With Good News Comes…

For me, good news often means more work. One day, my good news will be the result of my hard work not the reason for it. But here is some recent good news that I will be updating on frequently.

For the month of April I will be showing my artwork at the Whole Foods gallery uptown. It is also Earth Month and they thought it would be a perfect fit since I use a lot of recycled materials. I have spent the last few weeks trying to figure out how to mount my photos to wood and frame them without glass. It was constant experimentation – which adhesive works with which archival spray, which works with which gloss spray. Which was the smoothest, didn’t run, didn’t destroy the color. How many coats? Well, combination solved. Now I will be able to offer various sizes of my prints. I plan on offering at least 3 sizes (small, medium, large) but I hope to one day have a range of about 5 sizes. Here is the first look at one of the prints (medium 12×12 print which frames to roughly 16×16). My main problem right now is trying to find wood. It’s been slim pickings at the salvage yards, but I plan to have about 20-30 pieces up for the show. More details to come… Please excuse the phone photos of my work.

St. Charles

Alabama Swinger

Optimism

Also, on the academic front, I will be giving a presentation at the Friends of Cabildo lecture series on Thursday, May 10th at the Cabildo, 701 Chartres Street.

The Cabildo. Photo from their website

I will be speaking about the research for my book on the late nineteenth-century newspaper, the Mascot. I also secured special guest stars: Andrew Ward, Veronica Russell, and Trixie Minx! I am not going to tell you their part in the lecture, I’m going to be leaving that for a surprise, but it will be awesome. (I am also going to give a lecture in the fall to art/history docents, and they mentioned the possibility of ongoing lecturing as my work continues to expand). My speech at the Cabildo will be forty-minutes to an hour with fifteen minutes of questions.

While I am excited, I am a bit anxious. Trying to figure how to balance everything has always been a challenge. I am going to have to be very diligent, as March is already pretty full with social obligations.

Once again, I am grateful for my friends who are always willing to lend a hand – whether it is dog walking, feeding me, offering opinions and suggestions, or forgiving me when I sometimes flake out or hide.

Deep breaths, deep breaths, deep breaths!

Posted in Art, New Orleans, Photography, Research, The Mascot | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Muses Recap

Muses has come and gone. Another sensational experience. We had a lot of stops and starts along the way, and this was one of the longest ones I have ever skated – but still awesome! It was, however, the first year that more of my old friends did not skate than actually did. I was definitely feeling the absence of some of my friends: Trixie, Wit, Chess, VvD, BeAtch, Crusty, Lacy, Deb, Deuce, MILF, Sophie, SlayedHer, Cheap. I wish they could have been there but I was thrilled to see some of my old teammates: Slaughter (co-captain), Cougar, and Bea (not technically a Punch but we still regard her as one since she was one of our favorite subs). And the always delightful Cooney! I was also happy to see Vieux and Choke; while I never had the opportunity to skate with them they are two of my favorites of the “new” BERG.

The parade started without any major hitches. Got there on time and in place. Lovely weather. I got a good stretch at Ashley’s friend’s house.

Me and Ashley pre-wig, pre-stretch, pre-roller skates.

I got two shoes before the parade started (one from a friend and one from a trade).

Christi gave me my first shoe of the season!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I also got to see all of my favorite Elvi and they all had amazing throws for me. Thank you Paul, Scott, Joe, Matthew, and Frank. Every year it seems like they outdo their throws from the year before – and wow, do I respect that. Also two different Elvi gave me the coveted “all shook up” vibrators. Should I be flattered or… is my life that obvious? Ah, heck…

The Goddess that is Choke

My breasts have exhibited many interesting personalities when I’ve been on roller skates over the years. They have had flowers sprouting out of them, bullseyes to mark the shot, bubbles blowing out, and during this parade they spun. Sometimes I feel like I can never top my own boobs.

Skating on Magazine Street is always a warm up. Then you turn onto Napoleon Ave and the crowd dilates briefly where the police barriers are before swallowing you back up, and the streets become a bit rougher, the fans a bit more frantic, even the lighting changes. Once you hit St. Charles you know it’s ON and you just roll with it. I gave out beads, wheels, buttons, spears, and even some kisses for the enthusiastic who asked.

