From another blog to which I contribute:
Texas Profs
Anti-Intellectualism in American Life, by Richard Hofstadter
Red Scare!: Right-Wing Hysteria Fifties Fanaticism and Their Legacy in Texas, by Don E. Carleton
Thursday, May 13, 2010
Wednesday, May 12, 2010
Larkin on May
I was poking around for a poem by Philip Larkin about spring, and I found this one a site called sundeepdougal:
The Trees
by Philip Larkin
The trees are coming into leaf
Like something almost being said;
The recent buds relax and spread,
Their greenness is a kind of grief.
Is it that they are born again
And we grow old ? No, they die too.
Their yearly trick of looking new
Is written down in rings of grain.
Yet still the unresting castles thresh
In fullgrown thickness every May.
Last year is dead, they seem to say,
Begin afresh, afresh, afresh.
Copyright Estate of Philip Larkin
Wow, much to like in this poem, including the terrific fourth line, "Their green is a kind of grief," and the image, "the unresting castles thresh/In fullgrown thickness . . ."
Philip Larkin: Collected Poems
The Trees
by Philip Larkin
The trees are coming into leaf
Like something almost being said;
The recent buds relax and spread,
Their greenness is a kind of grief.
Is it that they are born again
And we grow old ? No, they die too.
Their yearly trick of looking new
Is written down in rings of grain.
Yet still the unresting castles thresh
In fullgrown thickness every May.
Last year is dead, they seem to say,
Begin afresh, afresh, afresh.
Copyright Estate of Philip Larkin
Wow, much to like in this poem, including the terrific fourth line, "Their green is a kind of grief," and the image, "the unresting castles thresh/In fullgrown thickness . . ."
Philip Larkin: Collected Poems
Monday, May 10, 2010
Poet Publishes Novel
Hey, I published a novel. It's called Honoring Juanita, and it's a contemporary novel set in the High Sierra, where I grew up, so to that extent I wrote about what I ostensibly know. It does have an historical subplot based on the notorious lynching of a woman named Juanita during the Gold Rush.
Anyway, here's a link, but not a sales-pitch, mind you (you have more important things to spend $ on), although if you were to mention the book to your local librarian, I wouldn't mount a huge protest:
Honoring Juanita
The brief official recap of the novel is . . ."The global scramble for energy has made a river in California's High Sierra ripe for damming. Mary Bluestone, woodcarver and longtime resident of a remote mountain town, impulsively puts herself between the river and the dam, becoming a protester in spite of herself. Mary's husband, the county sheriff, must arrest her. A flood of unintended consequences ensues as the 21st century invades a pristine canyon. Meanwhile, Mary Bluestone is haunted by the legend of Juanita, a woman lynched during the Gold Rush Era. Honoring Juanita is a tale of entangled histories and divided loyalties, of greed, power, memory, and love."
This is the second novel I've published and, if memory serves, the 6th I've written.
With all genres, writers learn to write in them by writing in them, but I think with poetry, short fiction, and occasional essays (or creative nonfiction), I think it's easier to find ways to learn things efficiently, through reading about the genre, taking classes, etc. Of course, one may read a lot of novels, and one should do so, but for me, at least, it's harder to extract the structure and method of a novel from a novel than to extract same from a poem.
Probably this means what I already know: I'm a poet first, an essayist second, a short-fiction writer third, and a novelist fourth. Writing novels doesn't come easily to me. All the more reason why I've had fun making lots of mistakes writing them. I now know many things NOT to do when writing a novel.
I teach both the writing of (short) fiction and of poetry, and occasionally I'll run into a student is is more or less a "pure" poet, and she or he and I usually end up commiserating about just how many words it takes to finish a story, let alone a novel. And with novels, you have to manage people, move them around, remember their birthdays, know something about their extended families. I tell you, it's exhausting work! But pure novelists like Tolstoy, Dickens, Faulkner, and Morrison didn't/don't feel that way, I suspect.
