Thursday, September 19, 2024

A Sinking Feeling

 On Sunday the Common Household Husband said to me, “Did you see the sinkhole in our driveway?”

I said, “You mean, the driveway is uneven.”   I imagined a small divot in the asphalt – inconsequential.  I did not go anywhere on Monday so I thought nothing further of it.


On Tuesday morning I had to go out to fetch something I had left at a friend’s house. I drove out of the driveway and then thought, Wait, did I just drive over a hole?!


I parked on the street and got out of the car to examine the situation.  There was a hole about a foot in diameter in the asphalt of our driveway.  I tried to look down in, but didn't want to get too close.  Maybe it is like a BLACK hole and would suck me in!  I could not tell how deep it was, but there was definitely at least several feet of space in there below the asphalt.  I feel lucky the car didn't plunge into it when I drove over that portion of the driveway.




I have had no life experiences with sinkholes, other than making fun of when the city bus got stuck in a giant sinkhole in 2019 in Pittsburgh.  We shouldn’t have made fun, because that sinkhole formed at the exact spot I and a huge crowd of people had stood on the week before at a political rally.  The bus literally took the fall instead of all of us.   



I was quite distressed about our sinkhole, and asked around on what I should do.  A friend said to call "PA One Call" - an entity that checks on what utilities lie under the ground before any digging occurs.  I did that, and the woman there calmed me down a bit, taking down all the info.  Then, with disturbing visions of piles of cash poured into the sinkhole, I nervously drove off to fetch the thing I had left behind at the friend’s house.


Our decidedly less dramatic
but still alarming sinkhole.


On the way home I started imagining the neighborhood kids falling into the hole.  I decided I should go to Lowe's to buy a traffic cone and some "Danger" tape.   But I thought I had better take another look at the sinkhole first.  As I arrived home, Andy, the person from our town's Department of Public Works, also arrived.  Andy examined the situation and said, "It's definitely the township’s sewer pipe that has collapsed."  This is, or was, a 15-inch-diameter pipe that runs under our lawn from one end to the other.  Andy showed me on a cool map with all the township’s underground infrastructure.  He said the hole was at least 5 feet deep.  Yikes!  Andy covered it with two orange traffic cones and said the township would be back soon. 

Andy takes a photo inside our sinkhole.
I feared for his well-being the whole time.



A friend sent me a link to this timely opinion by Alexandra Petri. A fine piece of satire, sobering up at the end to deliver the true tragedy of that person's evil and heinous behavior. 


It didn’t occur to me until later that day that our sinkhole lies directly in the path of the Common Household Husband’s access to the EV charger in the garage.  The CHH started calling the sinkhole “the gateway to hell.”   And further asked, “Is it a divine punishment?”


In the middle of the night, we woke up. The CHH said to me, “Do you think the house has fallen into the abyss while we were sleeping?”  Gee, thanks.  Now I will not be able to get back to sleep.  I read my book, a chapter about the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire, definitely not material designed to help me sleep. 


There are some things to be thankful for.  The house has not slid into the abyss.  Yet.  As my older brother pointed out, at least it’s not one of those underground coal fires that sometimes occur around here.


My younger brother helpfully said, “You should drop Cheerios down into the hole.”  This is a reference to this childhood memory:  When we were kids, our parents got us a globe because they were all into education and stuff.  It had all the latest countries on it – Yugoslavia, the USSR, East Germany, to name a few.  At some point the family globe developed a ½” diameter hole.  I think it was in the middle of the Pacific Ocean.  Of course, we kids thought it was a brilliant idea to put Cheerios into that hole.  That was highly educational.  It taught us that once a Cheerio went in there, it was dastardly hard to get it out.  My father was disgusted with our flippancy toward geographical knowledge.


Eastern Europe in the 1970s, about the era of our 
family globe.


On Wednesday, The Director of the town’s Public Works Department Himself and three other Public Works employees showed up at our house.  While the workers installed a steel plate over the sinkhole, The Director explained to me that the township needs to entirely replace the pipe running under our yard. This means much of that side of the yard will be dug up, and three of our trees will need to be removed.  