Here are some of my favorite moments of Muses 2012:

– Seeing all my friends on the route. Some I’d seen a few hours earlier, some it’d been way too long. But I was excited to see all of them – and wish I had just a few more moments with them.

– A Seattle rollergirl dressed to the pink nines was on the route with a bag full of swag to exchange for a wheel. I was happy to oblige and I got some sweet things: a skate tool (which I am giving to Trixie because I have two already), socks, laces, stickers and derby chocolate!

Derby Sister from Seattle!

– Telling Cougar that I was running low on throws and having her tell me (perfectly deadpan) “Oh, you should do what I do then. Only throw to Asian people.” I think I laughed for about six blocks. Later that night, the last few blocks, I saw about six young Asian girls (none older than five years old) all lined up. I turned around and handed them all something. So sweet and cute. Since we were at the end, and the truck was ahead of me, I was in no rush to catch up. I danced in the back and created my own little parade.

– During the breaks we had a lot of fans jump in and dance with us. One elderly gentleman was really flirting with all the ladies. And I loved seeing Cooney shake it down!

Ladies Man with Slaughter

– Seeing fans that I didn’t know I had. It’s a bit weird (and somewhat creepy to me) to have people come up and yell my name (albeit skate name) but still somewhat cool. And I appreciate all of their good wishes – especially since I have been retired for a few years but still love BERG.

As soon as I saw their signs I knew I had to load these ladies up with swag!

– Having serious talks with Slaughter – and her pausing to sing parts of hip-hop songs.

– Another Cougar moment – at the end of the parade where we always gather to watch (and finally drink) she was trying to trade a rubber chicken for a shoe. “Chicken for a heel?!” She told me that she wasn’t having any luck, and maybe she should quit. Hell no! She kept up and SCORED! She literally did not stop screaming and jumping up and down for ten minutes. What was even more perfect it was right around midnight – her birthday! I was so excited for her. Her smile did not stop for the rest of the night.

Cougar's moment of glory!!

The ladies of Muses were a bit low on their throws by the end of the parade, but I still managed to get some nice stuff. The weirdest stuff I got was a beer, a water, and a very heartfelt offer of an apple from a Muse. “I have nothing to give you. I would give you anything for those boobs. Anything! A koozie? I live uptown, you can come there. How about my apple? It’s the one snack I have but I’ll give it to you. DO YOU WANT MY APPLE?” In the end, I gracefully turned down her sole Granny Smith.

Wonderful, exhausting, challenging, exciting – Muses. My body is recovering, but my heart will remember. To me, it is always the official start to Mardi Gras.

The Big Easy Rollergirls in Muses 2012

Let the wild rumpus begin….! Now, if I can only stop the high squeaky excited voice that comes out during these times. How do I control that? I guess just keep putting myself in those madcap remarkable moments and practice, practice, practice.

Posted in Mardi Gras, New Orleans, Roller Derby | Tagged , , , , , , | 1 Comment

It’s Carnival Time!

It’s Mardi Gras Time again. And that means that my house is an explosion of glitter, glue guns, beads, feather and general disarray. No matter how far I plan in advance, it’s always a last-minute scramble. Every year I vow to start earlier, but it never quite seems to happen.

I am skating in Muses again this year. I really appreciate that the Big Easy Rollergirls allow their retired skaters to participate. I did not have time to light myself up again this year, and I am slightly recycling a costume from the past (damn, graduate school seriously cuts into my crafting). As usual, I will be skating, taking photos, filming, and handing out over 200 handmade throws. This year I forgot to order official BERG beads, so I will hopefully trade some with friends.

Cast-acrylic skates and BERG logos

I will also be handing out cast acrylic ornaments of the BERG logo and roller skates that have been attached to be beads, as well as handing out decorated wheels, spears, and flowers.

