Monday, November 30, 2009

I hate to admit it,

but the Bears do suck.

In a half-hearted attempt to bring some levity to what is making football season pretty dismal in our household:

I find this rather amusing.
(not suitable for work)



And this list of 20 Things Worth Knowing About Beer is rather amusing as well.
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Sunday, November 29, 2009

The Book of Lost Things

Finished this.



John Connolly wrote an incredible novel. It's one of the books that I wish I had written. It has a gorgeous mix/melding of mythology (or in this case, folklore) interwoven into the story. I would have finished reading this one at least four minutes earlier but I was having a hard time reading the last few pages through my tear-filled eyes.
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Wednesday, November 25, 2009

A Short History of Myth

Finished this.

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Sunday, November 22, 2009

The Angel's Promise

Finished this.



I'm not sure if it was just me or the fact that this was a translated French novel, but in reading the 495 pages, I almost gave up on this book at least a half-dozen times. It was slow plodding through the first three quarters of it at least. But I may just not understand the pacing of a French novel.

The end justified the means.
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Monday, November 16, 2009

Coming up on two years...

Thanksgiving is November 26th this year.

Two years ago, on November 26th, one of my grandma's died.

She was something.

I'm still having a difficult time coming to terms with my grandma's death. Yeah. Two years after.

I can't say that she was always pleasant to be around, though from my eulogy (which follows) you'd be hard pressed to find much of anything negative about her. That's probably part of the confliction that's niggling at me now.

Even two years after her death, I'm really having a hard time believing that she's dead. (I typed over that last word more than a half-dozen times. "dead" or "gone." I'm opting for dead because apparently she's not *gone* as far as this narrative is going.

Indulge me, if you will, a bit of reminiscence.

My grandma made the nastiest chop suey that was ever eaten by human beings. If it was a leftover in the fridge, and it didn't (appear to) have anything fungal or microbial growing on it, it was fair game to be cut into very small pieces and mixed with rice to become chop suey.

My grandma had geese, Huey and Louey. On at least a couple of occasions. White geese. They lived on her property and ate grass and goose feed that she would give them. And they shit in the pond. And everywhere else. Geese are, well, how should I put this... Um... they're not very sociable when it comes to other living creatures. In fact, they can be downright mean. And when my brother and I would play out in grandma's yard, they would, if we wandered too close to them, vent their anger, with loud goose hisses and a flurry of flapping wings. Quite terrifying to us, being pre-pubescent and not all that aggressive. But when we would tell Grandma about this, she would remind us that we should probably stay away from the geese because, in essence, they were wild animals. When I was 10, the immediate family clan went to Grandma's for Thanksgiving.

As was already mentioned. Grandma was never mistaken for a gourmet chef. C'mon, eggplants from the garden that she grew should probably never have been sliced and put into spaghetti what was tomato sauce, said eggplants, a bit of leftover catfish head boilings and noodles. I mean, really.

But that's an aside, I guess. Once again, forgive. After obligatory mingling we were invited to the table. For the Thanksgiving Feast.

It was, as I remember it, a wonderful bounty. There was a huge bird, roasted to golden perfection, in the center of main table that my grandpa proceeded to carve up with deft excellence, every slice juicier that the one before. A mound of smashed potatoes higher than my head that steamed to one side. A pile of corn, perfectly boiled and steeping in butter and its own juices, Stuffing nearly falling out of its bowl, the scent making me mad with hunger. Cranberry sauce, gelled and shimmering in its tart tang. Everything. Everything smelling and looking so wonderful. And I was given my helping. And I dove in. And ate with complete relish.

"Wow," and an uncle finally said, "This is so wonderful."

Mind you, we didn't always say that the food was wonderful because it was wonderful. Most times, the food was complimented because it was food. As I've said, Grandma was not a Chef.

"Thank you," my grandma said, smiling.

"This is the best turkey I can remember having," the uncle continued. "Where did you get it?"

"Oh," my grandma answered, "It's not a turkey. It's Huey. Or maybe Louey. Those damned geese kept coming after me whenever I went to feed them, I just got tired of them. I had Hank take care of them."

And Thanksgiving went on from there. I'm sure I had bits and portions of those geese for years to come.

But this was all an aside. Just a bit of reminiscence. Not all that pleasant, but hey, not all of life is pleasant.

I'm thinking of my grandma because she always pressed me. When I stopped going to grad school, she asked me, on quite a few occasions, when I was going to go back and finish my graduate degree.

In 1990, I earned a Bachelor of the Arts in English. I had a minor in philosophy. I went on to graduate school with the (at the time) thought, that I would one day teach in a University environment. Things didn't happen that way and I dropped out of graduate school. And I was never able to explain to my grandma why I didn't finish my graduate degree.

My grandma was a go-getter. She got her degrees like nobody's business. She got a teaching degree that had her teaching art. I remember being a little boy and going to her house for the weekend and having students from her art class come to work on projects, and she had me working (in my own, little boy way) also work the project. And then, years later, I ended up being a student in one of the schools that she had taught at. There was a file cabinet in a classroom that I went to that had her name, in her hand, markered on it.