THREE TREES!  This is devastating.  We will be losing two pin oaks and one red maple.  They were already mature trees when we moved in about 30 years ago.  I wanted them to go on existing forever.    


The Director said the township will pay for all of it, and will even plant new trees for us. I wonder how much time we will have to decide on how many and what kind of trees to plant, and where.  I have an inkling that trees vastly affect the heating and cooling of the house but I don’t know the particulars.


The Dept of Public Works won’t start doing any work until next week at the earliest.  In the meantime, no kids, pets, adults, wildlife, or cars will fall in the hole.  We might be able to get some Cheerios in there, but I am not going close enough to find out.   


I will never feel the same again when I am standing on the driveway to shovel the snow. There will always be the feeling that the driveway could swallow me up at any moment.   


The whole (!) thing reminds me of one of the very best YA novels I have ever read.


Monday, September 2, 2024

First lines: August 2024 edition


 

I am declaring this past month to be “Fall of the Patriarchy” month for me - it was in my reading and my life.


For my birthday I bought myself some artwork that says “My Favorite Season is the Fall of the Patriarchy” and compostable garbage bags.  Somehow those two things go together.  And a friend made her own design with the same saying, and put it on a t-shirt, just for me!  All month I have been in the throes of planning a public rally for reproductive rights.  

 

The first lines of the six books I read this month:

 

Book 1

Mister Robert Roberts Hitt, the well-known steno man, arrived in Springfield late on the sweltering afternoon of August 28, 1859.

 

 

Book 2

The Slogan

Some time ago a former student e-mailed me from California: “You’ll be delighted to know that you are quoted frequently on bumpers in Berkeley.”

 

 

Book 3

Stuff Happens

Pat stood before the door at the bottom of the stair, reading the names underneath the buttons.

 

 

Book 4

THE PAST PERFECT

Le Plus-que-parfait

I hadn’t wanted to live in Geneva.  In fact, I had decisively wished not to, but there I was.


 

Book 5

Kentucky

They still call her Book Woman, having long forgotten the epithet for her cobalt-blue flesh, though she’s gone now from these hills and hollers, from her loving husband and daughter and endearing Junia, her patrons and their heartaches and yearnings for more.

 

 

Book 6

I was not sorry when my brother died.

 

 


The titles and authors revealed:

 

 

Book 1

Lincoln's Last Trial: The Murder Case That Propelled Him to the Presidency.  By Dan Abrams, David Fisher.

320 pages • first pub 2018.


It was fascinating to see how the law worked back then.  I read it for book club; everyone in the club liked this book.

 

 

 

Book 2

Well-Behaved Women Seldom Make History by Laurel Thatcher Ulrich

284 pages  • first pub 2007.


This excellent historian examines the writings of three women who made history, one from the 1400s in France, one from the mid-1800s in the US, and one from mid-1900s in England.   Good stuff that fits with my personal theme for this month.  The title is a sentence that Thatcher Ulrich wrote in a research paper, which was then picked up by the public and put on t-shirts and bumper stickers.

 

 

Book 3

44 Scotland Street (#1 in the series)

By Alexander McCall Smith with Iain McIntosh (Illustrator)

325 pages • first pub 2005


I finally read the first one in the series.  Not remotely related to any fall of any patriarchy.

 

 

Book 4

When in French: Love in a Second Language

By Lauren Collins

256 pages • first pub 2016


I really enjoyed this book, especially the parts on the history and quirks of language.


Since I have declared this to be Fall of the Patriarchy month, I’ll leave you with this moderately-related quote:

The Malian language Supyire has five genders (humans, big things, small things, groups, liquids), while the Australian language Ngan’gityemerri has fifteen (males, females, groups, animals, vegetables, body parts, canines, trees, liquids, fire, strikers, digging sticks, woomeras, two different types of spears).