Big Easy Rollergirls in Muses 2011

I also have something new to debut this year – limited-edition buttons and magnets. I made special buttons for all of the derby girls, and the rest get handed out with beads. To keep with the secretive Muses tradition, they will not be revealed until the start of the parade. Give me a shout on Muses and get a little something special!

A sneak peek

I have not started my official Mardi Gras day costume yet – but let’s say I will be spinning! Let’s hope it translates on my flesh as well as it does in my head. Friday night is my recovery from Muses as well as my costume-making date with my friend who will be my evil twin this year. Bwahahahah.

I have a feeling that this year is going to be spectacular. Here’s hoping I can balance debauchery, concerts, parades, work, scholarly research, parties, and costume design in a semi-orderly package. Or just a package…

Safe but not-too-sane revelry!

HAPPY MARDI GRAS TO EVERYONE!

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14 Commandments For Writing History and Then One More

My professor Judith K. Schafer gave us a handout that was modeled after William B. Hesseltine. I would like to share it here.

THE FOURTEEN COMMANDEMENTS FOR WRITING HISTORY

  1. Thou shalt not use the present tense, nor the passive voice.
  2. Thou shalt not split thy infinitives, nor dangle thy participles, not end thy sentences with prepositions.
  3. Thou shalt not use slang. Above all, thou shall avoid modern jargon. Also trite statements. Do not use contractions in formal writing.
  4. Thou shalt not use the personal pronoun.
  5. Thou shalt not use this for the nor the for a.
  6. Thou shalt place thy time clauses first in the sentence.
  7.  Thou shalt not begin a paper with a rhetorical question. Thou shall strike thy reader hard with thy first sentence.
  8. The shalt set down things as they happened. There should be no reference later in time than the subject thou are treating.
  9. Thou shalt beware of quotations. Do not quote from secondary sources – you can say the same thing as well as the author. Use quotes from original material (primary sources) only to enrich and enliven your work. Avoid block quotes – never more than three lines.
  10. If you want to battle with other historians, do so in the footnotes, not in the text of your paper. Use one footnote or endnote at the end of each paragraph and cite in order to the sources you used for the paragraph [Really don’t agree with this one]
  11. If you discuss methodology, do so in the introduction or in the footnotes, not in the text of the paper.
  12. Thou shall clearly identify persons about whom you write, be it Abraham Lincoln, the Battle of Gettysburg or Jesus of Nazareth. Only after that can you refer to the as Lincoln, or Gettysburg (but never as Abraham or Uncle Abe).
  13. Thou shalt not be judgmental. If you discover that some historical figure made an unwise decision, remember you have the benefit of hindsight.
  14. Always give credit in the footnotes for any ideas that are not your own.

Overall, very good advice, but I would like to add one more from my friend Will Burdette:

  1. Thou shalt NOT SUPPOSE!

My research continues…

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There is Nothing Discrete About a Chainsaw #1

On Martin Luther King Jr. Day, my friend John and I took my dogs to Holy Cross for a romp and adventure.

Glorious Fannie unaware some of these logs will one day be in her home.

We go there a few times a month as it is filled with diverting smells and appetizing driftwood courtesy of the Mississippi River. The chance of my dogs needing a bath afterward is fairly high, but the chances of them being content and sleeping for 36 hours afterward is even higher.

The river has been really low lately and we walked along the mud, fished Fannie out of the river, and led Django to spots that we believed had the most delectable pieces of driftwood.

I have been toying with the idea of getting a side table made out of a log for quite awhile now, but when I stood on this one tree trunk that had made its way down the Mississippi and lodged itself almost ceremonially among the others, I decided I had found the piece I wanted.

One of the great things about John is that he is game for anything. Anything. So when I mentioned it he immediately told me he was on board. Not knowing how long we’d have this tide, I started texting John the next morning asking him if he could get a hold of chainsaw for me by the time I got off of work. Maybe ask Paul, who also has a collection of machetes, builds scooters, brews his own beer, and makes flan. Yup, Paul had one. I made arrangements with my boss to get off early because I knew I would be working against the light.