Three of my favorite poets--Randall Jarrell, Karl Shapiro, and Richard Hugo--published exactly one novel each. I think I know why. It's because they were, well, you know, poets. Read Faulkner's or Hemingway's poetry, and you'll see how this genre-preference thing works in the other direction.
The biggest thrill out of publishing this novel was that I got to dedicate it to my two brothers, Ike and Sven.
Anyway, here's a link, but not a sales-pitch, mind you (you have more important things to spend $ on), although if you were to mention the book to your local librarian, I wouldn't mount a huge protest:
Honoring Juanita
The brief official recap of the novel is . . ."The global scramble for energy has made a river in California's High Sierra ripe for damming. Mary Bluestone, woodcarver and longtime resident of a remote mountain town, impulsively puts herself between the river and the dam, becoming a protester in spite of herself. Mary's husband, the county sheriff, must arrest her. A flood of unintended consequences ensues as the 21st century invades a pristine canyon. Meanwhile, Mary Bluestone is haunted by the legend of Juanita, a woman lynched during the Gold Rush Era. Honoring Juanita is a tale of entangled histories and divided loyalties, of greed, power, memory, and love."
This is the second novel I've published and, if memory serves, the 6th I've written.
With all genres, writers learn to write in them by writing in them, but I think with poetry, short fiction, and occasional essays (or creative nonfiction), I think it's easier to find ways to learn things efficiently, through reading about the genre, taking classes, etc. Of course, one may read a lot of novels, and one should do so, but for me, at least, it's harder to extract the structure and method of a novel from a novel than to extract same from a poem.
Probably this means what I already know: I'm a poet first, an essayist second, a short-fiction writer third, and a novelist fourth. Writing novels doesn't come easily to me. All the more reason why I've had fun making lots of mistakes writing them. I now know many things NOT to do when writing a novel.
I teach both the writing of (short) fiction and of poetry, and occasionally I'll run into a student is is more or less a "pure" poet, and she or he and I usually end up commiserating about just how many words it takes to finish a story, let alone a novel. And with novels, you have to manage people, move them around, remember their birthdays, know something about their extended families. I tell you, it's exhausting work! But pure novelists like Tolstoy, Dickens, Faulkner, and Morrison didn't/don't feel that way, I suspect.
Three of my favorite poets--Randall Jarrell, Karl Shapiro, and Richard Hugo--published exactly one novel each. I think I know why. It's because they were, well, you know, poets. Read Faulkner's or Hemingway's poetry, and you'll see how this genre-preference thing works in the other direction.
The biggest thrill out of publishing this novel was that I got to dedicate it to my two brothers, Ike and Sven.
Anne Spencer, Poet and Gardener
Here's a link to a terrific recent article on Harlem Renaissance poet Anne Spencer, who was born in New Jersey but spent most of her life in Lynchburg, Virginia, where she tended a garden, which is the focus of the article.
Half My World, the Garden of Anne Spencer, a History and Guide
Half My World, the Garden of Anne Spencer, a History and Guide
Thursday, May 6, 2010
Garden-Gadget Additions
I'm a happy gardener today because I got a rain-barrel installed and two compost-barrels delivered.
The rain-barrel has an automatic overflow, a faucet at the bottom, and a screen up top. The compost barrels are great because you just bury the bottom of them in dirt and worms come in; also, they have lids with screw-down seals, so there's no trouble with raccoons, possums, or rodents.
So now I can water the garden using the rain-barrel--after it rains. Today, of course, it is sunny.
Dan Borba, the fellow I got the materials from, has been in the harvesting-of-rain business since 1999 (in Tacoma). Here's a link:
harvesting rain
The rain-barrel has an automatic overflow, a faucet at the bottom, and a screen up top. The compost barrels are great because you just bury the bottom of them in dirt and worms come in; also, they have lids with screw-down seals, so there's no trouble with raccoons, possums, or rodents.
So now I can water the garden using the rain-barrel--after it rains. Today, of course, it is sunny.