 

 

Book 5

The Book Woman’s Daughter (2nd in a series) by Kim Michele Richardson

338 pages.  Published 2022.


For book club.  In which a teen and her friend in Appalachia struggle to overcome the entrenched patriarchy and racism of their time and location.

 

 

Book 6

Nervous Conditions (#1 in a series)

By  Tsitsi Dangarembga

204 pages (my print copy has 298 pages) • first pub 1988.


A coming of age story, in which a teen and her cousin in Rhodesia struggle to overcome the entrenched patriarchy and racism of their time and location. (Content warning - eating disorder.)   Recommended by my daughter.   


Wikipedia says that this novel, “which was the first to be published in English by a Black woman from Zimbabwe, was named by the BBC in 2018 as one of the top 100 books that have shaped the world.”  The third book in this series, This Mournable Body (2020) was short-listed for the Booker Prize.   My daughter has read all three in the series, and says Nervous Conditions was her favorite.


 

Dear Reader, what have you been reading?  What is your favorite season?

 



 


Wednesday, August 21, 2024

How Do I Love Books? Let me Count the Ways.



The Common Household Husband forced me to look through these six boxes of books that have been sitting in our garage untouched since we moved to this house thirty years ago.  They smelled so musty that I will likely suffer the allergy effects for the next three days.  He thoughtfully put them on a card table in the basement so that I wouldn’t have to bend down while looking through them.


  


The first box had some old work papers I had written in the 1990s.  Look, folks, words and numbers printed on paper is how commodity research used to be disseminated!  How quaint!  These will all be consigned to the recycled paper bin.



The first box also had numerous tomes on the Soviet economy.  Let’s hope that is a topic for the permanent past.  All will be going to the dustbin of history.  






Love and grief came rushing in when I saw these two books that belonged to my mother when she was a girl:  The Bobbsey Twins and The Outdoor Girls.  There used to be a whole set of some of these.  These particular volumes were first published in 1917 and 1921, well before World War II.  What  I cherished about these books is finding the words “7 day” handwritten inside.  As a girl my mother loved to play library, which included forcing her younger sister (my aunt) to borrow the books for 7 days.   The books were in very poor condition, so off to the discard pile they went.



In another box there were more books about Russia.  There will definitely not be a next time I go to Russia - that one was easy to discard. 


One box, labeled “Good Literature” in my husband’s writing, included giant classics of Russian lit (some in English, some in Russian), plus some steamy paperbacks (not pictured).  We each have our idea of what is Good Literature.  The novels in Russian were purchased aspirationally but I never read them.





Another box had some really great children’s books. 


It was agony to get rid of these books.  The decision was made a little easier by the overwhelmingly musty odor.  Nevertheless, I chose to keep six books.  There is probably a one in a thousand chance that I will actually read these.



This blog post serves as proof to my adult children that I saved them from having to go through six boxes of dusty books.  I told the Common Household Husband to cart the six boxes away, and not to tell me what he did with them.  Any sane person would have snuck them into a dumpster somewhere,  but he took them to Goodwill.


I felt a sense of relief seeing the empty spot where the boxes had been.  When I went down to the basement the next day, the card table was refilled, with 8 more boxes of musty books to go through.  Sigh. 





Sonnet 43: How do I love thee?

Elizabeth Barrett Browning


How do I love thee? Let me count the ways. 

I love thee to the depth and breadth and height 

My soul can reach, when feeling out of sight 

For the ends of being and ideal grace. 

I love thee to the level of every day’s 

Most quiet need, by sun and candle-light. 

I love thee freely, as men strive for right. 

I love thee purely, as they turn from praise. 

I love thee with the passion put to use 

In my old griefs, and with my childhood’s faith. 

I love thee with a love I seemed to lose 

With my lost saints. I love thee with the breath, 

Smiles, tears, of all my life; and, if God choose, 

I shall but love thee better after death. 




Sunday, August 4, 2024

First Lines: July 2024 edition

 


Below are the first lines of the 8 books I finished reading in July.  

