Sunday, March 6, 2011

Thank You, Please Carry On!



I've just been awarded the "Stylish Blogger Award" by http://ange-aspiringnovelist.blogspot.com/ (and I hope the link works!). I've also been told I'm now supposed to tell you seven things about myself and then nominate a handful of other bloggers for this award. Seriously, Ange, you might want to reconsider after watching me mess this up.

1. Early spring, like now, makes me want to take off and be in new and strange places. There is is this wild yearning to be away, have adventures and meet people. Maybe I'm a secret hobbit. One of the daring tribe.



2. If I could I'd live in a house with a porch on the beach in Virginia. The porch would lead directly on the sand and there would be a big fridge with plenty of drinks for when all my friends come visiting. At day I'd sit on the porch and write novels and at night I'd sit on the porch and party with the Mimosas. Can you see how important the word "porch" is?



3. I don't like chocolate. No, really.

4. I'm fat, and I'm working so hard on slimming down, only my stupid chemo will not let me. I guess I'll never wear a strapless gown again.

5. On the upside, I've finished my first novel, edited and submitted it.

6. And started on a new one. Goal: finish the first draft before I go to the States in summer. I have 110 days to achieve that.

7. And now I'm going to go back to writing.

Here are my Stylish Blogger Award nominations:

http://www.understandblue.blogspot.com/

http://thecrookedstamper.blogspot.com/

http://steinwaystreetny.blogspot.com/2011/02/running-quick-errand.html

http://creativityhaus.blogspot.com/p/rooms.html

http://southboundcats.blogspot.com/

Thank you for this awesome nomination!

Saturday, February 12, 2011

The Last Thing On My Mind

This eBook hype, right? I'm way too busy finishing the edits on my own novel so I can send it back to the publisher, but this is getting to me enough right now so I have to write it off my chest.

Let's say printed books go out of fashion. Bookstores close down. There are no more printed books, or only in rarity shops or on your grandmother's shelves. Everyone reads their stuff on a Kindle or an iPad or something similar. Or listens to it on their smartphone or iPod. Probably self-publishing gets easier, anyone can put their story up there, right, and as a reader, you can browse and find whatever you want.

There are two things about this I find really disturbing, and I don't mean to hurt anyone's feelings, but...

Who will tell you what to edit? Who will say to you, "This is great, but you need to cut it down, change that part, consider that character again," and help you shape your novel into a sleek, elegant book? A paid editor? Someone who will put their stamp on your work instead of kicking you into doing it yourself? Or are you maybe one of those authors who think their story is perfect right from the start and no one has a right to meddle? Come off it, friend. No one is. Are you going to throw it at readers with all its repetitions, typos, superfluous people and lame side plots? Please don't tell me you're good enough to see all the faults yourself. No one is. That's what publishers are for. Really.

And then there's this.


A book reading. This here is the amazing Neil Gaiman, reading from Graveyard Book here in Hamburg last year, and I tell you, he is the best. Hearing him read his own words to you in person brings them to life like no other medium could. And standing in line to get him to put one of his lovely drawings and his signature in the book you hold in hand is an experience I would not want to miss, and with me, hundreds of other fans that day. Obvious question: How do you sign an eBook? How will you be able to stand in front of an admired author and tell him, "I love your graphic novels, but your others are not that hot." and have him smile at you and reply, "That's ok. I love the graphic novels too." Which he did, to me.


 



My big fear is that with this eBook thing authors will become a lot more anonymous, and I don't want that. I want to be able to go to book readings and I want to be able to GIVE book readings some day soon. I want to meet my readers, read to them, have them ask questions about my books, my writing and my publishing experiences, heck, about whatever they care to know about me. I want to be a person behind the stories. I want to hear that cute conversation Neil Gaiman had with his then-fiancée and now-wife while he signed for me, when she commented about how he would be spending hours  with his fans and she would go shopping in the meanwhile and he smirked at her and asked if she maybe was jealous of his popularity. Which earned him a slap on the shoulder.



