Friday, January 17, 2025

Winter Wonderland (not!)

What I'm Watching 

New episodes of “Vienna Blood” to be continued next week and the week after.

Watched the first episode. It’s a bit over-the-top in its faithfulness to the book.


Dreaming of Birds in Trinidad





Current Reading


I found my very old paperback edition of this classic by Nobelist Gabriel Garcia Marquez.
It’s a very dense read to say the least. Long & long-winded. I’m not its perfect audience.
I was curious about how it would be made into a Netflick. Now I know.

Sometimes One Hundred Years of Solitude makes me think of Dickens. Each Dickens novel has at least one very eccentric or unusual character that’s not quite natural, but very exaggerated, and these characters provide contrasts with the other characters who are more naturalistic (though not 100%). But in this book ALL the characters are eccentric, unusual, bizarre, and beyond realistic. And sometimes it’s too strange for me. In other words, Dickens had a little slant towards magical realism, before the genre had a nice name.

One strange passage from the strange book

“He was convinced that his own officers were lying to him. He fought with the Duke of Marlborough. ‘The best friend a person has,’ he would say at that time, ‘is one who has just died.’ He was weary of the uncertainty, of the vicious circle of that eternal war that always found him in the same place, but always older, wearier, even more in the position of not knowing why, or how, or even when. There was always someone outside of the chalk cirde. Someone who needed money, someone who had a son with whooping cough, or someone who wanted to go of and sleep forever because he could not stand the shit taste of the war in his mouth and who, nevertheless, stood at attention to inform him: ‘Everything normal, colonel.’ And normality was precisely the most fearful part of that infinite war: nothing ever happened. Alone, abandoned by his premonitions, fleeing the chill that was to accompany him until death, he sought a last refuge in Macondo in the warmth of his oldest memories. His indolence was so serious that when they announced the arrival of a commission from his party that was authorized to discuss the stalemate of the war, he rolled over in his hammock without completely waking up.” (p. 161)


Another classic that I’ve been wanting to revisit. This one is fun.

An extremely short and not very satisfying sequel to
Clarke’s Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell.
Rather insipid illustrations.

Eating Out

Coffee at our local Argus Coffee shop.


Downtown: a fun diner. Wish I remembered its name! Can’t find it online.

New fried chicken shop in Maple Village Shopping Center: food pretty good, service lousy.

Carol’s Great Cooking

Carol invited us for dinner: bouillabaisse and fougasse (a special flatbread with olives)

The Back Wall of Zingerman’s Roadhouse

We haven’t eaten here lately. We should do it soon.


Sharing with the weekend people: Eileen’s Critters, Deb’s Sunday Salon, and Sami’s Murals.
Photos © 2025 mae sander for maefood.blogspot.com

Wednesday, January 15, 2025

Our Country is Burning. Our Culture is Burning

"The iconic Eames House, Getty Villa, and other Los Angeles landmarks are still at risk of destruction amid raging wildfires across Southern California. But what are the other buildings impacted by the Palisades fires?"

"For some design geeks... the heart and soul of L.A.’s architecture resides not just in its museums and office towers but also in its exalted, often otherworldly houses."


Will Roger's house, January, 2025.


"The only works of art America has given are her plumbing and her bridges"
— Marcel Duchamp

"Composer Arnold Schoenberg's archive destroyed in LA fires"

At the Senate hearings on the nominee for Secretary of Defense: "Hegseth’s past comments [about women in combat] didn’t distinguish women who meet certain standards from other women; he said women shouldn’t serve in combat, period. As recently as November — shortly before Trump picked him — he said, 'I’m straight up just saying we should not have women in combat roles.'"

"U.S. securities regulators sued Elon Musk in federal court in Washington on Tuesday in an enforcement action arising from his $44 billion purchase of Twitter, now called X."

"Donald Trump raised alarm last week when he refused to rule out military intervention to bring Greenland and the Panama Canal under US control"

"Amid the parade of surreal images from the last few days, few have been stranger than this one: a FEMA disaster recovery center for L.A. fire victims inside the former Westside Pavilion. Alongside the escalators and signs for the now-defunct movie theater in the carcass of what was once L.A.’s premiere shopping mall, dozens of government agencies have gathered to offer fire aid." 

"For President-elect Donald Trump and his supporters, the fires are a parable of liberal ineffectiveness. And the villains are Democratic politicians like the feckless mayor of Los Angeles, Karen Bass, who had left town just as the National Weather Service issued warnings about the increased dangers of the approaching winds. But the edging out of the Los Angeles middle class has been a long-running, bipartisan project. Today, the budget-slashing values of Ronald Reagan and the taxpayer revolt remain woven, by law, into the fabric of California life."
— OpEd in NYT by 

"Over the past month, we’ve learned that Donald Trump’s inauguration fund has received million-dollar donations from, among others, Google, Meta overlord Mark Zuckerberg, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and Apple boss Tim Cook. Hard to know whether it’s encouraging or quite the opposite to find them being so public about it."