Includes a whole slew of audio books, which I found to be the best

thing while recovering from cataract surgeries.  I started a good many

more audio books than this, but for various reasons couldn’t finish them.  

 

Books in which disabilities are portrayed: one, portraying mental illness and addiction.


Book 1

“Hello, darling.  It’s me.  Just wanted to let you know that I will be attending the conference at the library after all.  It’ll be wonderful to see you, but we’ll have to be careful.  We wouldn’t want…well, you know.”

 

 

Book 2

On Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays it was Court Hand and Summulae Logicales, while the rest of the week it was the Organon, Repetition and Astrology.  The governess was always getting muddled with her astrolabe, and when she got specially muddled she would take it out of the Wart by rapping his knuckles.

 

 

Book 3

A Painful Return Home

I was about five years old when I was abducted.  It was one of the most beautiful days of my childhood. 


 

Book 4

How the Whale Got His Throat

In the sea, once upon a time, O my Best Beloved, there was a Whale, and he ate fishes. 


 

Book 5

Fate

It was the hour of the morning snifter, and a little group of Eggs and Beans and Crumpets had assembled in the smoking-room of the Drones Club to do a bit of inhaling.  

 

 

Book 6

1.  Love, Marriage and Other Surprises

The wedding took place underneath the Castle, beneath that towering, formidable rock, in a quiet church that was reached from the King’s Stables Road.

 

 

Book 7

If you want to find Cherry-Tree Lane all you have to do is ask the Policeman at the cross-roads.



Book 8

One’s-Self I sing, a simple separate person,

Yet utter the word Democratic, the word En-Masse.

 

Of physiology from top to toe I sing,

Not physiognomy alone nor brain alone is worthy for the Muse, I say the Form complete is worthier far,

The Female equally with the Male I sing.



Did not finish

Prologue: Unmasked

The lectern where the lawyers stood to argue their cases had been pushed back twenty feet from the Supreme Court’s elevated bench.  Dozens of wooden chairs that normally filled the front section of the court were gone. The tableau on this Nov 1, 2021 morning was spare as the coronavirus pandemic still raged and extra health precautions were in place.





The titles and authors revealed:

 

 

Book 1

Never Laugh as a Hearse Goes By (A Penny Brannigan Mystery), by Elizabeth J. Duncan.  Audiobook, 6 hours.  Narrator Anne Flosnik.

In print it is 304 pages • First published 2013.

 

Murders in the library!

 

This fit the bill exactly of what I needed for the day of/day after my eye surgery.  An audio book, available immediately, cozy mystery, loads of afternoon tea, a single narrator, and not overly long.   Ordinarily I would have abandoned it early – the narrator’s voice was rather stolid, with the (I suppose) Welsh accent charming and the narrator’s portrayal of the Canadian character plausible.  Audio books tend to make me fall asleep, and this one did too, but I stayed awake enough each time I awoke that I could follow the story.  The straightforward story line lent itself to my needs.


 

Book 2

The Sword in the Stone, by T.H. White, (abridged; Junior Classics for 7-12 year olds).  Audiobook released 2008.

Original unabridged text published in 1938; then published with the full set of books in 1958 as The Once and Future King

Naxos Audiobooks, narrated by Neville Jason.  4 hours (or maybe 6 hours) – there must have been some editing problems because a whole section repeated itself. 

 

This was yet another audio book narrated by a British actor.  Makes me wonder if the “available now” section of the library audiobook catalog is almost all British.  Neville Jason’s narration was delightful, as were the character portrayals by T.H. White.  Of course, a lot is left out, but it was just right for my recovery period.  This recording seemed to have an editing flaw where a whole section was repeated, but I found my way around that.  I wonder how often that error happens in audiobooks – I don’t usually do audiobooks because they put me to sleep. 