 


So many things are easier, better, faster and even nicer with the internet and the many things it offers. Books, I think, need paper. And a cover to make you want to read them. Don't you just love the smell of a new book? The excitement when you open the crackling pages for the first time? I do. And I don't want to miss it.

Saturday, February 5, 2011

Super Bowl Memories

Sometimes, through very little things, big memories are awakened, the kind of memories that you have carried in your heart for a long time, and then you share them, and in the other person they resonate like a wonderful, huge bell.

This happened to me today when my friend Ginny talked about the Super Bowl and its commercials, and I told her about the Cannes Commercials Prize in return. It was a typical, nonsensical facebook chat about nothing important, where everyone strives to be as funny and original as possible to amuse the others, and it really meant nothing.

But in Ginny in brought back a memory of another Super Bowl, and she wrote it down and sent it to me in a message, and it rang said bell in me. I asked Ginny if I could post it as a blog, which surprised her more than anything else, and she asked me why I wanted to do this. I can't rightly explain. It's just that this is the kind of story I would want to tell, a personal, touching story of a family and how their Super Bowl night will always be connected to that moment in their life.

Here is Ginny's story.



There was one ad in 2005, sponsored by Anheuser-Busch/Budweiser, that had me in tears. In November of 2004, Sarah told us she was going to Afghanistan for a year, leaving in Feb 2005. At Christmas, she told us (confirmed for me) that she is a lesbian. In January, she began her 6 weeks of pre-deployment training with the rest of the 249th General Hospital. (Keep in mind that even this early, there was lots of anti-war sentiment everywhere, even in the States, and DADT was very much in place).

Meanwhile, the Super Bowl went on as usual. We were in Salt Lake City and were invited to a 'party' at a more upscale sports bar. The party sponsors, Solar Turbines, had several tables. It was noisy, of course, but also sort of family oriented so there was a group of teenagers nearby who were extra noisy. We were actually having trouble hearing some of the commercials; but, hey - they're just commercials, right? Then comes a shot of the interior of an airport terminal - lots of people standing around - then a soldier, (at this point you can hear a pin drop in the restaurant) and another, then a whole unit. The crowd parts - and one after another they begin to applaud. At this point, I had tears rolling down my face and needed to blow my nose (thank goodness the napkins were paper). And then I had to explain... I think I only saw that ad one other time; I cried then, too.

I don't know if the ad had anything to do with this, but later that year, when Sarah came home on leave, she came to Phoenix through Dallas. There were several other soldiers coming through customs as well and they exited together. Outside customs, where they needed to separate and go to their connecting gates, there was a group of greeters waiting - they began applauding and handing out thank you gifts and snacks. Sarah said it was very warming and she was very grateful - especially so when she got on her next flight and the woman sitting next to her looked her up and down and said, "So! How does it feel to kill women and babies?" (Sarah was a combat medic; never left the hospital compound, never fired her weapon once in the entire year and, even if she had, it would have been at armed combatants, not women and babies.) The woman then stood at the rear of the aircraft talking to the flight attendants for the rest of the flight. Sarah is very forgiving. I'm still angry enough that I would like to find that woman and slap her silly.

But I still get a little teary when I think about that ad. (btw, as of Nov 21, 2010, Sarah has completed her duty to the army and is fully and honorably discharged.)





Thank you, Ginny, for letting me share this.

Thursday, February 3, 2011

On The Midnight Train To Frankfurt



Not very often, but from time to time, the urge grips me to go back home.

Home, to see my parents and the city where I was born and raised, Frankfurt, and my sister who does not live too far away. Memories of my childhood are not too kind, my father being a true Middle Eastern despot and not too fond of me for the choices I've made for myself, but there's my Mom, and she loves it when I visit. For a few days I'm her child again and she can pamper and care for me, cook my favorite dishes and make me a hot water bottle before tucking me in for sleep. I'm going to be fifty-five this summer. But I let her, and it feels very nice to be a kid once more. No one cares for you like your Mom does. She brought home orange juice, but because it was cold (fresh from the cooler at the supermarket) she warmed it up a bit. I had to put it out on the balcony in the snow before it was in any way digestible again, but the thought was so sweet, she did not want me to drink it the way it was and get a tummy ache. The back rub before going to sleep I refused though.