Dan Borba, the fellow I got the materials from, has been in the harvesting-of-rain business since 1999 (in Tacoma). Here's a link:
harvesting rain
Wednesday, May 5, 2010
Seattle Signs
In Seattle yesterday I was amused and/or perplexed by several commercial signs.
One read, "Organic To Go." This one intrigued me because an adjective is offered as something one may take "to go," but where is the noun? Organic what? Maybe it's just the concept, "Organic." "What size would you like on that concept, sir?" "Uh, make that a medium."
Another sign read, "Coming Soon: Sullivan's Steakhouse." I felt like responding, "Is this really necessary?" I have nothing against steakhouses or Sullivan's Steakhouse (which I do not know), but there just seem to be so many steakhouses. Also, I was wondering about the word, "steakhouse." We don't really have fish-houses or salad-houses. A chickenhouse would make us think of a coop, probably. But steaks are served in a house. "Coming soon: Ed's Steak-Garage."
Let's see--and then there was "Floral Masters," which sounds like an academic degree. Or like a strange combination of flowers and martial arts. Or maybe it brings to mind people who have mastery over flowers--bossing them around. "Yo, rose, a little brighter on the color, dude!"
Then in Starbucks there was a written-in-chalk sign for cups of coffee made individually, and one of them was "New Guinea Peaberry"--for $3.85 a cup. Wow. And is the beverage made from roasted coffee berries (beans) or from peaberries, in which case one would be drinking a cup of pea, which is not appealing. But--$3.85? For one cup? I mean--really?
One read, "Organic To Go." This one intrigued me because an adjective is offered as something one may take "to go," but where is the noun? Organic what? Maybe it's just the concept, "Organic." "What size would you like on that concept, sir?" "Uh, make that a medium."
Another sign read, "Coming Soon: Sullivan's Steakhouse." I felt like responding, "Is this really necessary?" I have nothing against steakhouses or Sullivan's Steakhouse (which I do not know), but there just seem to be so many steakhouses. Also, I was wondering about the word, "steakhouse." We don't really have fish-houses or salad-houses. A chickenhouse would make us think of a coop, probably. But steaks are served in a house. "Coming soon: Ed's Steak-Garage."
Let's see--and then there was "Floral Masters," which sounds like an academic degree. Or like a strange combination of flowers and martial arts. Or maybe it brings to mind people who have mastery over flowers--bossing them around. "Yo, rose, a little brighter on the color, dude!"
Then in Starbucks there was a written-in-chalk sign for cups of coffee made individually, and one of them was "New Guinea Peaberry"--for $3.85 a cup. Wow. And is the beverage made from roasted coffee berries (beans) or from peaberries, in which case one would be drinking a cup of pea, which is not appealing. But--$3.85? For one cup? I mean--really?
Monday, May 3, 2010
Housman: Politically Conservative
On another blog, I just posted something about A.E. Housman's being politically conservative, and I quote a humorous paragraph from an article on Housman:
Housman/conservative
And apparently Housman's Tories will be back in power soon in England, at least according to an article I read in the Economist this weekend.
Housman/conservative
And apparently Housman's Tories will be back in power soon in England, at least according to an article I read in the Economist this weekend.
Nikki Giovanni to Donate Copyrights to Virginia Tech
Thanks to fellow blogger and poet, Poefrika, I've learned that writer and professor Nikki Giovanni will bequeath copyrights to her work to Virginia Tech University, where she teaches. Here's a link:
Poefrika/Giovanni
Bicycles: Love Poems, by Nikki Giovanni
Poefrika/Giovanni
Bicycles: Love Poems, by Nikki Giovanni
A Fine Poem About Auden
Below is a link to a fine poem about W.H. Auden, one of my favorite poets; it was written by Australian poet Peter Nicholson, who also posts on the blog 3 Quarks Daily.
on Auden
on Auden
Sunday, May 2, 2010
This Thin Mist
*
*
*
*
*
*
This Thin Mist
This thin mist, less than rain,
more than fog, enchants evening.