Monday, January 13, 2025

The Glass Maker by Tracy Chevalier

 
Have you visited Venice? If so, you are probably aware of the glassblowing industry on the nearby island of Murano. You may have seen shops selling the art glass as well as the kitchy souvenirs that are made on the island at the present time.

Perhaps you purchased a little glass animal statue or a glass-bead necklace made in Murano. Art beads were invented by a woman in the glass-making trade in Murano (and this real person appears among the fictitious characters in The Glass Maker). Maybe you visited a demo of the ancient craft of glass-making or encountered art glass in museums or antique shops. 

Even if you have never been to Venice, you surely have some idea of the famous canals and the small boats and gondolas used to get around there. Or you may have an idea of the historic buildings and bridges. Perhaps you know about the long history of the city and its former military and commercial domination of the Eastern Mediterranean.

Tracy Chevalier’s current best-seller, The Glassmaker, explores the history of Venice by inventing a family of glass workers who lived and worked in Murano from the fifteenth century until now. In each century, the members of the family age only about a decade, and thus these miraculous individuals seamlessly experience the vast changes of history and the constant decline of the Venetian Republic. Tracy Chevalier somehow manages to make this a convincing story, despite its utter improbability!

The story’s central character, Orsola Rosso, is the main focus of the novel, beginning with her girlhood in a household that’s also a glassblowing shop. The head of the Rosso family and master artisan is first her father and after his death, her brother. The women and younger men were subordinate to them. 

Over time, Orsola teaches herself to make beautiful beads, using the glass rods that were essential in glassblowing. Her craft does not involve blowing glass, but using a flame to melt a small blob of glass and bits of colorful other glass and sometimes gold, to make a cleverly decorated bead: a technique now known as lampwork. Her identity as a skilled worker and her determination to contribute to her family’s livelihood, not simply to do women’s work (which seems to be mainly doing laundry) is a key part of the novel. As the history of Venice constantly changes the way the family needs to live, we learn both the personal stories and the march of history.

The Rosso family must deal with many challenges, including friction and rivalry between the family members, changes in demand for their craft work as the centuries pass, and quite a few hard times. During the plague years of the sixteenth century, they are quarantined with the house sealed off and sick members taken away. History more or less repeats itself in the twenty-first century, when the Covid epidemic is handled in very much the same way, and the characters in the book actively remember their experiences from centuries before. In fact, the way they remember and compare their experiences through the ages is a very fascinating aspect of the novel. It seems utterly impossible but the author makes it work!

Many characters outside the family also play a role in the story, including the dealers, rivals, and customers for the glasswares they produce, and for the shop that they eventually found to sell their wares. Tracy Chevalier has created a very interesting way to present this large amount of historic research and make it relatable. 


The author acknowledges this painting as her inspiration for the character of a gondolier of African origin. He was enslaved by the agent who bought the family’s products, and played an interesting role in the novel throughout the centuries that are covered. The image shown is a detail from a large painting.

I have only read a few of the novels of Tracy Chevalier, specifically, Remarkable Creatures, The Last Runaway, and The Glass Maker. I may read more of them eventually, as I have enjoyed them and learned from them. In 2003 when living in Santa Barbara, I attended a pre-release showing of the film “Girl With a Pearl Earring” based on her most successful book, and it was a very memorable experience to hear a lecture from the film maker along with the preliminary version.

A close look at a decorated glass bead 
from Murano made by “lampwork.” 
— source: Venetian Bead Shop

Review © 2025 mae sander

Sunday, January 12, 2025

San Diego Street Art





Near La Jolla Cove.
 






I’ve been saving some photos from our December trips to post during the long grey month of January in Ann Arbor. As we drove through San Diego, I was amazed at the number and variety of murals and other street art, and also frustrated because it’s so hard to get photos from a moving car! 

Shared with Sami’s Colorful World — Photos © 2024 -2025 mae sander

Friday, January 10, 2025

Books and Movies

Reading


The first sentence of the introduction to The Autobiography of an Ex-Coloured Man, which was published in 1912: “This vivid and startlingly new picture of conditions brought about by the race question in the United States makes no special plea for the Negro, but shows in a dispassionate, though sympathetic, manner conditions as they actually exist between the whites and blacks to-day.” 