To get from Hamburg to Frankfurt, I ride in this.



The ICE train. A wonderful German invention, this high speed train, it will whisk you across the country in no time. The 500 miles from Hamburg to Frankfurt, eaten up in less than 4 hours while flying low over the railway tracks. The restaurant aboard is pretty neat too, with white tablecloths and linen napkins and a perfect service.

Frankfurt Station was in upheaval when I got there. The local football team had just lost a game, and while I tried to make my way to the subway dispirited fans swarmed the hall, their red scarves hanging like limp, mourning flags from their necks, their faces a study in defeat. The police, out in droves in case sadness turned into fury, had little to do but point me in the right direction. Maybe the bitter cold held tempers at bay, but there were no hysterics.

I grew up here.



It's not as terrible as it looks. For some weird reason someone decided, in the late 60s, to set these high-rise apartment buildings in the middle of a stretch of lovely greenery, and for a while it was a very coveted, en vogue place to live. Not more, of course, but then, we were the height of chic. My parents have lived there for forty years now. It's like a small, upright village. Coming back here feels weird, stepping back into being a teenager, staying in my old, nearly unchanged room, looking out over the forest and remembering all the dreams and hopes I had back then. Many have come true, some not. But I'm closer to them now than I ever was before, so maybe it only needed a little time.

My sister rescued me after two days of pampering from my Mom and fighting with my father (and to cite my sweet friend Emerenta, I'M INNOCENT!!!), but I'm still sorry he can get to me like that. In fact, we are quite alike in that I'm afraid, my father and I, both easily angered by the other. We should not be together in one city for longer than it takes a pebble to fall from the hand of a very small person. Like, a toddler.

Anyway.

Time with my sis at her castle (the castle she lives in; it does NOT belong to her) is always like being at a spa.



This time, my sister invited me to her neighbors for breakfast as she had to go to work. They came to pick me up in her corner of the castle and took me to their apartment, the one above that large terrace you can see in the pic. And while sitting in the large, wonderfully colorful and ancient castle kitchen I was told anecdotes from the Vatican University where my host studied as a young man. He is now a retired university professor for Catholic theology, and he had a lot to tell.  His wife looks like Helen Mirren. Or rather it is not so much that she looks like her but that she reminded me of her with her clear eyes and her alert, quick mind and her bird-like bones. We sat around that huge wooden table, ate smoked sausage from their son's organic farm. ("My son is an organic farmer. He does meat." No kidding), drank tea with honey, and I was STUFFED with food. Two slices of toast? That's not nearly enough, dear, breakfast is important, you got to eat! We won't let you go before you've eaten your egg, it's organic, too, and do try the jam, it's from the farmers' market, and so delicious! What, no cheese? You don't like this cheese? I'll get you another. Mark: I'd not met them before.

My sister works at my old university.



This is the main building. You know who  taught here? Wilhelm Roentgen. The man who discovered x-ray. And do you know who invented condensed soup, milk, and those soup cubes? The guy this university is called after, Justus von Liebig. He had a Chair here too.

This is where I studied. And my hubby. We met here, got married and raised our older son on this campus.

Last night I came home. I was so tired, my bones and nerves ached after three days away from home, and the train was crowded.  Across from me sat this young girl, no more than twenty I guess, dressed in sturdy outdoor clothing and walking boots, her blond locks contained by a red kerchief, a huge backpack beside her, and a staff that put Gandalf's to shame.  She seemed absent-minded and nervous, bored by the long trip, impatient. Most of the time she stared out of the window into the darkness, an uncertain traveler among passengers with a destination. Shortly before we reached Hannover she turned to me and asked if I knew any cheap hotels in Hamburg. I had to say I'm sorry, but no. She nodded and accepted my apology with a small smile. The man sitting next to me got out his phone to talk to his young daughter, advising her on how to remember the words she would need for her English test the next day, telling her to think of "vegetarian" to recall "vegetable" (which is how I guessed she must have been relatively young), and then promised her to be back in two days, and they would play her favorite video game together. And to dream something nice.

