bad. As they almost always do. The thing about hanging out with people 10 years+ your senior when you are an awesome teen gal is that you will grow up and the man-boys won't, and they will hate you for it. Also, see the comment from the "teacher," who proves him or herself to be the last person I would ever want to talk to my child about anything.

Mimi Smartypants makes me laugh so so much.

Mary Millwhistle has a new project called NoPOTUS. From the release:"The frenzied scrutiny of the 2008 presidential contenders proves that past mistakes can, and will, come back to haunt those who run for office. NoPOTUS.com exposes the transgressions, missteps, and ill-advised associations of America's children... proving that they, too, will never grow up to be president." What she needs from you is pictures of kids under 10 to be used in hilarious, but anonymous, ways. Email her at millwhistle AT gmail.com.

Thursday, March 20, 2008

Bottles and cans and paper and plastic and and and

Spending the morning thinking about the trash that comes from your house. Have I mentioned lately how much I love last night's garbage?

Thursday, March 13, 2008

I just spent a whole dollar on a candy bar. It hit the bottom of the machine with a depressing thump before i fished it out, scraping my knuckles on the plastic theft guard. I certainly like it alot better in the old days when vending machines were more of a crapshoot; sometimes you'd get nothing at all for your 50 cents and have to wildly pound on the window and curse, and sometimes you'd get two treats instead of one and slip the extra into the emergency drawer.

Here are some other things I like:
This essay about books about sex by Elizabeth Bachner made me both think about stuff and also alerted me to the new Mary Roach book.

Muffy Bolding's blog. It makes me less scared.

These storybook illustrations from the days of yore make me think of quilts. Why? I don't know, but I like it. (via journalista)

Fancy Nancy has a new episode, finally. (Though I can't figure out when she airs anymore.)

That Amy Ambulette's book finally has a cover and it's not ugly.

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Last fall I went bulb-crazy, hoping for a beautiful spring display out in the old out back. Here are the beginnings of justification:

Winter-blooming hellebores. Now it seems dumb that I only got one plant.


My favorite color of crocus, but where are the purple and white ones? WHERE?


The tulips and daffodils making their presence known. I don't get a lot of sun in my garden so these are always a little retarded. My impatience for heat grows every time I see another little shoot of green (or reddish brown) push through the ground.

More books later.

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

leftovers from 2007 I

I have returned from England with a rash-covered face and a spring in my step. I n an effort to bring the blog up to this fresh feeling 2008ness here the rest of the short story collection reviews from 2007.

Top Top Stories edited by Anne Turyn
I picked up Top Top Stories at Ejay’s Books in Pittsburgh. It was in the Beat section for some reason, perhaps because it was published by City Lights in 1991. From the book jacket, I learned that Top Stories was an experimental fiction journal published by Turyn in the 80s and 90s. In this collection there are a bunch of [my] household names: Jenny Holzer, Kathy Acker, Lynne Tillman, Cookie Mueller and more. Mueller’s piece which features a few short stories to begin to tell how to get rid of pimples (”How To Get Rid of Pimples” [excerpt]) really opened her up to me. I loved the stories, with their quiet wonderful rhythms: “In a suburban house with white shingles and black shutters, Ioona, a woman of forty lived with her mother, a woman of sixty-four.” This sentence maybe isn’t the most enticing, but imagine wave after wave of listing tweaked facts and “circumstances of cures [for acne]” leading up to the regime, a list of actions that now seem mustily extreme in the days of Proactiv. It practically rocked me into a contented stupor, feel-good but not feel-dumb. I now get a feeling of what was so beguiling about her to John Waters and Nan Goldin and everyone else.

The stories also include a few entries that mix text and illustration. Lynne Tillman & Jane Dickson’s piece, “Living With Contradictions,” is a surprisingly affecting story that seems to ask what is settling in romantic love? Dickson’s wet and heavy illustrations take up most of the page and Tillman tells the story in short bursts of a few sentences and it is perfect.

