Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Transitions

As I start fully moving into the home I've been sharing with the Airman I am struck by how much I've accumulated on 5 months. There are the normal things I accumulate: books, yarn, recipes torn from the pages of Real Simple, nail polish....Now I have the contents of 5 months worth of subscription box items to throw in their. Since my stay here has often felt temporary, I have never truly taken then time to organize. Now that I know what is here is only the beginning, I have to re-evaluate the way I live, with another person, in a physical space. This is a challenge for many reasons but the biggest being that the Airman and I have hugely different views on how to live. I won't go into specifics but sufficed to say that we both have to make some changes. I have to be (a lot) more organized and he had to learn that sometimes I'm not super organized. I'm hoping (especially since I have given up my house) that we can learn to really live together.

Tonight I'm cleaning the house. Scrubbing down the kitchen, putting my things away, organizing the bathroom ( I do sometimes miss Odenton where we each had out own bathroom), washing clothes, and throwing out my many empty boxes. Basically, I'm trying to help us have a good start to this new adventure. 

Thankfully there is Netflix (Star Trek TOS!!), a grassy Sauvignon Blanc, and a really effing good steak and arugula salad to get me through the night. 

I'm halfway there but here's a picture of my progress.

Summer Reading Plans

Note: I've been posting a lot this week for two reasons: 1) I assigned a social media personal essay project to my students and I thought I'd do it with them by putting more down on this this blog. I have a perfectly valid reason to update during the school day.  2) I am freaking obsessed with subscription boxes. OBSESSED I tell you!

But back to the original reason for this post. 

This school year has had it's own challenges but overall it has been a pretty good one. I got to teach classes I actually felt passionate about (Fiction Writing and Literature of the Middle East). I liked my students (and I'm not just saying this because they might actually spend some time reading this blog. Lastly, we have a new schedule that actually allows me, as an administrator/teacher to get things done during the day so I don't find myself working from home until 9PM.

The year is rapidly coming to a close and I'm looking forward to spending the summer reading book after book and writing page after page.

Here's what is on the docket for my summer reading.

Maus I and II. Why? Besides being excellent, this is actually required reading for the kiddos at school. I've never read them even though they've been on my shelf all year.

The Night Circus (Erin Moganstern) Why? I bought a copy recently and why not? Looks like it will be a good read.

The Brothers Karamazov. (Fyodor Dostoyevsky) Why? Because I've my copy for a million years and there is absolutely no reason why I have not read this book already.

Anna Karenina. (Leo Tolstoy)  Why? See above.  I went to see the movie and I found it to be absolutely stunning to watch. But also, I bought my copy in Minneapolis on a college admission recruiting trip. I haven't been on a recruiting trip since 2007.....

Hold it Til it Hurts (T. Geronimo Johnson)Why? Because Nimo is a great writer and former classmate. Also, he was nominated for a PEN/Faulkner award!

A Visit From the Goon Squad (Jennifer Egan) It's one that I've owned without reading for far too long.


There you have it. I hope that by the time the summer is over I have read more than this short listing of books. I know that I have at least 10 others at home that I have yet to read. I'm going to aim for a book a week for the month of June and give two weeks each to the Russians. If I can do that, August will be the perfect time to add a new list of short works that I'll consider using for Fiction Writing in the fall and Literature of the Middle East in the Spring. I also want to start developing a new course for the 2014-15 year so that Middle East becomes an every other year course.


Anyone have a couple of good book suggestions?


Eulogy

Two weeks ago my Grandfather passed away. When my Father called to give me the bad news I was immediately devastated by the fact that I would not get to have another long conversation with my Grandfather about the English language, his desire to learn French, or listen to him talk about any of the various projects he was working on.  Because I could not do those things again I wanted to share with people what I had always found to be so special about my Grandfather, so I offered to write his eulogy.

It pretty much wrote itself. Stanley Williams was probably the most brilliant man I have ever come into contact with. He had no formal education having dropped out of high school before graduating (he later earned his GED I think sometime in his 70s). Still, I have never known anyone so devoted to learning.