 

This audio book includes a viciously truncated version of one of my most favorite quotes, something that I believe my parents lived by:

 

“The best thing for being sad," replied Merlin, beginning to puff and blow, "is to learn something. That's the only thing that never fails. You may grow old and trembling in your anatomies, you may lie awake at night listening to the disorder of your veins, you may miss your only love, you may see the world about you devastated by evil lunatics, or know your honour trampled in the sewers of baser minds. There is only one thing for it then — to learn. Learn why the world wags and what wags it. That is the only thing which the mind can never exhaust, never alienate, never be tortured by, never fear or distrust, and never dream of regretting. Learning is the only thing for you. Look what a lot of things there are to learn.”

― T.H. White, The Once and Future King

 

Another version uses  “disturbances of the spirit” which I like better in place of “being sad”.  But I do like the notion of Merlin puffing and blowing, which isn’t in the second version.

 

This is not to say that in any one instance of sadness there are not other paths of action which are better to follow.  And sometimes learning does fail.  But I still feel that learning why the world wags could be a good option. 


 

Book 3

More Than I Imagined: What a Black Man Discovered About the White Mother He Never Knew, by John Blake.

240 pages • First published 2023.


Blake is a CNN journalist.  I first heard his story on the podcast No Small Endeavor with Lee C. Camp.  This memoir was a fast-paced but deep and thoughtful read.  Includes portrayal of mental illness and addiction.

 

 

Book 4

Just So Stories by Rudyard Kipling.  Unabridged.  Audiobook read by Geoffrey Palmer.   3 hours, 27 minutes • Written text first pub 1902 (editions).  Audiobook released in 2005  by Naxos Junior Classics.

 

Completely charming narration by Geoffrey Palmer.


 

Book 5

Young Men in Spats, by P.G. Wodehouse.  Audiobook released in 2012 by AudioGO.  Read by Jonathan Cecil.  Text first published in 1936. 236 pages.


Short funny stories centered on characters at The Drones Club.  The characters in the Club are all identified as breakfast foods.

 

 

 

Book 6

The Unbearable Lightness of Scones (44 Scotland Street #5) By Alexander McCall Smith

344 pages • first published 2008.


I turn to this series when the world becomes too much, as it did in the past few weeks.

 

The book’s title is a play on another book of high literary stature The Unbearable Lightness of Being by Milan Kundera, which I read eons ago and don’t remember, other than that it was an excellently written book.


This book’s chapter titles often echo other literary titles, for instance:

Paradise Found

Portrait of the Artist as a Surprised Man

Let Us Now Praise a rather Infamous Man

A Shot in the Park

Fathers and Sons

I can’t remember if this was the case in the other books in this series.

 

In a chapter titled “Edinburgh Noses Through the Ages” there is an essay about noses.

 

 

Book 7

Mary Poppins By P.L. Travers with Sophie Thompson (Narrator)

~ 4 hours • first pub 1934. Publisher: Blackstone Audiobooks 2013


I stand by my opinion when I read it in April 2019:  In the book, Mary Poppins is a gaslighter.  I enjoyed the book much more as a child.  But I needed a light audio book.

 


Book 8

Leaves of Grass by Walt Whitman, Inscriptions section.  First published 1855.  The version I read was published in 2004.  The whole thing is more than 600 pages.  The Inscriptions section is the first approx. 8% of the book.  Or maybe a different percentage - there are many different versions of the opus..  I listened to an audiobook while reading along on my kindle.


I wrote a whole pithy commentary on this, but it seems to be lost.  I will just say this:  the section I read (“Inscriptions”) was very American.


 

Did not finish

Nine Black Robes: Inside the Supreme Court’s Drive to the Right and Its Historic Consequences.  By Joan Biskupic, senior Supreme Court analyst for CNN.  Audiobook released in 2023, read by Kirsten Potter.  13 hours approx.  Text in print is 588 pages. 


Just couldn’t stomach it right now, and definitely could not manage this topic via audiobook.

 


Speaking of things that cannot be stomached:

Tea party in 2010, with
leaves-of-grass cupcakes and mud wine