Thursday, July 28, 2011

Clangour of the Gong


But she stopped.  There was a smell of burning.  Could they have burned the Boeuf en Daube overboil?  she wondered, pray heaven not!  when the great clangour of the gong announced solemnly, authoritatively, that all those scattered about, in attics, in bedrooms, on little perches of their own, reading, writing, putting the last smooth to their hair, or fastening dresses, must leave all that, and the little odds and end on their washing-tables and dressing-tables, and the novels on the bed-tables, and the diaries which were so private, and assemble in the dining-room for dinner.

-Virginia Woolf
To the Lighthouse

A more fleshly bit in To the Lighthouse, but when I was reading it last night, was completely struck by the beauty of it and kept reading it over and over.  Maybe I am just a fleshly person, but it's sometimes the simple things like getting ready or being in the privacy of your own room that I find the most beautiful.

Image: New York Public Library

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Beyond the Sea


Beyond the Sea by Paul X. Johnson

I think I found a new obsession.  Just take a look at Mr. Johnson's work and try not to become obsessed.  Impossible!

Tuesday, July 26, 2011


In continuation with yesterday's post...

Monday, July 25, 2011

Meet me in the stacks


Don't you love this picture of Carol Lombard and Clark Gable?  They seem so very much in love.  I went through a huge Carol Lombard phase this winter (blame Instant Netflix) and was so interested to find out about their relationship.  They were indeed very much in love, but only married for two years when she died in a plane crash.  Gable was inconsolable and devastated -according to wikipedia- and enlisted in the army,  dedicating himself to a suggestion she had made before her death. 
I think the fact that the two are flirting in a library makes it even more perfect.

Saturday, July 23, 2011

The Summer Book by Tove Jansson


A couple weeks back I was perusing the New York Review Books- which seem to be in joyous amounts at Symposium Books in Providence- for Wish Her Safe at Home by Stephen Benatar, a review I read at Stuck in a Book.  Regrettably it wasn't there, but I did find another on Simon's list, The Summer Book by Tove Jansson.  I'll give it a go, I thought, I dare say it is summer.

Now, I'll be honest, it took me about 75 pages to get into it, and at 170-odd pages that's almost halfway through, but now that I'm finished, I haven't been able to stop thinking about it and actually fancy a reread.  A series of short stories (I hate the word vignette, although it's probably a more accurate word - maybe it's just how so many people seem to use it wrongly) about a grandmother and her granddaughter living on a island for the summer off of Finland.  All of the stories have an almost ethereal feel to them, like foggy memories put into writing, which I think is what I found divergent to what I have been reading lately.  It took me a while to get into it, but once I did I didn't want loose that distant feel.  She has a bit of a Virginia Woolf-style to the way she writes, in fact, when I was reading it I kept on thinking about Mrs. Dalloway.  Did anyone else find this or am I just imagining things?


With it, brought back vivid memories of my childhood growing up on the coastline in Rhode Island.  Playing in the woods until our legs were covered in scratches.  Digging for clams out on a sandbar during low tide.  Swimming off of docks that weren't ours, then hiding from the owners behind rocks, so we wouldn't get in trouble.  Then ending the night in absolute exhaustion, passing out, face in pillow.  Sophia and her grandmother's experiences were the same and Tove Jansson was telling us about her own childhood through them.  Our Finnish family friend (alliteration much?) often tells us how similar the New England coastline can be to that of Scandinavia, which I think is why I related so much to the descriptions of landscapes and their mindset.  I wonder if it is something about having to survive such brutal winters desperately waiting for a too short summer that makes us similar?

When a rich businessman builds a house on a nearby island, I could feel for them, watching their precious views being disrupted by the big, modern and ugly:

A business built a house on Blustergull Rock.  At first, no one mentioned it.  They had developed a habit, over the years, of not talking about painful things, in order to make them less painful.  But they were very much aware of the house.
People who live on islands are always letting their eyes glide along the horizon.  They see the lines and curves of the familiar skerries, and the channel markers that have always stood in the same spots, and they are strengthened in their calm awareness that the view is clear and everything is in its place.  Now the view was no longer clear.  It was broken by a big square house, a new and threatening landmark, a deep notch in the aspect of a horizon that had been their own for a very long time...

I was really moved by The Summer Book, not only for what I related to but also the emotional connection between the two leading ladies.  With gorgeous imagery, Jansson throws us back into her past and most importantly helps us to remember our own!  Gracious, I loved it.

Side note:  Images are mine taken of a lovely tidal pool I've gone to forever.  It's one of the few places undiscovered (mostly) by tourists and where one can spend the day in the crystal clear water without a soul around you.  It fills up so much you have to dive down to touch the bottom - then empties until it's only ankle deep...something that has never ceased to amaze me.  I won't tell you here where it is, but if you come for a visit, it will be first on my grand tour.

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Io Non Ho Paura

 
This past weekend I watched the Italian film by director Gabriele Salvatores, Io Non Ho Paura or I'm not Scared.  I actually started reading the book by Niccolo Ammaniti when I was in Italy, but left it in my apartment in the confusion of moving.  It's won endless awards and been translated in many languages for good reason.  Ammaniti wrote the screenplay which I think made this book transition into film perfect.  It will fill you with suspense and also melt your heart, which is why I won't tell you any of the plot line...I'll leave it for you to find out.  But with all that and the cinematography, scenery, amazing acting and soundtrack, I think this is one of my new favorite Italian films, right next to Nights of Cabiria.


Monday, July 18, 2011

The Grist 1936, Continued

Now back to scheduled programming...last we met we were discussing the lives of Ernestine and F. Justin.*


Let us now take a look at one of the University's many sororities.  Although there was no instant messaging, Facebook and texting, lasting friendships were easier to keep and maintain; and with Delta Zeta we have no exception.  Especially in Miss James and Miss Fitzpatrick's (center row, two farthest to the left) case.  Nadine James and Margaret Fitzpatrick both grew up in tenement houses in Providence and Boston.  Each with several siblings under them, the wish to move away was inevitable.  They both decided to go to University in the country -close and yet far enough from home- even though a career wasn't what they had in mind.  They became fast friends and were married around the same time, naturally being each other's maid-of-honor.  When the time came to buy a house, Nadine's husband found a nice place in Wakefield.  Nadine noticed a 'for sale' sign next door and quickly told Margaret.  Although it was above their budget Margaret and her husband put a down payment on the large Victorian on Elm Street.  Both girls had girls of their own, who shared their mothers friendship.  When Nadine's husband died, Margaret and her husband invited Nadine over for dinner every night, never without walking her home. 


I love the classy gals over at the Portia Club. 

"The Portia Club sponsered women's debating activities very successfully during the year.  The extensive schedule included frequent trips and home debates."

Look at those fur coats and that style.  Tweed was definitely the must have, non? This was the Great Depression, mind you.  I have a feeling that these ten girls went on to be great successes in life, as what happens with most people who belong to a Debate Team.


Lest we forget the token 'Chariots of Fire' track team shot.  The yearbook was full of them, and it should be noted that Childs was viewed as a prospect for the 1936 Olympics in Berlin.  Unfortunately he lost his place to local Narragansett Indian, Tarzan Brown.

*All material has been fictionalized.