This book has made me curious about finding other work by these authors and learning more about Turyn, which was, perhaps, exactly what it was going for.

The Best of Lady Churchill’s Rosebud Wristlet
edited by Kelly Link and Gavin J. Grant
Sigh. As much as I hate to say it, this was a disappointing affair. Even with over thirty poems and stories, the reader doesn’t really get a sense of the weird wonderfulness that Link and Grant wreak by doing what they do, which is cultivating (and publishing) a group of writers with voices that creep into your brain and tug at the loose stuff, scaring and awing you in the process.

The upside is that it reminded me to check out their catalog and make a list to check twice. You should do the same.

Mountains of Madness and other stories
by H.P. Lovecraft
The title story was of the utmost creepiness and beauty. Details, details made it perfect and it turns out, the penguins are real. Tantalizing enough for you? The other stories were not as good, though I did enjoy the one that used an elbow as an element of revolting horror.

Wednesday, March 05, 2008

Tea Time

I am in London now and somehow unable to get a good chunk of reading time in, what with the tubes and the migraines and the televisions shows where they read from newspapers.

However, Moonlight Ambulette's copy of Lolly Willows beckons, beckons and drops sweet, heavy lines into my brain. The time I spent reading Alison Lurie's intro was time wasted though. Women used to be confined and pushed about by societal expectations? NO WAyZ!!!11111!! New York Review of Books could have done better.

Missing you all.

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

One way to fight black thoughts and bad days is to use whatever you have extra of (time, money, art supplies, love) to help someone who is at risk have a chance to do something great.

"Helping Books Find Libraries Since 2003"
I have been remiss in not posting about the Dewey Donation System earlier; it is a project of pamie and friends that send books and sometimes money to libraries in need. Often it is a surprise to the librarians when they start recieving the packages. Nice, huh? You have to use Amazon for the book donations which is a drag, but you will get over it.

***


Another site I like to peruse when I am feeling help-y is Donors Choose, which helps teachers get much-needed supplies for their students. Some projects in Philadelphia that intrigued me:
- Kids in Germantown need owl barf for science!
- Some reluctant readers need those comics!
- Second graders in Wissinoming want to snap photos for a neighborhood history project!

Of course, there are many proposals for basic school supplies and textbooks as well.

If you decide to sponsor a project or donate something, please let us know!

Thinking of the children,
Carrie Tryharder

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Good to know

1) Fecal accidents in swimming pools: no big deal
2) Ghost trains are most likely friendly.

Sorry for the nonbook coverage. Look for the rest of 2007 the next couple of days and perhaps some of 2008!

Friday, February 15, 2008

Happy Late Valentine's Day


I love love, but February 14 is always kind of lame. Today I saw so many ladies toting home shopping bags of various hues filled with wilting flowers.
Also, a crazy man walked by me and said "rich bitch," which is half uninformed. He may have said "bitch bitch," which seems a little like overkill, don't you think?

Wednesday, February 13, 2008


Enjoying these. I hope the story turns out to be as good as the art. Mice on a mission! But why does it bug me that its not hand-lettered? Thanks indie spinner rack.

Part of a comic buying spree that I don't even want to cop to right now...

Sunday, February 10, 2008

also it snowed

Last 4 comics of 2007


Tell Me Something by Jason
I got this as part of a group of books, many of which were discards from a public library in Las Vegas. Tell Me something is another of Jason’s temporally twisted love stories in black and white, peopled by his usual bird and dog-people. It is cute, requires a few reads to follow all of the way through and uses few words to tell the story. This copy fell in the Bad Place behind the toilet and rested there for a few clicks before my intrepid life partner fished it out. Luckily the nice plastic coated library binding kept the pages dry and free from hair monsters.




The Fart Party
by Julia Wertz
After finding Wertz’s site and enjoying her daily journal comics, I looked forward to getting the hard copy of her collection, lured by the promise of new material and happy to support Atomic Books’ publishing company. I bought it from her in person at SPX while most of her attention was taken by a kiddy sketchbooker trying to get her to draw a piece. Overall, I was underwhelmed by the book, having read most of it before on her site, but I really liked the way it was printed and the paper and all.




