- Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro
- The Adventures of Tintin Volumes 1-8 by Herge
- When You Are Engulfed by Flames by David Sedaris
- Love in the Time of Cholera by Gabreil Marquez
- apparently 10 plays for night class by William Shakespeare
- Revolutionary Road by Richard Yates
- The Handmaiden's Tale by Margaret Atwood
- Payback: debt and the shadow side of wealth by Margaret Atwood\
- The Bloody Chamber by Angela Carter
- I'm down: a memoir by Mishna Wolff
- Skim by Jillian Tamaki
I have already read:
- Paul Goes Fishing by Michel Rabagliati
- Dar by Erika Moen
- French Milk by Lucy Knisley
- Hamlet by William Shakespeare
- 1/2 Richard III by William Shakespeare
- various zines
I was a little ambitious last summer so we'll see how this goes. If you want, book club with me!
Thursday, May 28, 2009
may 1
We’re still trying to escape the lion’s breath. Hot air on the back of our necks, damp and clouded. Getting away was the hard part. Coming through cold, harsh waters to emerge into the cool air, the sun rising behind silhouetted buildings and trees. It’s a solitary journey, it’s different on the inside. Building a new life, moving into a clapboard house on the escarpment. The house needed a new life too. Fresh paint, ripping up carpet to reveal dusty curving hardwood floors, scraping the dirt off of grey windowsills. My mother standing over the sink, eating a tuna fish sandwich, paint flecked sweatpants. The marks of progress. Pictures of our faces put in glass frames on the wall, our old furniture settling into new corners. Fog clinging around the house, I always think of that time in terms of mornings. Walking hunched and lonely to school, cars growling by while I walked steadily through dark grey mist, footsteps on wet pavement, hands in my pockets. I always forgot gloves. That was when dinnertime forgot it’s name, eating meals after ten o’clock, eating frozen food. Nothing like in my childhood of homemade, wholesome family time. Mashed potatoes, pork tenderloin, corn on the cob. My mother moved up steadily, from minimum waged part-time jobs with managers ten years younger than she was, to better work environments and staggered hours, to better bosses and steady hours. The work clothes she hated, pin-striped pants and turtle necks, cardigans and trousers. I would make dinner so that it was ready the moment she walked in the door. But the hot wind lingers and blows through cracks and crevices in the wall. Overturned lamps, broken-down stovetops and leaky eaves troughs.
Sunday, May 24, 2009
lessons in productivity no. 1
slice is my vice
you should not seek solace in craisins. while it might be the sweetest way to eat a cranberry, craisins are not comfort food. when someone asks you how your day was, replying that you drowned your sorrows with a bag full of craisins does not conjure up the same sympathy that admitting that you lost yourself in a tub of ben and jerry’s does. it only makes you seem like you have a problem.

Friday, February 13, 2009
character sketch.
Audrey is this cool punk rocker self righteous feminist woman, who has tattoos all over her biceps and is an active activist, she sits at bake sale tables and sells her free trade brownies just after her advocacy meeting. At least she used to, at twenty-nine it’s a little hard to be the disenfranchised youth. She stands and sways to heavy grungy angry girl music, female Kurt Cobains, male Ani Difrancos, gender-fucking performance artists, she stands on the hardwood and sways and moves and bucks her hips and wants to fight the power, shove fists in the air. but she’s twenty-nine now and they expect her to dress professionally at the work place, but her tattoos peek out and give away her true identity. She is a children’s librarian. She reads these books to little kids and she can see traditional gender roles in these harmless little story books, she sees sexism and racism and heteronormativity but she can’t fight the power here, surrounded by runny noses and grubby hands and protective parents. Why don’t parents want to protect against the most harmful of lies? Women can drive tractors, that’s a given now in any case. Why can’t a man wear a purse or knit or make babies? Opening the minds of seven year olds. She goes home buys concert tickets online and buys some kitchen appliance off of her friends wedding registry because she’s getting married and moving on and Audrey isn’t. Audrey wants to go back to school so she can be one of the thinkers and doers, the movers and shakers.
Saturday, January 24, 2009
fragment 2.
Will didn’t know what he was going to do for money this year, of course he wanted a job in an art store but all art students want that, instead he’d just avoid the cliché and disappointment and find a simpler job. He got a job in a photocopy place on campus, assisting people with their copy needs. He did alright, he photocopied until his fingertips were black and left fingerprints all over his drawings when he went home that night. He worked with some awesome people, these masculine fresh-faced bearded guys, Josh and Luke who both wore flannel shirts and dark brown leather boots and knew how to survive in a forest. Sweat and facial hair, tough denim and pencil scrawled notebooks. Thinkers and doers, active and controlled. Will slung his messenger bag over his shoulders and wanted to be more like them. They’d never try to be like anyone else. He’d shrug his way home into his dark apartment, listen to Dale’s thumping heartbeat music and sit, his abdomen pressed to the edge of the table and his forearms putting pressure down. Why didn’t he have more to say? Preoccupation and slight of hand, ADHD and silver fish, flitting through the legs of his chair and the legs of the drafting table and through his legs, swim over to the girl in the apartment across from his, through her legs and the iron bars of her bed.
