Sunday, September 30, 2007

Why buy local?


Behold the locally-made cake. It is a thing of beauty in so many ways. This cake was freshly baked to order by a small locally-owned bakery, using eggs from locally-raised cage-free chickens. The baker didn't cut corners by using cheap, suspect ingredients produced in a low-wage country under questionable conditions. She decorated it with skill (and food supplies) that would reflect well on her, sure that we would cross paths often, and she charged a fair price for her hours of labor without apology. The cake cost more than a less beautiful, less delicious cake would have cost at a giant retail grocery store . . . but what is the real cost of a "cheaper" product?

Let's see:
Lower price likely=lower pay for the store baker, cheaper ingredients, lost business for the locally-owned baker, lost business for local graphic designers who don't design the retail giant's advertising, longer wait in line at the giant retailer that doesn't hire enough clerks to prevent slow-moving checkout lines, less consumer control over the cake ingredients (add your own)

Locally-made=developing relationship with the local baker, larger portion of the cake's purchase price is invested back into the community, no waiting in long line at retail giant after purchasing unnecessary items while wandering across the stress-inducing store, no going to customer service to correct wrong price scan, more work for local graphic designer who designs the baker's logo and labels (add your own)

BUY LOCALLY-MADE PRODUCTS. EAT LOCALLY-GROWN FOOD. SUPPORT LOCALLY-PRODUCED ARTS.

Thursday, September 27, 2007

If you're feeling literary . . .

Here's a review I wrote recently of a challenging book:
The Last Journey of Ago Ymeri. The story is set in Albania.

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

The Great Pumpkin


We grew this pumpkin this year ("Big Max" variety) and are mighty pleased with it. (Also grew the smaller pumpkins and the corn.) After we picked The Giant, we watched "Lords of the Gourd" on PBS. Now we're thinking we need to make a special pumpkin patch next year, dedicated to giant pumpkins.

Sunday, September 23, 2007

Review of In the Ghost House Acquainted (a book of poetry)

In the Ghost-House Acquainted, by Kevin Goodan, Alice James Books, Farmington, Maine, 2004, 56 pages

If the poems of In the Ghost-House Acquainted were not composed in the moment after—after love’s loss, after revelation, after moonset, after lamb-pulling—then surely they were meant, at least, to be read in that moment. They are messages from a man acquainted with work and rest, grief and joy, death and life. It is not essential to have experienced all that Goodan writes of in order to appreciate his work; and if we are novices in the occupation of grownup life, the poet will instruct us in our necessary preparations for that life.

Informed by an acquaintance with the Bible (both Old and New Testaments), Goodan has written verse that beckons us to consider the lilies of the field—and the dead lambs in the diesel-fueled bonfire—and how our own place in the cosmos may resemble those members of our shared creation. Along with Psalmic structure and diction, many of the poems in this book contain phrases that seem taken directly from familiar Bible verses, yet upon inspection reveal subtle word shifts that point to a particular speaker: farmer as co-creator with God. For example, in “In the Ghost-House Acquainted,” Goodan writes: “I close the simple flowers//and bid the moon now rise//for Death is not my harbor.//And I walk among derelict combines//that they might know//and come unafraid.”

The poet’s speaker sings with humility, with quiet anger, and with pain masquerading as bravado, too. In his “Canticle for the Day-Labor,” the speaker is both taskmaster and servant, waiting on the good graces of his lord, aware that grace is given in many guises:

temper me make me plow blade
an implement for the deep earth
a pleasure in the sowing
and if I bleed make it plentiful
make it sweet like honey
like a train spike through the skull
and I will push the land
and dispatch winter
for the veins of my lord
are always open

Goodan’s poems are redolent of country life—not the pretty, polite kind pictured in glossy magazines for weekend gentlefolk, but the kind of living that coats one’s hands with amniotic fluids from pulling a stuck foal and rips one’s heart out from watching the mare clean the already-cooling body of her stillborn. He tutors his readers in the large and small benedictions of farm life, never letting us forget in any single poem that those blessings can be recalled in a moment. And we, Goodan reminds us, hold the power to bestow or revoke benedictions as well—not because we can or want to, but because we must. Consider his “Barn-Cleaning”:

A pigeon topples down,
cocks a dazed head.
I catch it, try snapping its neck
like a wet towel in air.
Stupid bird! [. . . ]
An alien eye.
I set the bird’s head
against a flat rock.
Wings beat my ankle
but I do not rise.
Four and twenty birds
twitch in a barrel.

A word that peppers some of the poems in this collection, scree, is indicative of the precarious nature of life on a farm (or anywhere else). This material life, which feels solid and sure because it is the only existence we know at present, is so much loose rock beneath our feet, Goodan tells us. A gust of wind, a torrent of rain, or the imperceptible shuffle of emotions across our days can dislodge the precarious debris beneath our feet that we call daily life and throw us off of our mountain into an unfamiliar valley: “I’m in the pasture calming down the mares,//calculating what might be taken//by the hurricane as sacrifice.//Anything not rooted might be taken” (from “If I’m Not a Garden”).