Warburger
by various artists
This fat collection of war themed comics is put out by Forum Ljubljana and features contributions from cartoonists from all over the world. I really enjoyed the introduction by Alexsandar Zograf (and still somehow haven’t picked up his newest collection). Many of the strips place their focus on the US’s actions post-9/11, which makes sense as Warburger was published in 2003, the year the US invaded Iraq (again). There were a few standouts in the collection, including work by Fabian Goranson, Rocco Lombardi, Capucine Latrasse, Michal Baruch and Primaz Krasna. Though the art was very different from piece to piece, the black and white pages ran together for me. The pieces that stuck out were the ones that tackled the cyclical nature of war, how subliminal training for war is universal and how ignoring war is surprisingly easy. The ones that fell flat invoked images of Hitler and made easy linkages between sex, consumerism and war. War is a universal topic, but that doesn't mean you get to be lazy when talking about it.




Real Stuff
by Dennis Eichorn and A Host of Artists
I learn history best when I am able to work out connections between people and events on my own over a long period of time. I am talking years here, folks. Such has been my education in comics so far. One way I do this is to buy collections that look forgotten but have work by artists I am interested in. Real Stuff was one of these, a collection of Eichorn (apparently quite an autbio cartoonist and crazy man) stories illustrated by other artists, including pieces by Renee French, Mary Fleener, Ariel Bordeaux, Jason Lutes, Carol Swain and many others you probably care more about, originally published by Fantagraphics in single issues. Each story at least one of these elements: troublesome women, binge drinking, sex, drugs and fighting, and most consist of some combination of them in color and B&W. I liked seeing how each artist dealt with the similar material in their own way. I also believe that Eichorn must be fun to know, just not all that personally. Definitely worth a purchase if you can find it.


5 more to finish up 2007!

Tuesday, February 05, 2008

Skinny Dipping in the Lake of the Dead by Alan De Niro

After buying this at the Brooklyn Book Fest oh so many months ago I listened to the Bat Segundo podcast with Alan De Niro and fell a little bit in love. After reading Skinny Dipping a few times, it’s official. Though short story collections always seem to disappoint me because I read them too fast and complain that all the stories are the same, that didn’t stop me from doing exactly that with this book. Luckily, this collection is many-sided and holds together perfectly- the book heaves and sighs with few dull patches and each story is great individually. Like another Small Beer Press short story collection (you know which one I am talking about), it does perfectly what it should do, showcasing the writer’s talents and themes without boring me to death.

The book opens with a story that was hard for me to like at first, “Our Byzantium,” but after a few readings this story of an almost-relationship really delivered. All of the emotional dynamics of almost-sex and almost-friendship are captured in the midst of a violent invasion of a college town by soldiers from the past. Somehow both elements fit perfectly and show how even an almost-relationship can sometimes wreak a more devastating change than one with a beginning and an end and also how friendly acquaintances can turn into personal saviors.

The title story had a George Saunders-ish feel that I enjoyed but didn’t hit me quite as hard as some of the others. It also includes footnotes.

“The Caliber” tackles high school and groping government fingers. After Shelby’s millionaire hating, cultist uncle is moved up on the FBI’s most wanted list, a black suited agent appears in her life. I love how De Niro introduces the feeling that Shelby wouldn’t have been socially successful even without this shadow and that her former invisibility needled her without playing on well-worn high school stereotypes. No angst here, just the real deal. “The fall stumbled on. An extra layer of coolness and distance fell on her. I am a disaffected character she wrote on the second stall in the ladies room, right below the toilet paper dispenser. Two weeks later, her words had been scratched out with Who has a big dick? Who has a big dick?” Exactly.