The grand scope of it all

 

After changing, John met me at home and we drove over to Holy Cross. I had big ambitions. Cut about 6 logs – enough to make a couple side tables for me and some for friends. I’ve handled a chainsaw before, cutting firewood growing up, and I was convinced it would be fairly quick in-and-out job.

Cutting logs with the Donald Trump comb over.

I didn’t consider that the chainsaw was smaller than I was used to and that the log was 4x the size of what I was used to, or that the log was wet and therefore more heavy and surely over 125 lbs, or that it was getting dark, and it was possibly illegal what we were doing. Just minor details. And getting the log up the steep levee once we finished cutting it? Never entered my mind.

 

 

 

 

The Facts of the Case:

2.5 hours is how long it took us to cut and transport two logs to John’s car.

Once is how many times the cops stopped us.

19 inches is how wide across the log is.

45 degrees is the rough angle of the levee.

150 lbs is my best guess on how much the log weighed.

Four hands is the number it took to push up the hill

90% is the amount John cut due to me not bringing a wrap for my wrist.

61 is the age of the man who offered to help us lift the first log.

9,10, and 11 are the ages of the kids who helped us lift the second log.

3 is the number of high fives and hugs we got from the kids afterward.

Only the beginning

A view from the side

After John and I sawed the first piece and laboriously rolled it up the hill a man from a nearby house shouted out and asked us if we needed any help.

The real journey begins

I told him thanks, but we had it under control. Then we actually tried to lift it into John’s car…  John went down and knocked on the man’s door and he immediately left his television and came over to help us. The two of them applied the appropriate brawn and lifted it up without any problems.

After realizing how arduous the first log was, John and I agreed to just start on the second log – but then we both became fairly involved in it and stayed until we finished, working that chainsaw by only the lights of the nearby ships. Rolling the second log up was much more difficult than the first, not only because we were both physically exhausted and it was even heavier than the first one, but because it had a large knot on its side. With several heaves, though, we got it atop the levee and over to the car.

There was no way the two of us were going to be able to lift it though. John went back down to the house but a lady told him that her nephew Derrick just drove the man to the bus stop, but when he got back in ten minutes, she would send him to help us. John and I settled in by the side of the car to wait when a young boy on a scooter came by and started asking me questions – what was I doing, was that a real chainsaw, what was I making? A couple of minutes later, two other little kids showed up, a boy and a girl, and informed us that Derrick wouldn’t be back soon so their grandmother sent them to help us. The boy we had been talking to threw down his scooter and got very excited to help us as well. They all grabbed at the log, insisting that they were strong enough, and informed me that they could even do it without me or John.  Not wanting to squash their enthusiasm, I told them to wait just a minute. I lined them up – “All right, let me feel your muscles.” They all flexed and I felt each of their arms, oohing and ahhing over their magnificent strength. Then the boy with the scooter wanted to feel my arms. “Sure,” I told him, flexing my arm. I thought at least he’d give me some credit, but he gave my bicep a squeeze and then gave me a very unimpressed “hmmphf.” I didn’t let this cloud my focus.

Still not convinced, and definitely not wanting any of the kids to get hurt, I conceded to John’s “why not” look and the five of us crowded around the log and on the count of three, hoisted it into the back of John’s truck. Success! The kids were all so excited and immediately started hugging me and John and giving us high-fives.

My strong helpers

They then posed with me in front of the logs (which you can’t really see) and I promised to bring them copies of the photo. With that, we headed home, filthy and weary but with two badass sections of tree trunk in tow (plus a third we found that didn’t need to be cut).  Back at the house, it took Glenn’s hand truck to get the logs out of the back of John’s truck and through to my back porch.

On to the next step.

Beautiful bark

The bark on the side of the log that had been in the mud came off with only a crowbar, but the bark on the drier side was much more difficult so I incorporated a hammer as well. It’s difficult to be delicate with a crowbar.

Fish

I can already tell this stump is going to be a beauty and I have named him “Fish” after the fish pattern in the grain that I discovered about halfway through the bark removal process. I have named the other one “Bump” because of the large knot on his side.