The traveling girl accosted me again, this time to ask about the airport in Hamburg, was it big, and did international flights leave? Like, to Reykjavik? Or Greenland? Again, I could not tell her. Well, anywhere international? This I could answer. London. Of that, I was totally sure. We talked a while, and then I asked her where she was planning to go.

"The North," she replied, "Somewhere in the North. Iceland would be best." I was going to ask why she did not have any tickets or travel plans, but desisted. "Hamburg," I said instead, "Is not the best place to catch a plane to an international destination. You should have got out in Frankfurt."

She shrugged.  Yes, well, it was a little late for that now. I asked her if she was going all on her own, and if she had done this before, travel without any planning, and I'm still thinking about her reply today: "Yes, but never before with so little. This pack-back is heavy, but there's not much inside."

We got to Hamburg a short while later.



This is what you see when you arrive here at night by train. I think it's a pretty good impression of our town.

My hubby and my kid were waiting for me at the station, and the first thing my son told me was that two cheeseburgers were not enough to fill him. Gosh, it's good to be home again.

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

156 Days And Counting

Have you noticed the name of my blog recently? That's right, it's called "Meet The Mimosa Club". Some of you know where that name comes from, others may not. The Mimosa Club is a twitter group. It came to life one night about two years ago when Bunny in Virginia was having a solitary drink on her porch, a Mimosa, and shared it with all of us virtually, and Pea coined that name. We were having a cocktail hour together over twitter: Pea, Bunny, Leslie, Lydia, Jane, Sue, Libby, Dreena, Kim, Lisa, Patti, Dana, Patsy and some more. We imagined how we would all meet up somewhere and have a huge party, a pajama party, no guys, only us girls. And we made plans how we could really make this work, in real life, and the easiest way seemed to be to invite me over, the only one from another continent in that group, and hand me around like the Olympic Torch.

All this was planned for last summer but then didn't happen because I became ill, blah blah you know all about that, so I won't go into it again.

The good news is, the trip is going to happen this year. And I have proof! Look!



Yeah I know it looks like a freaking mug shot. Do you know how much concentration it takes to look JUST in the right direction, your head tilted JUST so and please don't move and don't smile? But it is in my passport now. Which means, I have one, which also means I'm serious about this trip. Wanna see how serious? Here it is:



That, my friends, is what a plane ticket looks like these days. I recall when they used to be little booklets with the airline logo on them, something that you could hold and fondle, and something that made you feel special and important, like "Oh look, I own an airplane ticket, I'm actually GOING somewhere!" No more. These days, it from a computer and looks like any old print out. The charm has gone out of it. But no matter. The facts are the same. The price too.

So, you've of course gone ahead of me by now and realized I'll be traveling this summer. I'll be an Olympic Torch. I'll meet the Mimosas. Well, not all of them, but a good number.

And I'm liking very much how my trip will start.



Oh yes Baby. Good old Air Canada! That Sue, she has the tongue of an angel, and she talked me into visiting her in Vancouver, which was not exactly on my plan, but who cares. In fact, traveling the LONG distance with Air Canada makes me feel safe. Nobody hates Canada enough to put bombs on their planes, right?

Which also means, I'll be entering the US by car and not by plane, and for some very quirky reason this makes me feel extra luxurious and not touristy at all. Anyone can fly into the US, right, and spend a vacation there. I'll be driven across the border. From Vancouver to Seattle. And speaking of Seattle, we'll visit the original Starbucks there. Alright, I admit it, I love Starbucks. And I collect their city mugs. And I'm looking forward to seeing the original café. So there.

But I'm also looking forward to dipping my feet into the Pacific.

This is a grand concept, in fact. I've never been that far from home, and never on another ocean than the Atlantic. Going all the way to the Pacific Coast feels a bit like going to another planet. Sue will laugh at this, and Jane, Susan and Tara too, I'm sure. But maybe they would feel the same way, coming all the way here. Vancouver and Seattle are far, far away from Germany.