A number of years after her art teaching spree she went on to law school. She did phenomenally well. And she became a lawyer. It was in her lawyer phase that she actually questioned my stopping going to school. Asking me when I would finish my degree.

I'm not going to finish my degree, Grandma. I never wanted to teach students. I don't have that in me.

But I want to make art, like you did.

I gave you something that I made one time. Very late in your life. It was a compilation/collage kind of thing. I really thought you would like it. I brought it to a party that was being held for someone. I don't remember who the party was for. But I was shy about giving it to you. So when I finally asked you to come to my car so I could present it to you, and then bring it to your car so you could take it with you, I was shivering even though it was summer. Yes, I was, as I probably always will, still yearning for your acceptance.

I gave to you. And you were acceptant. You took my work. And you doted.

Then, not long afterward, you learned you would die.

The gift I had given you was in your garage. I had been since I had given it to you.

You asked, after you knew you were dying, but before you told anyone else, if you could give it away to my cousin, because your garage was getting pretty full. I said yes.

I really miss you, Grandma. So very much.



-----------------------------


My Eulogy for my grandma

Most of this is taken from something I wrote for my for my grandma's journal. She had asked that her sons and grandchildren each write a page for her journal that recounted our personal memories of being a member of this Engels clan. Mnemosyne: She's the ancient Greek goddess of memory and the mythic inventor of words. I'm not real strong when it comes to the ol' memory-department of my early childhood, but here go some words.
I have a number of clear memories from my childhood with my grandma; they range from my sitting on the floor to read a book in front of the chair she was sitting in and having her scratch my scalp and stroke my hair, to her teaching me how to swim by tossing me (wearing one of those orange life vests, of course) into the gently drifting waters of the Kankakee River. I remember nestling on the couch with both Grandma and Grandpa and a huge bowl of stove-popped popcorn to watch All in the Family, Grandma and Grandpa singing their respective parts of the opening theme song.
I remember when their Momence mailbox was at a far corner of their property because the mailman didn't drive any further down the dirt road that led to their driveway. At that time going to get the mail was a wonderful mini adventure; when my brother and I were old enough to make the trip to get the mail without an adult, it was a sign of being one step closer to being grown up. I also remember when we raised worms in a bathtub that was buried beside the house and whenever any of us would find a worm we'd bring it to the worm party. Reading, swimming, sewing projects, tadpoles and bullheads in the pond, wandering in the woods and sitting on the "bench" that was actually a plank between two trees that had grown to hold it into a platform, clearing huge piles of scrub brush from their property and piling it around a fire pit in which I would roast garden grown onions I'd wrapped in aluminum foil. These are just flickers of the many memories that flutter like moths around the flame of whom I've become.
Grandma was a perpetual entrepreneur, in business dealings as well as of life. She taught my brother and me our first lesson on working for wages: She calculated how many hours she thought it would take the two of us to deepen their crawlspace and told us that instead of paying us by the hour she would give us the lump sum on our completion of the task and if we got it done faster than the time she had calculated, she would have another job for us if we wanted, thus giving us the opportunity to earn more money by taking the job on a flat rate basis.
Probably the most important thing that she taught me, though, ultimately stemmed from the Red-Winged Blackbird.
When I was a young boy my brother and I would often spend summer weekends with Grandma and Grandpa. By the time I was seven or so I had already begun to show a slight predilection towards art, drawing in particular. With Grandma having been an art teacher, my brother and I always had supplies for drawing and painting. Now, decades down the road, and with a son of my own, I regret the environmentally spurred switch that grocery stores have made to plastic bags; paper grocery bags were always the best "sketch" paper to work out ideas before committing them to one of our art tablets.
One Saturday it got into my mind to draw red-winged blackbirds. I made some sketches, but was not very happy with them. When I showed them to my grandma to ask for her advice, she didn't comment on the quality of the figures. In essence, her "critique" for me was to pay attention to details. I, of course, was confused. These (self-perceived) misshapen scrawls were a disappointment to me, so I gave up on them.
The next morning we woke as usual with the air filled with the echoing coos of mourning doves and then we went to church. On the drive back from church, Grandma pointed out a number of red-
winged blackbirds and asked me to look at them, paying attention to the details. I did, memorizing each individual as best as my little mind could. When we got back home, grandma asked me to get my drawings from the day before. I had already smushed them up.
I flattened them as best I could and brought them to her. She asked me to look at the pictures and then look in my mind at the memories I had from the drive home and to compare them. I did, and my hopeless lumps were not too encouraging. I said nothing.
After a few minutes Grandma finally said that the drawings themselves were fine and that the only thing she would change is the fact that I had one of my red-winged blackbirds standing on a wire strung between two fence posts. I'm sure I looked more confused so she explained that red-winged blackbirds always perch on verticals. I searched my memories from the morning, and she was right but when I had been drawing them the day before, I hadn't made that connection.
After high school, I packed up my bags and went off to college. Initially I had envisioned myself going into a pre-law program and then going on to law school, following in my grandma's footsteps. As I discovered more and more of myself in college, though, I realized that her steps were not going to be mine in that particular regard. I still carried with me, though, the lesson she taught me of paying attention to detail.
I actually enrolled in an entry level drawing class even though I was not an art student and hadn't had an art class since junior high. I got an A (some of the art majors got grades as low as C-
minuses) and enjoyed the class thoroughly, though by then I had already settled on a course-load focusing mainly on English and, secondarily, Philosophy.
I had already begun to apply the attention to detail to my creative writing and had been told by many that it is one of the strengths of my writing, both fiction and poetry. My stories and poems are positively littered with the shards of memories I have of spending weekends with my grandparents.
I don't think I'll ever square dance or SCUBA dive. I am not a teacher, not a lawyer, nor any sort of entrepreneur. In my life, though, I try, in my own way, to meld some of the things that Grandma did and was. I continue to write stories and poems, paying attention to the details of the world around me. Grandma had a zeal for life that I've never experienced in anyone else. She reached out for and took hold of, with her mind and with her heart, everything within reach and much that was not. She reached the unreachable and attained the unattainable. Thank you, Grandma, for teaching by example. We all miss you.
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Sunday, November 15, 2009