My plan is once I remove the bark, to let it dry (this could take weeks) and then sand it, level it (I am probably going to have to get someone to do that) and then perhaps stain and coat it. There has always been something about wood that I love – I can’t really describe it. It is calming just sitting on my back porch for hours and removing bark. Beautiful day, animals about me, my mind able to relax and wander… And soon I will have a lovely new piece of furniture with another great memory… And hopefully, eventually I will have some for my friends as well.

Until next time...

I am investing in a chainsaw of my own.

Thank you John, Glenn, Paul, 61-year old he man, and kids of Holy Cross!

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Birthday Wishes to Ali

Happy 70th Birthday, Muhammad Ali. You are still the greatest.

In honor of Ali’s birthday I would like to mention Neil Liefer. Liefer was the one who took the iconic photo of Ali during the Sonny Liston fight in 1965. That photograph is considered one of the greatest sports photograph of all time, but oddly enough it didn’t make any magazine covers or any awards. Liefer was a very young photographer at the time and was seated in what was not exactly considered the “money” spot. If you look closely at the photograph you will see a horde of photographers on the other side of Ali, and between his legs, Herbie Scharfman, a very esteemed photographer.

Liefer once said that shooting sports is being in the right place at the right time. In an interview he stated, “What the good sports photographer does is when it happens and you’re in the right place, you don’t miss. Whether that’s instinctual or whether it’s just luck, I don’t know.”

Liefer’s favorite photo he ever shot (and one of the few hanging in his home) is the aerial shot of Ali vs. Cleveland Williams. He climbed up and positioned his camera in the rafters and then shot it via remote from ringside. It’s a beautiful, abstract, completely unique shot that can never be replicated. Aside from the perfect positioning and completely original perspective, the white canvas hearkens metaphorically back to a different era. Today, the canvas is littered with a myriad of logos and promotions. Everyone paying for the chance to associate (and exploit) themselves with greatness. The photo is clean and pure – in an oddly triumphant, violent way.

So happy birthday to Ali and hats off to Liefer, from one artist capturing another and giving us the gift to experience it forever.

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Narrative is a…

To quote one of my old professors who emailed me this week on the topic, “writing narrative is a bitch.”

I think it’s more like a demon from hell. Yea.

While I believe writing in the narrative form to describe real-life events has become more widely accepted in the scholarly community, I still don’t know if it garners the proper respect. And it should! Lordy, it should!

My professor Joel Dinerstein suggested I read Sin in the Second City: Madams, Minsters, Playboys, and the Battle for America’s Soul by Karen Abbott. It is about a famous brothel run by two sisters in Chicago in the early 1900s. I was familiar with the book because my good friend Amanda had given to me a few years back. I just needed to find it on my bookshelf. It was a great recommendation. Take for instance these paragraphs:

Minna navigated the silk couches, the easy chairs, and the grand piano, the statues of  Greek goddesses peering through exotic palms, the bronze effigies of Cupid and Psyche, the imported rugs that swallowed footsteps. She had an odd walk, a sort of caterpillar bend and hump, pause and catch up, as the poet Edgar Lee Masters, a friend and frequent client, described it. She came to rest before a wide-paneled window and swallowed, her throat squeezing behind a brooch of diamonds thick as a clenched fist. Holding back the curtain, she surveyed Dearborn Street.

Arc lamps stretched up and out, unfurling bold ribbons of light. The air was thick and yellow, as if the varnish manufacturer on the next block had slathered his product across the sky. Visibility was reduced to the next street, or the next corner, or sometimes just the next step. No matter: Minna didn’t have to see the Levee district to know what it was up to (xxi).

At face value, it’s a lovely couple of paragraphs that really set the scene. When I look at it from a scholarly perspective I think, “that must have been a bitch to write.” To hunt, peck, scrounge, crawl on your belly for details that you then must turn into a dose of nuance – it’s an admirable feat. I can only pray that I spin a few paragraphs like that in my work. As of now, writing about the offices of the Mascot, even in the barest sense, took finding old court documents, having them sit in a dehumidifier for three days, and then painfully going over the handwritten pages for clues.