unpacked
They had just moved into together. It was so quick, a lightning speed shuffle from one part of town to another. It wasn’t him that felt too quick, it was these walls and door frames and electrical outlets. She had just pulled the plug of her alarm clock from her sea-glass blue walls and she was pulling it into this new pale wall and setting it on a jade coloured bedside table. It was the speed, the dangerous acceleration of movement of cardboard boxes and Rubbermaid containers full of winter coats. Nick had asked her when she wanted to move and she had said “Saturday, I think I can be ready for Saturday.” She had tucked her clothes into suitcases, her books into boxes, stuffed blankets into her old duffel bag. Pulled the sticky-tac from the backs of posters and pictures, laying them flat in an oversized art store bag. She had neatly and casually pushed her life into boxes and helped Nick make the trips back and forth to the new apartment. At first her stuff had sat in a stack in the middle of the living room floor. She had burst through one cardboard box to retrieve dishes so they could have glasses of water with their pizza on Saturday night. She was letting it sink in, the beige walls, the hardwood floors, the pale blue cupboards with peeling paint in the kitchen. The scuzzy bathroom floor that she’d have to avoid for a while, until there was time to fix it. It was exciting and stressful simultaneously, anticipation over their first apartment and picturing her and Nick installing shelves together or cooking dinner or lying on the couch. Also picturing all the work it takes to settle, to feel like the walls and floors are yours and not some strange piece of public property to lean against. To feel a degree of ownership and belonging, these are my plates in the cupboards, my toothbrush on the sink. The slow process of gradual work: hanging up picture frames, needing a can opener, the way boxes tend to slowly disintegrate as you find you need certain things until you’ve slowly unloaded the box and can crush the cardboard.
It didn’t happen this way. Instead she had left to run errands Sunday morning, to get her library books, some milk, a new laundry bin. And when she had returned Nick was installing picture frames and hooks, had already put all of her books on her bookshelf, had set up the television and stereo system. All of her unopened boxes were stacked neatly against the wall to conserve space, except for her boxes of books which he had opened. He smiled at her, pressing into the plaster with the drill. She shed her shoes and set her bags down and stepped over to the bookshelf. He had put her books on it for her. Her books from school were mixed with her old favourites, her cookbooks integrated with The Making of a Poem and Cultural Studies 2B03.
Throughout the day she had studied, cooked a dinner of macaroni and cheese and put the sheets on their bed, fit her clothes into the closet and dresser. Nick had transformed the apartment. He was out for a beer now with his friend and she wandered around the rooms. Every picture he had wanted to hang was securely hung from various walls, the furniture was arranged, the various shelves filled with her books or his, his graphing equipment, his drafting table pushed against the wall. The only evidence that they had just moved in was in the stacked boxes of hers that he had neglected to open. The kitchen cupboards were full, food tucked away into the pantry, the salt and pepper shakers filled and huddling on the table. In the bathroom his toothbrush lay on the sink. It was so quick, so light and easy for him to aggressively settle into this new space. It looked like he had already lived here and she was just moving in with a few things. She had wanted to take a little time, enjoy the claustrophobic clutter of unpacked suitcases and boxes, furniture without cushions.
It didn’t happen this way. Instead she had left to run errands Sunday morning, to get her library books, some milk, a new laundry bin. And when she had returned Nick was installing picture frames and hooks, had already put all of her books on her bookshelf, had set up the television and stereo system. All of her unopened boxes were stacked neatly against the wall to conserve space, except for her boxes of books which he had opened. He smiled at her, pressing into the plaster with the drill. She shed her shoes and set her bags down and stepped over to the bookshelf. He had put her books on it for her. Her books from school were mixed with her old favourites, her cookbooks integrated with The Making of a Poem and Cultural Studies 2B03.
Throughout the day she had studied, cooked a dinner of macaroni and cheese and put the sheets on their bed, fit her clothes into the closet and dresser. Nick had transformed the apartment. He was out for a beer now with his friend and she wandered around the rooms. Every picture he had wanted to hang was securely hung from various walls, the furniture was arranged, the various shelves filled with her books or his, his graphing equipment, his drafting table pushed against the wall. The only evidence that they had just moved in was in the stacked boxes of hers that he had neglected to open. The kitchen cupboards were full, food tucked away into the pantry, the salt and pepper shakers filled and huddling on the table. In the bathroom his toothbrush lay on the sink. It was so quick, so light and easy for him to aggressively settle into this new space. It looked like he had already lived here and she was just moving in with a few things. She had wanted to take a little time, enjoy the claustrophobic clutter of unpacked suitcases and boxes, furniture without cushions.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)