I am lucky in that respect. Though I no longer have living grandparents, I did inherit a love of learning from all of them.

Here is the eulogy I delivered in honor of my Grandfather last Saturday.



Before I could really begin to write this eulogy in honor of my Grandfather, Stanley Eugene Williams, it seemed fitting to first look up the word and share what I learned about it. I already knew its definition but I did not know that it comes from the Greek work eulogia, and that in is original state it means, simply, to praise.  I think my Grandfather would appreciate that today, as we say our final goodbyes, we are learning something.
Many of you think of Stanley Williams as the son of Sydney and Anna, the husband of Grace and father to Ruth, Gene, Ricky, Alice, Steven, Ann and David. You know that he had 15 grandchildren and 12 great grandchildren. You are also probably aware that he was an electrician and a member of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Local 98.
There are many things that you might not know. 
Stanley Williams was a grammarian. He devoted a great deal of his time over the last few years, studying and breaking down the English language. He delighted in finding grammatical mistakes in the New York Times and he could diagram a sentence better than any English teacher I know.
He was a craftsman and an artist. Over the years, using materials he had around the house, he built several dollhouses. On one occasion I noted that the doorknob on one of the houses was very unique. He told me that he had driven around Philadelphia looking for the right one put on the dollhouse he was working on at the time. Eventually he found one--I don’t remember where--but when he looked for a miniature replica, he could not find one. So he did what was natural to him, he took out his tools and created a perfect replica.
My Grandfather knew that the capitol of Turkmenistan is Asghabat and that the capitol of Eritrea is Asmara. In fact, if you gave him a blank map of the world he could fill in every country and capitol from memory.  An amateur cartographer he rearranged the boarders of fallen communist countries in his worn almanac.
Stanley Williams believed that you could learn just about anything within the pages of a book. I distinctly remember him telling us that he had learned to swim from and book and had also learned to drown proof himself too. Though he might have been kidding about the last part.
I asked my cousins if there were any special memories they had of our Grandfather. They remember his quizzing us on American and World History, the capitols of every state in the US, the nature walks, going out on his canoe (which had a motor), projects which, included building a skeleton and a model of the human brain, or $20 to see how many push ups you could do.
For many of us it seems strange to be here. I know that I had long been convinced that Stanley Williams was going to live for nothing short of forever. But I also know that when one creates great works of art, like he did with his dollhouses, or devotes themselves to the pursuit of learning and then passes on that knowledge, as he always did, down to his children, grandchildren, then one is most certainly blessed with immortality.


Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Afternoon treats with the English Department

Afternoon treats from my department head, Helen. These beauties come from Pastisserie Poupon. 



Friday, March 15, 2013

In Case You Were Wondering...

...What I've been doing since August, well here's the rundown you're dying for!

Cooking

The Airman likes to eat out. I like to stay in (stop the giggles, sometimes I do like to stay in). So the compromise (in my head) has been that I cook restaurant quality dishes at home!

Here's a list of some things I've made:

Lobster Mac and Cheese
Molten Chocolate Cake
Chicken Curry
Bacon Wrapped Scallops
Beef Borgiugnon
Coq au Vin
Garlic Shirimp with Couscous and Snow Peas

This is just 2013...I can't remember all the yummies from 2012

Knitting

Socks!
Scarves!
Fingerless gloves!
Hats!

Teaching

Fiction Writing to high school juniors and seniors
We read: Barry Hannah, Joan Didion, ZZ Packer, Tobias Wolff, Bret Anthony Johnston, Annie Dillard, Raymond Carver, Anne Lamott, Justin Torres, Joan Silber, Jeffery Eugenides, Russell Banks, Stuart Dybek, Chris Offutt, Edward P. Jones, Dorothy Allison, Joyce Carol Oates, Andre Dubus, Jamaica Kincaid, George Saunders, Denis Johnson, and Ann Rushton

Literature of the Middle East
We read: Midaq Alley by Naugib Mahfouz
We are reading: Woman at Point Zero by Nawal el-Saadawi
We will read: Selections from Tablet and Pen edited by Reza Aslan

I've also been teaching knitting classes at Lovelyarns here in Hampden, Baltimore!