The exterior of the New Orleans Parish Prison (from "Illustrated American")

I have had some serious stumbling blocks this week thus far on Chapter Two in regards to the Mascot’s first libel trial. I wanted some description of the Parish Prison (since the editors of the Mascot eventually spent some time there). I wanted some more personal details on Watson Van Benthuysen, and I wanted some more physical descriptions of Mayor Shakspeare and the city council building. After hours and hours (that add up to days), I have found some information in a variety of sources. But is it enough? Is it ever enough?

The greatest artists/athletes/musicians make it look easy. When they are onstage performing, on the field, or in front of their work, you don’t see the sacrifice, you only see the effortless perfection. Isn’t that what everyone should strive for?

But here is a little something I am leaving you with. Something that will probably not make the book, but in my search, I found this in a typed and bound book from the WPA (Works Progress Administration) from 1939. It is a WPA summary of a series of 1895 newspaper articles (which I found and read – amazing) about the old Parish Prison in New Orleans, on the “gloomy and forbidding” square bounded by Orleans, Marais, St. Ann and Treme:

It is an old legend of the parish prison, reciting how a fiery-headed, pock-marked, worthless old drunken woman hanged herself in a cell, which ever after was visited by her in ghostly counterpart of her former self. Prisoners who were placed in that cell, complained that, at dead of night, some spirit hand pulled their pillows from under their hands, and that on opening their eyes they saw an apparition of a wrinkled, ugly woman glaring at them, with blood-shot, horrible eyes, and inviting by imperious gestures, to hang themselves. The stories were not credited by the prison officials, but after several suicides had happened in that cell, and after many prisoners had made the night hideous, by yells and screams, due to the presence of the supposed ghost, the cell was abandoned.

Interior of the Orleans Parish Prison (from "Illustrated American")

I have made a willful decision to write my book on the Mascot in a narrative form. More than anything, I want to do this amazing project justice.

I just hope the bitch doesn’t kill me.

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From Penthouse to White House: 2011 Year in Review Part 5

THE YEAR OF NEW WORK SPACES!

My house is no longer a workplace!!! I moved into two new studios – one for my art and another for work! Yes, I now have my own art space to create and mess up without worrying about my cat Zelda climbing into anything or my pups Fannie and Django “helping” me. I got sick of everything being stored in a millon places. Plus, the owners have big plans for the building – they want to build a cafe and some galleries. Very exciting. It was also perfect timing because my art has been doing pretty well this year and I really needed to expand my space.

One of the many work stations

My bike Zippy in the studio

Old gym lockers - perfect place for storage!

Trixie helped get my website and blog up and running. I got into the Arts Council Art Market at Palmer Park and have been showing there since June. I also show at Freret Market. They are both great markets with different vibes but both allow artists the opportunity to make a living and create on their terms, as well as make art (and the artist) accessible to a much larger and more diverse crowd than your usual gallery. I love showing at the markets, and always enjoy eating the food from the vendors, listening to the musicians, viewing other artists’ works, and talking with customers. It’s a lot of work, but I hope to do even more next year.

I also finally perfected something I had been working on for a few months with the help of my friends Glenn May and Eric Stamp.

This one is called "Helping Hands"

After screening some of my photography images onto organic hemp, I stretch them on birch, and then frame them using local, salvaged wood (I now carry construction gloves in my car for spontaneous dumpster diving or wood inspection). I hope to use some of these images this year to help benefit some charities. I also hope to expand the project.

Moving into a new office has allowed me to have my own mini-photography studio in the back.

New little studio in my work office.

It’s pretty much functional now as of this week (still slowly decorating – it allows me to keep my front desk fairly minimalistic while I can go cazy in the studio). Not only does the space make it so much easier to shoot portraits and still life, but all of my equipment is in one space and not piled up in my office/guest room. It’s much more efficient and at the same time helps my home feel more like a home. And speaking of home…

Last year, I was finally able to do some long overdue repairs on my house – some “sexy” ones (new granite kitchen counters, bricked the front patio and sidewalk, new dishwasher, new bed, front patio fountain and planters, backyard fountain out of old bathtub) and some “unsexy” ones (new attic ladder, chimney tucked and pointed, new patio roof, and side window repair). I have always had the renovating bug, but being able to do some major renovations has really kicked it into overdrive and I am in the middle of redoing the master bathroom and designing a new dog bed – goodbye kennel, hello crazy expensive 5-inch foam.

