Monday, September 27, 2021

Nutshell (3*)


Not the author's best, that's for sure.  The musings of an in utero oenophile with a taste for Sancerre who nervously narrates the murder of one parent by another and contemplates its impact.  His perspective elicits a few puerile chuckles.

Not everyone knows what it is to have your father's rival's penis inches from your nose.

The man who obliterates my mother between the sheets obeys like a dog.  Sex, I begin to understand, is its own mountain kingdom, secret and intact.  In the valley below we know only rumors.

This slight novel may appeal more to readers with a fondness for the crime genre, although McEwan has more on his mind than that.  I particularly enjoyed his mordant take on world outside of the amniotic sac:

The lecturer took a dim view of our species, of which psychopaths are a constant fraction, a human constant.  Armed struggle, just or not, attracts them.  They help to tip local struggles into bigger conflicts.  Europe, according to her, in existential crisis, fractious and weak as varieties of self-loving nationalism sip that same tasty brew.  Confusion about values, the bacillus of anti-Semitism incubating, immigrant populations languishing, angry and bored.  Elsewhere, everywhere, novel inequalities of wealth, the super rich a race apart.  Ingenuity deployed by states for new forms of brilliant weaponry, by global corporations to dodge taxes, by righteous banks to stuff themselves with Christmas millions.  China, too big to need friends or counsel, cynically probing its neighbours' shores, building islands of tropical sand, planning for the war it knows must come.  Muslim-majority countries plagued by religious puritanism, by sexual sickness, by smothered invention.  The Middle East, fast-breeder for a possible world war.  And foe-of-convenience, the United States, barely the hope of the world, guilty of torture, helpless before its sacred text conceived in an age of powdered wigs, a constitution as unchallengeable as the Koran.  Its nervous population obese, fearful, tormented by inarticulate anger, contemptuous of governance, murdering sleep with every new handgun.  Africa yet to learn democracy's party trick--the peaceful transfer of power.  Its children dying, thousands by the week, for want of easy things--clean water, mosquito nets, cheap nets, cheap drugs.  Uniting and leveling all humanity, the dull old facts of altered climate, vanishing forests, creatures and polar ice.  Profitable and poisonous agriculture obliterating biological beauty.  Oceans turning to weak acid.  Well above the horizon, approaching fast, the ruinous tsunami of the burgeoning old, cancerous and demented, demanding care.  And soon with demographic transition, the reverse, populations in catastrophic decline.  Free speech no longer free, liberal democracy no longer the obvious port of destiny, robots stealing jobs, liberty in close combat with security, socialism in disgrace, capitalism corrupt, destructive and in disgrace, no alternatives in sight.

And still the fetus demands to be born!  


Sunday, September 26, 2021

Only An Octave Apart in DUMBO

Justin Vivian Bond lured me to St. Ann's Warehouse for my first live performance since Thom and I saw "The Inheritance" in December 2019.  I wasn't familiar with Anthony Roth Costanzo, but man the guy can SING. Their pull-out-the-stops duet of Bowie's "Under Pressure" brought me to my very tired feet.


Tired because I'd walked from 47 Pianos to DUMBO.  It took 2.5 hours on a perfect autumn afternoon.  The Manhattan Bridge offered plenty of photo ops.



The jewel box of Jane's Carousel sits on the banks of the East River, looking good from any vantage point.




An aerial view of Brooklyn Bridge Park's north end.


People enjoyed the sun and views on Pebble Beach.


Dumbo was really happening.








 



Sunday, September 19, 2021

Heirs Apparent

Randy, Victor, Varick, Thom and I gathered on the beach (plus Chris who participated from Prague via FaceTime) to celebrate the end of an era.   We've all been housemates at one time or another during the past three decades but none of us will be returning to the Pines as shares.

A few stats from my tenure:

34 consecutive summers (1988 - 2021), all but the last three at least a half share, beginning at age 35

9 houses, all but three on the ocean or bay:

84 housemates (including  one woman and a baby, unrelated), 10 pets (all dogs but one) & 6 Airbnb guests

2 pandemics

3 guest stays:

Ever since we reduced to a quarter in 2019, I've been perusing #fireislandpines on Instagram, curious to see the strangers with whom we shared our last house.  I'd never had any success until shortly before our final weekend.  In a discovery I only can describe  as cosmic, I came across this dewy picture:


Randy and I goofily mimicked the pose as best we could.  Time waits for no one, but where better to spend it than the world's premier gay resort with people you love?  May they have as much fun as we did!







Friday, September 17, 2021

Driftwood Sculpture

I can't recall a summer in the Pines with so much accomplished beach art. Bravo/a to the driftwood sculptor!




 

Friday, September 10, 2021

68

Here's what three score and eight looks like in 2021, a week after the event:

Thom took me to Vermont to celebrate my birthday.  Coincidentally, we happened upon a resonant portrait of TW Wood while sightseeing in Montpelier.  This is what 68 looked like in 1890:

Florian customized both a card and a Corksicle thermos to mark the occasion and hand-delivered them during his July visit with Arko.

Magda, Joe & the D-Girls sent a corgilicious card.  


Pretty good as birthdays go if I ignore the fact that I'm two years closer to 70!










Thursday, September 9, 2021

Lake Champlain Ferry

Florian had done a New England tour earlier in the summer.  He recommended we cross Lake Champlain on the car ferry at Charlotte.  What a treat!

This ride, for both of us and the car, cost less ($15.75) than a Pines round-trip.

Delia even had a lane to herself.


This fellow, the only passenger without a car, reminded me of Bronski Beat's "Small-town Boy," even though his "small packed case" is maroon, not black.

Thirty minutes after boarding, we docked in Essex, New York, ending a trip that would have been perfect if we'd seen a moose!  Thanks again, Thom.  I couldn't have asked for a better birthday gift.



Wednesday, September 8, 2021

Unpronounceable

Our final scenic drive took us north to Newport, a few miles away from the Canadian border.
 

I had to ask a native how to pronounce the name of Lake Memphremagog, which is part of the Northeast Kingdom.  Once polluted by heavy industry in both Vermont and Quebec, it now provides drinking water to 200,000 people.


Looks like these geese had begun migrating to warmer climes.

Those distant mountain peaks are in Quebec.  One is known as Mont Owl's Head.


We were the Dowell Owls in elementary school!


Transportation in Newport is varied.

Finding the perfect iconic red barn to photograph had eluded me for days.  This one would have to do!