The Writers Journey:

Mythic Structure for Writers,

2nd Edition

Finished this.

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Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Cross Country

Finished this.



It's another Alex Cross novel by James Patterson. Really nothing to say except that it's a mindless (and for me, entertaining) read.
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Monday, November 9, 2009

Another great thing about Autumn...

(not my image)

Geese flying overhead low enough that I can hear the wind flowing through their feathers.
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Saturday, November 7, 2009

Once and Future Myths:

The Power of Ancient Stories in Our Lives

Finished this.



I especially liked (though I wasn't expecting to at the outset) the last chapter/essay: "The Myth of Sports." I should send a copy of it to my friend EDP
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Monday, November 2, 2009

On the Job:

Behind the Stars of the Chicago Police Department

Finished this.



Mouse took Ursa Minor and me to HalloweeM 34. We had a great time, and one of the speakers that I went to see was Daniel P. Smith, talking about his above-mentioned book. He made a great presentation and I really enjoyed his book.

I think my favorite snippet is this:

Often in his [undercover] role as a priest blending into the city's background, [Officer Rick] King provided close cover to any number of his colleagues who played the role of would-be victim, the easy target inviting crime to come his or her way.


"I'll never forget Art Novitt and his Superman costume," says King, recalling one of the unit's most notorious tales. "His wife was an excellent seamstress and put together this Superman costume for him that would have made Hollywood jealous. Fit him perfectly."


Novitt served as the centerpiece in a pickpocket set-up in the city's underground El stations. The group positioned Novitt, clad in the royal blue outfit with a blaring S on the chest, in one of the worker's booths. The team then removed the hinges of the door and rigged fire extinguishers to release cloudy gas upon the door being pushed open by Novitt. The act only began, however, when the decoy, playing the part of a drunken construction worker with money hanging out of his pocked, was the robbery target.


"So the decoy was lying on the bench," tells King, "and we'd see the guy come by with big eyes once he spotted the money. And when he went for the money, Novitt would push open the door, smoke would come up, and you'd hear Novitt say, ‘Halt, wrongdoer.'"


King and the other team members then emerged from beyond the subway's corners to discover Novitt and a stunned thief amid the cloud of gas.


"We'd say, ‘Superman, Superman, what's the problem?' and he'd say how this guy was trying to take the man's wallet. We'd thank Superman and lead the man away. Then, Novitt ran down the platform and it would look like he jumped off the side and began flying down the tunnel. You couldn't help but chuckle at the situation."


The next day in court the thief pleaded guilty, something King says all the pickpockets did, giving that the frequent consequence — 30 days' probation and time served — offered little punishment. In the courtroom, however, the judge asked the defendant if he had anything to offer in defense. And this rare time, the defendant spoke.


As King retells it, calling upon his repertoire of voices to play the role of judge and thief: "The guy says, ‘Well, yes, your honor, I would like to say something. It is true, I did take the man's wallet, but it wasn't the cops who arrested me, your honor. It was Superman.' All I remember was the judge shaking his head, thinking this one was new, and then giving the guy 30 days and an evaluation by a doctor.


"You have to allow yourself a laugh or two no this job, you have to break the monotony of things because most of what you see is the negative — it's ‘gallows humor,' making light of awful situations just to save your sanity."

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Sunday, November 1, 2009

The Joys of Autumn

I and the boy raked leaves. Lots of leaves.

The neighbors have a *huge* maple tree. We take their leaves every year and dump them into our garden to compost over the winter.

There are a lot of leaves every year.

The boy did a great job helping. And he sure had a great time afterward.







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