I have always believed that where you live and work, and what you surround yourself with, is vital to your general well-being. My well-being is doing pretty good right now. Yay!

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From Penthouse to White House: 2011 Year in Review Part 4

Since 2000, I have been writing down all of the books I read every year in my journal. I like to keep track of what I read and try to make improvements. I am hoping that posting this list will encourage me to read more.

Here are (in no particular order) books (and plays) I read this year for school, book club, research, and just plain enjoyment. Sometimes they all just blur together. A little bit down from last year (35), but to be fair, I probably read well over two hundred scholarly articles.

I want to read more books in 2012. I usually try and read a couple from the Pultizer Prize list, but will have to make that a priority this year. And I have been reading two different Lincoln biographies forever that I need to finish…

  •  Their Eyes are Watching God – Zora Neale Hurston (2nd time)
  • The Help – Kathryn Stockett
  • Mrs. Warren’s Profession – George Bernard Shaw
  • The French Quarter – Herbert Asbury
  • Dust Tracks on a Road – Zora Neale Hurston
  • The Great Southern Babylon – Alecia Long
  • Sarah’s Key – Tatiana de Rosnay
  • Brothels, Depravity & Abandoned Women – Judith Schaffer (I actually met her to talk with her about my research and she was awesome! Very funny)
  • The Bluest Eye – Toni Morrison
  •  Sula – Toni Morrison
  •  Storyville – Al Rose (2nd time)
  • Topdog/Underdog – Suzan-Lori Parks
  • Slave Narratives – Frederick Douglas (first book I bought and read on my kindle)
  •  In the Blood – Suzan-Lori Parks
  • Fucking A – Suzan-Lori Parks
  • Jarhead – Anthony Swofford
  • African American Solider in the Civil War – Mark Lardas
  • Whip Smart – Melissa Febos
  •  Quicksand – Nella Larsen
  •  Home to Harlem – Claude McKay
  • Last Exit to Brooklyn – Hubert Selby, Jr. (BLEW MY SOCKS OFF)
  •  Graphs, Maps, Trees – Franco Moretti
  • A Light in August – William Faulkner (2nd time)
  • The Invisible Man – Ralph Ellison (4th time)
  •  The Garden of Eden – Ernest Hemingway
  • Mad Madame LaLaurie – Victoria Cosner Love & Lorelei Shannon (I need to loan this one to Trixie)
  • Sin in the Second City – Karen Abbott (Thanks, Amanda for giving me this book)
  • Welcome to the Monkey House – Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.
  • Song of Solomon – Toni Morrison (2nd time)

 Looking forward to an even better year of books in 2012!

 

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From Penthouse to White House: 2011 Year in Review Part 3

2011: The Year of Babies!

Blessed be the babies! I was an “Auntie” many times over this year.

Congratulations to all of my friends and their beautiful new additions: Ryan Thomas, (okay, he was technically 2010 but since he was November and is irresistibly cute, I am going to throw him in here) Louis Ray, Lucia Bandzuch, Trip Wang, Dylan Hecker, Lily Young, Beatrix Cannon, and Lindsey Green. Welcome to the world. You are very loved and very lucky to have such kick-ass parents!

Ryan keeps on the gloves!

After 3 baby showers, I finally get to meet the awesome Louis!

Lucia's first howl

Sweet dreams for Dylan

Lindsey is a Daddy's Girl already.

And on a selfish note – I am VERY excited for Mardi Gras this year since two of my favorite Mardi Gras Partners-in-Crime were out of commission last year due to being severely knocked up. Steph and Trixie have promised to make it up to me this year. Woo-Hoo!

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