Goldenrod & bracken have both gone dull. |
Although goldenrod’s bright color has already dimmed in Leelanau, I look forward to the near future gold of tamarack. Anomalous among conifers, tamarack trees change from green to gold and then, acting like leafy deciduous trees, shed their feathery needles as winter approaches. By the time the tamarack trees are bare, bracken fern on the ground will have gone from green to yellow to brown, from spring soft to fall stiff to winter brittle. (In hunting season, bracken crunches underfoot.) Some Leelanau bracken has a head start on that seasonal change.
Tamarack in U.P. |
Hot cocoa at the Uglyfish Baking Company hit the spot, too. |
It was great to catch up with Ellen, talking dogs, books and reading and writing, plans for cozy winter days, and life in general. My drive back south felt longer than the drive north, with pouring rain from Newberry to Traverse City, but the trip was worth it to have time with my friend, and I was safely home in bed by 9 p.m. with book and dog.
My current bedtime reading is a Library of America volume that includes all four of Albert Murray’s semi-autobiographical novels, starting with Train Whistle Guitar. Besides fiction, Murray wrote quite a bit about jazz and blues, and much of his writing has a jazzy quality to it that is simply delightful. This writer won me with his very first paragraph:
There was a chinaberry tree in the front yard of that house in those days, and in early spring the showers outside that window always used to become pale green again. Then before long there would be chinaberry blossoms. Then it would be maytime and then junebugtime and no more school bell mornings until next September, and when you came out onto the front porch and it was fair there were chinaberry shadows on the swing and the rocking chair, and chinaberry shade all the way from the steps to the gate.
- Albert Murray, Train Whistle Guitar
Despite the heavy rain I drove through farther north, I learned the next day (a bright, sunny Monday) that Leelanau had only gotten a fraction of an inch, and the weather app on my phone showed no hope of further rain until next week. But then during the day on Tuesday, the wind shifted, and with that the weather forecast also changed: Rain on Tuesday evening, rain Wednesday, rain Thursday? Dare we hope? I write this on Tuesday evening, waiting for rain…. Hearing coyotes....
Having done a little mowing and raking on Monday, I did more raking Tuesday evening and a little edging around my perennial border, with frequent breaks to launch tennis balls for Sunny Juliet, and after supper we went outdoors again for Frisbee and agility. She is figuring out the weave poles! Her Frisbee catching is improving! She loves any activity that we do together, and while she eagerly accepts little treats for a good performance, sometimes it seems the activity itself is sufficient reward, which of course is the best scenario possible. Do what you love; love what you do.
My reading of Nassim Nicholas Taleb’s Antifragile had me so excited that I signed up to “follow” him on Facebook, but I should have known better, because just as I enjoy conversation more with one or two or three people than in larger groups, I’ve never been a very good follower, either, and by halfway through Taleb’s Skin in the Game I had fallen out of love -- possibly for trivial reasons, but aren’t reasons for falling out of love often trivial?
For one thing, Taleb seems to think no one could really enjoy Proust but would only carry the books around to impress people. Is that the only reason why people carry around the Wall Street Journal or the Economist or a book by Nassim Nicholas Taleb? Some, I’m sure, but really, is it too much of a stretch to acknowledge that different people have different interests and pleasures?
Then – and this is really trivial! – in his list of all the ways people he does not admire show themselves to be wimps, he notes that they never curse on social media. Well, if cursing is such a sign of superiority, why does he spell ‘bullshit’ in his book ‘bull***t’? Prithee, why so coy? I don’t often read half a book and quit but probably will with this one. Like Sartre’s Being and Nothingness, I’m finding the going repetitive, the repetition self-indulgent.
My advice: Read Antifragile. It’s worth reading. If you want an introduction to it, you can start with The Black Swan, but Antifragile is meatier, and you can get the black swan idea there. As for Skin in the Game, the book’s basic point is that you shouldn’t take advice from people with nothing to lose. Naturally, there are sub-propositions and logical inferences, but you can read a few chapters at the library. Or, if you want to buy a paperback copy from me, I have two available at the cover price of $20.
(I had a third trivial reason for falling out of love, but who cares?)
Still in love with: Michigan! My life as a bookseller. My dog. Proust. My country life. My friends!
There she is, writer and cookie baker extraordinaire! |
THIS SATURDAY: Northport’s annual street fair, LEELANAU UNCAGED!!!
Get ready. Get set. -- |
6 comments:
Fast trip, long drive, but glad you had fun.
Seeing Ellen made the long drive worthwhile.
Impressed with Sunny's weave pole progress! As sometimes, your post reminds me of vaguely related thoughts. Our in-laws from Alaska were here for a couple of days, and he brought up a question he had asked a few years back. He had read "Lessons
In Chemistry" and sent a photo of a formula on a gravestone asking what it was. It was oxytocin and he was overjoyed finding it explained what he was reading about. Not being much of a fiction guy, I had never heard of the 'love hormone'.
Have to confess I have not read LESSONS IN CHEMISTRY. The gravestone sounds different, though. And hey, aren't you kind of a science guy? And isn't chemistry a branch of -- ???
Yes sort of. I checked out the chemical structure and identified it for him. (He has a PhD in ocean fisheries and a need to know). it was just another peptide based hormone to me. And yes, Chemistry is a branch of alchemy! Boring guys at cocktail parties chewing on angastora bitters and discussing the latest addition to the periodic chart. Do I have to read that book?
Book? Which one? You don't have to read any book you don't want to read, Bob. I'm well into the second novel, THE SPYGLASS TREE, in my Albert Murray volume and already looking forward to rereading his fiction in years to come. Such a pleasure!
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