Goodan speaks of human loss with such palpable authority that it is tempting to search for a biography of the poet in order to confirm his right to do so. How could he write of these moments unless he has experienced them? we want to know. What happened to these people? we wonder, for he has created individuals whose fate resonates in our imaginations. A lover, a father, even a horse caught in barbed-wire fencing, are not mere fodder for his poetry: They inhabit his poems and our minds long after we have put down this volume. Consider “His Voice Had Grown Softer Each Day”—a goodbye as eloquent as any elegy read aloud at a memorial service:

I need you to get me a ticket, he said.
For what, I asked, waking at the foot of his bed.
For the train, he said. They say I need a ticket.
Except for the small lamp the room was dark.
The air was cool and clear. The first night of September.
Do you know who they are, I asked
and he said, oh yes. They are smiling and waving—
I haven’t seen them for so long.
They want me to climb on board. . . . I need my ticket.
I want to give you a ticket, I said.

Haboo, the speaker says into the ear of a mare straining in birth—“what the Skagit children said//when the storyteller stopped://keep the story going.” In this collection of poems, Goodan keeps the story going—a story that has been unfolding from the beginning of Earth’s time: life, death, sowing, harvest, burial, blood, ice-laced trees in winter, fragrant loam, rain on scree, keening wind, and the stillness that signals we are “Near the Heart of Happening.”

© Erica Jeffrey

Friday, September 21, 2007

On kisses and clothing

Is anyone else alarmed/amused/bothered/perplexed/saddened by the realization that many people won't buy used clothing at yard sales or thrift stores because it "might have germs"--or insist on fastidiously sanitizing their hands after shaking hands in greeting--but willingly have sex with a number of partners in a week? Without so much as washing their hands first?

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

An Introduction to Art Gekko (AKA An Introductory Taradiddle)

Art Gecko is the name of a movement long misunderstood in the art world. Art Gecko, which reigned supreme in interior design for about five minutes during 1926, was, of course, a direct descendant of Art Deco. The main difference between the two styles was that Art Deco’s sleek, stylized lines brought elegance to interior design, furniture and very tall buildings, whereas Art Gecko—with its overriding obsession with the gecko form—graced one very short building in Des Moines, Iowa and a rest stop near San Francisco. Both were later torn down and replaced with portable toilets.

The Art Gecko movement began shortly after the Art Deco movement was named in 1925 A.D., following the Exposition Internationale des Arts Décoratifs et Industriels Modernes in Paris. Herb Sillcox, the founder of Art Gecko (who has recently come out of hiding in an attempt to revive the movement), organized and carried out the one-man exhibition that would in turn give Art Gecko its name and small but rabid following: the Exposition Internationale des Rest Stops Décoratifs et Geckos Modernes in Des Moines.

Art Gecko was a natural and understandable effort to amend the previous century’s apparent oversight of geckos in painting, sculpture and tatting. Sillcox often bemoaned the fact that so few extant art pieces portrayed geckos in any form and medium. Whereas symmetry, simplicity and geometric patterns were characteristic of Art Deco, perhaps the only recognizable characteristic of Art Gecko was the predominant positioning of geckos in each work.
Important influences upon Art Gecko were Hulke Sillcox (Herb’s mom), whose crocheted afghans featured a gecko in every granny patch, and Bette Greenhouser, at whose notorious Des Moines card parties female guests were invited to clamp a gecko on each earlobe as they walked in the door. Cubism, with its emphasis on the geometric, had a huge impact on Art Deco—but absolutely none on Art Gecko. Sadly, no leading designers took up the banner of Art Gecko and brought it to the forefront in any of the fine or domestic arts. In fact, it would not be until the late 1970s or 1980s that a popular clothing manufacturer would place a gecko on T-shirts and other apparel, thus lending credence to Sillcox’s insistence that he had changed the way the world looked at geckos.

Art Gecko grew increasingly compulsive in its obsession with the gecko form as it became apparent to Sillcox and his handful of maladapted supporters that the movement was not a major one. While the spiritual center of the Art Gecko movement continued to be Des Moines, a disgruntled adherent who had moved to California attempted to branch off by carving geckos on the stalls of a San Francisco Bay Area rest stop. He was soon arrested for defacing public property and jailed on unrelated charges, where he spent his days writing hate mail to Herb Sillcox.

While the Art Deco form can be viewed today in Radio City Music Hall’s interior and the Chrysler Building’s exterior, there are no remaining public monuments to Art Gecko. Herb Sillcox’s storage building in Des Moines was razed in the 1960s, and the rest stop near San Francisco was destroyed in a freak fire. (Coincidentally, the erstwhile Sillcox disciple had been released from custody just two hours prior.) Art Gecko founder Sillcox promises to rebuild his movement from the ground up.

© Erica Jeffrey 2007

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Why taradiddles?

According to dictionary.com, a taradiddle is "pretentious nonsense" or "silly pretentious speech or writing," or "twaddle," or even "a fib."

Excepting "a fib," taradiddle seems a fitting description of much of the writing to follow in this blog. Thanks to drlogan for suggesting the title.

And now . . .
Book recommendation for today: The Small-Mart Revolution, by Michael H. Shuman.

If you're into graphic novels, please consider publications from the new-ish publisher Cinebook Ltd. Check out the Yakari books if you're shopping for young children. They're listed here on www.amazon.com.

And another plug . . . check out the book reviews at
www.curledup.com.

Happy midweek to you!