The book is a fictional narrative of the life of one man, featuring his observations on what it meant over 100 years ago to be black both in the north and in the south (also in Paris and London). I was amazed at how many aspects of the “race question” have remained unchanged. Only the choice of words (“race question”) is different. So much is the same. The book vividly combines the specific events of one character’s life with insights about the way that being either black or white created a person’s opportunities and experiences. The protagonist/narrator is a black man who can pass for white, and thus experiences life from both points of view.

James Weldon Johnson (1871-1938) was an author, a poet, a civil rights leader, and a participant in the Harlem Renaissance. His most famous poem is “Lift Every Voice and Sing,” which is viewed as the Black National Anthem. Johnson was the head of the NAACP from 1920-1930. His novel The Autobiography of an Ex-Coloured Man is an American classic.


The latest Detective Galileo novel was a little disappointing to me. The plot wasn’t as interesting or as compelling and the suspense wasn’t as dramatic as in earlier novels in this series. If you are hooked on this series you can’t miss it!

Reading Next

The Glassmaker by Tracy Chevalier: a bestselling author whose books
 I have enjoyed reading


Watching

“A Haunting in Venice” stars Kenneth Branagh as Hercule Poirot along with an all-star cast.
Creepy but a little too contrived.

 
The final episode of  “Vera” is very emotional and nostalgic, but with a good mystery to wrap up a great series. 

Blog post shared with Deb’s Sunday Salon
© 2025 mae sander

Wednesday, January 08, 2025

Ann Arbor Afternoon with Sushi and Art

Totoro Japanese Restaurant, Ann Arbor, where we often have lunch.
Named for our favorite Miyazaki film character, the Totoro.

Soup bowls, chopsticks, and Diet Coke.

The Totoro whose creator film-maker Hayao Miyazaki just celebrated his 84th birthday.

Sushi roll

Vegetable tempura … not shown: teriyaki salmon and orange chicken.
Always a nice place to have lunch.


A Brief Visit to the Art Museum

A very ancient pot in the shape of a bird.

A Duck-Shaped Vessel made in 2004 by Korean potter Kim Yik-yung (b. 1935)


Another duck-shaped vessel, Korean, 3rd-4th Century.

Chinese snuff bottle with bat design, 19th century.
Photos and blog post © 2025 mae sander

Friday, January 03, 2025

Quiet Times

 The Start of the Year

Watching the first episode of the Vera Stanhope final season starring Brenda Brethyn as Vera.
The last-ever episode is due next week for Americans (earlier in the UK).
We were amused that a minor character was played by Kevin Whately, the actor who played Inspector Lewis.

Most of my time this week has been spent reading, now that I’m back from a month of seemingly nonstop travel. I’m sharing this post with Deb’s Sunday Salon which starts on Saturday.

Book I’m Reading Now

The Strategists: Churchill, Stalin, Roosevelt, Mussolini, and Hitler by Phillips Payson O’Brien.
A very very long history book.

Book I Hated

The Briar Club by Kate Quinn.

What a pile of cliches and hackneyed ideas! If the totally predictable historic stuff wasn’t bad enough, the author had to include recipes to make sure you knew it was ChickLit. Setting a book in a boarding house is a lazy way to have a lot of characters. Also lazy: the author gives hints about a murder scene from the beginning, but the choice of when and how to reveal the mystery is completely arbitrary. Same is true for the arbitrary way that the characters’ backgrounds are revealed: not by conversations, not by plot elements, but seemingly at random.

Book I Gave Up in the Middle

How Animals Understand Death by Susana Monso.
A poorly written book. I can’t figure out why I bought it.

Book I Read on One of Our Many Plane Trips

Enjoyed The Secret Life of Bees very much.
Blog post © 2025 mae sander

Wednesday, January 01, 2025

2025 is Here!

 

First coffee of the New Year.

New Year’s Eve Dinner at Carol’s House

Carol’s amazing cookie platter: she made them all, including two flavors of strudel and rugelach.

Since it was also (a very late) Chanukah, we had two types of latkes.
These are the sweet-potato latkes. We also had traditional potato latkes.

Soup, cheese, lentil salad. Jason and Katrina made the soup…

Deviled eggs and smoked salmon. I made the deviled eggs,
Carol made all the rest including several dishes that I didn’t take a photo of.

The beautiful table setting. Zingerman’s made the bread.

Here we all are except Carol who took this photo. In case you are wondering,
I was wearing a rather dramatically patterned sweater that looks funny in the picture.
We enjoyed the holiday, and greeted it by using a set of whistles that Carol keeps for the occasion.


Photos © 2025 mae sander