It turns trees into impressioned,
faded, murky shapes. It blesses
gardens, grasses, weeds, and trees.
Makes streets and metal glisten.
This thin mist is weather whispering
in between storms. It's just water,
sure, but it feels like reconciliation.
Copyright 2010 Hans Ostrom
*
*
*
*
*
This Thin Mist
This thin mist, less than rain,
more than fog, enchants evening.
It turns trees into impressioned,
faded, murky shapes. It blesses
gardens, grasses, weeds, and trees.
Makes streets and metal glisten.
This thin mist is weather whispering
in between storms. It's just water,
sure, but it feels like reconciliation.
Copyright 2010 Hans Ostrom
Saturday, May 1, 2010
New Johnny Cash Video
A correspondent from California alerted me to the new Johnny Cash video (produced by Rick Rubin and John Carter Cash), based on one of Cash's last recordings, "Ain't No Grave Can Hold Me."
Cash Video
The Man Comes Around: The Spiritual Journey of Johnny Cash
Cash Video
The Man Comes Around: The Spiritual Journey of Johnny Cash
Wednesday, April 28, 2010
In Place of Grandparents
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
In Place of Grandparents
Through circumstances--an efficient, two-word
explanation--I had grandparents but knew none
of them. Two were dead before I lived; the
two living were near enough but not to be
encountered. Like most children, I probably
could have benefited from that mild antidote
to parents--the grandparent. In place of it,
I got some stories--what the dead ones had
been like, what filial fractures had made
the lives ones off-limits. Narratives became
my grandparents: unusual, sure; not horrible.
I came to know of treacheries and betrayals,
primal scenes, the weather of resentment.
The stories of other people become key parts
of our own lives. That sounds something like
a grandparent might say.
Copyright 2010 Hans Ostrom
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
In Place of Grandparents
Through circumstances--an efficient, two-word
explanation--I had grandparents but knew none
of them. Two were dead before I lived; the
two living were near enough but not to be
encountered. Like most children, I probably
could have benefited from that mild antidote
to parents--the grandparent. In place of it,
I got some stories--what the dead ones had
been like, what filial fractures had made
the lives ones off-limits. Narratives became
my grandparents: unusual, sure; not horrible.
I came to know of treacheries and betrayals,
primal scenes, the weather of resentment.
The stories of other people become key parts
of our own lives. That sounds something like
a grandparent might say.
Copyright 2010 Hans Ostrom
Monday, April 26, 2010
Malthus Called
*
*
*
*
*
*
Malthus Called
Malthus called today to say,
"I told you so." Too much us,
not enough planet. It doesn't
tale an algorithm to figure that.
I do such statistically insignificant
things as plant trees and direct
carbon dioxide their way. "This
way to the trees," I say to air.
I sealed the abode tightly
and now use those light-bulbs that
just sip electricity. None of this
will help, according to the message
left by Malthus. Theoretical doom
is no reason to give up. I called
Malthus back to tell him this, but
he was gone, back to the past.
Cardinal Newman answered
from the past instead. He asked,
"Have you tried prayer?" "Yes," I
said, "and it looks like a tree."
Copyright 2010 Hans Ostrom
An Essay on the Principle of Population
*
*
*
*
*
Malthus Called
Malthus called today to say,
"I told you so." Too much us,
not enough planet. It doesn't
tale an algorithm to figure that.
I do such statistically insignificant
things as plant trees and direct
carbon dioxide their way. "This
way to the trees," I say to air.
I sealed the abode tightly
and now use those light-bulbs that
just sip electricity. None of this
will help, according to the message
left by Malthus. Theoretical doom
is no reason to give up. I called
Malthus back to tell him this, but
he was gone, back to the past.
Cardinal Newman answered
from the past instead. He asked,
"Have you tried prayer?" "Yes," I
said, "and it looks like a tree."
Copyright 2010 Hans Ostrom
An Essay on the Principle of Population
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)