My favorite story is “Salting the Map” because it feels like it was written especially for me. Office jobs and imaginary lands fight for space in the narrative and I love the absurd crush of the words. “ABTACAS, population 4122. He wet his fingers on his tongue and found the listing for ARGH. Population 310, 210 he scribbled. He decided that ARGH needed a lot of inhabitants.” Is there magic in the supply closet or under the desk of the last cubicle down the hall? I fucking hope so.

This was one of the top three books I read in 2007. Every story had some element, subtly woven into the plot, with no loose thread showing, that obviously required a world of imagining- the newspaper code in “Child Assassin,” the bird merchant’s shop in “Cuttlefish.” War and nationhood as ideas get a lot of play here too, two topics I shy away from. De Niro got me thinking about both and it didn’t even hurt a little.

Buy Skinning Dipping in the Lake of the Dead now.

Saturday, February 02, 2008



five years.


oh my!

French Milk by Lucy Knisley

My favorite part of cons like SPX is the availability of single issues, access to artists and the cool art, prints and doo das that artists bring along. I got a few examples of the aforementioned and, AND, two books, French Milk and The Fart Party by Julia Wertz (to be reviewed later, hopefully sooner than). I was excited for both and disappointed that Lucy was too sick to come to the fest, mostly because I wanted to tell her about my love for the painting I bought from her at MOCCA.

***


The cover of this book grabbed me right away. A drawn-in Knisley, hanging out the window of a stereotypical Paris apartment, interrupts the dull palette of a rainy-day snapshot. It seemed the perfect image to introduce a book about a young gal in the city of light (and smoke).

Ostensibly, this is a book about Knisley and her mother’s month-long trip to Paris, where they rent an apartment and sort out their emotions about growing older in between eating, sightseeing and meeting up with friends. This is how Knisley says it in her handwritten intro:
“During January of 2007, my mother and I lived in a small rental apartment in Paris, in order to celebrate my mother’s turning fifty (and my turning twenty-two). The following is the drawn journal which I kept in the course of the trip. The title is in reference, in part, to my love for the fresh, whole milk which I found so different from American processed dairy. It also deals with the valuable and significant influence that we take in from out mothers, as well as my own struggling towards adulthood, at an age when we so desperately cling to our adolescence. With thanks to my mother, for holding the map.”

I was hoping FM would do for mother-daughter relationships what Epileptic did for sibling relationships, that is, expose the shadowy web that binds us to our loved ones in a way that is very hard to describe in mere words. Instead FM was frustratingly superficial and there is nary an indication that Knisley is really thinking about her mother very much during the trip.

The pages are filled with beautiful sketches of meals, the spoils of numerous shopping trips, people and art hat she meets and a few overexposed photos. I loved the art and the paging kept turning for sure, but by the middle I realized that the lists of things bought, things eaten, doubts and friends missed was all there was going to be. I feel like all the mother-daughter stuff was a sales pitch that didn’t pan out. As it ended up, these journal comics are too journally to tell a cohesive story and at the same, spend too many pages giving back-story on things she obviously knows herself, detracting from the energy daily journal comics can sometimes have. For example, early in the book, before the trip to Paris, Knisley meets up with an old “lover” (!giggle! it is hilarious to hear someone under forty use that term seriously) in the East Village named Zan. “Zan and I met in high-school [sic], fell madly in love, fell madly in art, and his presence is associated with all my good adolescence [sic] memories.” This dude, who Knisley seems super excited to tell us was born a girl, gets six pages and we don’t really learn much about him or Lucy. The vague details of their visit and a page of his drawing may have been meaningful for Knisley to have, but as a reader, I don’t care and it comes across as Knisley pimping out her friend’s life to add a little zazz to the section.

I’m sure that given some time to reflect on the trip, Knisley would have been able to use this journal as a source to tell the story she was aiming for and still have it be a document of the beginning of her twenty-second year. I do wonder why no one advised her to do that…

Apparently there will be a revised version of the book out this summer with 30+ new pages. I am definitely going to check it out and I hope the changes are improvements on a not-so-good story from an obviously amazing talent.

PS- her livejournal is here and totally the greatest thing.