What I've become obsessed with?

Nail Polish!

What I have become REALLY obsessed with?

Subscription boxes.

This may be a good reason as to why I'm always broke. But the Airman get so many packages in the mail! I wanted packages too. I really only subscribe regularly to PopSugar, Birchbox, and Ipsy. Yuzen is new to me and it's only quarterly so I don't feel quite as bad. I got a really cheap intro price for Glossybox so it's not likely I'll keep it after this first one. I've limited myself to $50 a month in boxes. Which is what I'd spend on going out for a night.

Note: I'm including links. If you subscribe through my links I might get some kind of credit. I apologize in advance for making you obsessed too...

PopSugar Must Have
Birchbox
 Ipsy MyGlam
Yuzen


What I've Read:

See above under teaching and tack on a whole lot of high school essays.
Also:
The Twelve Tribes of Hattie by Ayana Mathis
This is How You Lose Her by Junot Diaz
The Twelve by Justin Cronin
And I recently re-read The Septembers of Shiraz by Dalia Sofer.




The Next Big Thing or The Next Thing






My friend Ann Rushton, yes, that lovely and talented Ann Rushton, tagged me on this writerly project and I promptly dropped the ball. I'm finally picking it up today. Expect a couple of posts throughout the day.


According to Ann:
(This is my limited understanding of this phenomenon: Writers are tagged and asked to write about their current projects and then tag other writers to do the same the following week. Surely you’ve seen this. If not, I am sad to report that googling may not be helpful, as I’ve also seen this project referred to as The Next Big Thing and other questions have been asked of other writers so maybe ultimately this has turned into a version of an internet telephone game.)

Okay. So here it goes. I'm going to answer some questions about my novel-in-progress.   Expect this to be awkward and vague. I'm (not really) sorry.


TNBT: What is the working title of the book?

What We Have Lost
            What We Have Found

I totally imagine that this is how the title will look on a book cover one day. Or maybe not. I don't know.

TNBT: Where did the idea come from for the book?

When I graduated from college I scribbled a lot of paragraphs about a couple named Sherry and Roger and domestic misery. At the time I was writing a lot about Sherry toying with the idea of committing suicide. The scene I wrote had her packing a suitcase as if she were going to take a trip, and then sitting in her car in the garage while the engine ran. She would stop the car when she felt a little dizzy and then go back into the house and unpack the suitcase. Those scenes have all been cut (maybe they'll come back??) but around that idea I give S. and R. a family. It's more fun to write a family self destructing. I've also been inspired by numerous people I've encountered, stories I witnessed and stories that have been told to me.
 
TNBT: What genre does your book fall under?
 
Literary fiction.  Domestic fiction. Fiction.

TNBT: What actors would you choose to play the part of your characters in a movie rendition?

Ugh. I have no idea. I went on a House of Cards bender last weekend and I think the actress who plays the young journalist would be good for Claire, she's young, ambitious in all the wrong ways, and pretty but not stunning. I would cast Michael K. Williams in everything. I would even change the lead male into Omar if I could be friends with him. But he's a little too young. 



TNBT: What is the one sentence synopsis of your book?
  
A kid dies, a family self-destructs, let's all talk about race and class!  

TNBT: Who or what inspired you to write this book?

General wonderment and curiosity.
TNBT: What else about your book might pique the reader’s interest?

Adultery! Race! Class! Teen pregnancy! Guns! Summer houses! And then somebody gets married!!
What's not to love?

TNBT: Will your book be self-published or represented by an agency?

Well, first I should finish writing it. I hope some agent will take an interest and represent the work. I'd like to think that if I can complete something I'm proud of, it will have a life outside of my computer's hard drive.

I'm going to tag May in the Bay maybe she'll have some time??