From Seattle, I'll fly to Washington DC. Another pretty long flight, but I won't be alone. Sue will be going with me to meet Leslie, Patti and Marianne. Leslie will hand me over to Bunny a week later. Remember, she's the one with the Mimosas on the porch, in Lynchburg VA. A few streets down from her there is Jennifer. Are you keeping count???

One week in VA, and I'll board a very small plane to Portland ME. Yes, eclectic choice, I know, but the lovely family Farrand is there, and I'm looking forward to meeting Steve and Nancy very much. Also, I've been told there is lobster to be had in Maine. That is a very tempting thing. Lobster. Oh my, yes!



Objections, anyone? I thought not.

On the way to my last stop, NYC, there are two errands I have to run: pick up sweat-shirts for my kid at Yale and Harvard. He asked for that.



Harvard. He would like to study here, and I love him for that. Of course it will not happen - unless my book does become a bestseller, which is not impossible - and we can afford it. But I like that he dreams about it. He is sixteen, and he wants to go to Harvard. Good kid! At least I can get him a sweat-shirt, right?

And after that... oh yes. New York City. Been there, seen it, and now I can hardly wait to return. Only this time, I promise, dear hubby, I won't buy seventy books. I promise. Last time we were there we had to get a new suitcase to get all those books back home. Hubby is still teasing me with that.

So, NYC.



Oh yes. My dream: a backstage tour of the Shubert Theater. A visit to Juilliard. Explore Brooklyn. See the Chagall mural at the Met. Have lunch in Chinatown and a coffee in little Italy afterwards. Take a pic of the Bitter End. Have a drink with Paul and Keith. And meet all my other NY tweeps, like Sharron, PJ and MaryChris. Walk down Broadway, and browse the Rizzoli store and visualize my book on display there. Which might happen some day! And if I get very, very lucky, attend a very special show here:



And I bet you know who I want to see:



That's right. The one and only.

But no matter. I'll be traveling this summer, and I'll meet the Mimosas. That's the only thing really important about this long trip. It started on twitter, and all this will be tweeted and blogged about when it happens. And I can't wait.

Sunday, January 2, 2011

2010 in review

The stats helper monkeys at WordPress.com mulled over how this blog did in 2010, and here's a high level summary of its overall blog health:

Healthy blog!

The Blog-Health-o-Meter™ reads Wow.

Crunchy numbers


Featured image

The Leaning Tower of Pisa has 296 steps to reach the top. This blog was viewed about 1,200 times in 2010. If those were steps, it would have climbed the Leaning Tower of Pisa 4 times

 

In 2010, there were 30 new posts, growing the total archive of this blog to 50 posts. There were 122 pictures uploaded, taking up a total of 31mb. That's about 2 pictures per week.

The busiest day of the year was August 8th with 76 views. The most popular post that day was A New Blog, A New Life.

Where did they come from?


The top referring sites in 2010 were twitter.com, facebook.com, meetthemimosaclub.blogspot.com, networkedblogs.com, and hootsuite.com.

Some visitors came searching, mostly for аэропорт Де ГОЛЛЬ терминал Екатеринбург, mimose club hh, and gema.

Attractions in 2010


These are the posts and pages that got the most views in 2010.
1

A New Blog, A New Life August 2010
6 comments
2

Page 99 November 2010
8 comments
3

Just A Brief Word November 2010
14 comments
4

I Am What I Am.... Not Really. October 2010
13 comments
5

Sunday Morning.... November 2010
6 comments

Friday, December 17, 2010

Christmas Music

I like how twitter sometimes gives me ideas for a blog, like today, when @mscator blipped this song:







and I stopped my constant yowling about the masses of snow to imagine myself away into gentler climes and tinsel of palm trees instead of snowy firs.

And it made me think of the many, many years I used to do this every year:







Not exactly in this exalted choir but here in Hamburg in a chamber choir of good reputation, as one alto voice among many.

Every Christmas. As soon as the requiem of that year was done we would start rehearsing the Christmas Oratorio, the same piece, every Christmas. It is a lovely piece of music, very festive, very evocative, but if you do it EVERY year...

It is a tradition for this choir to perform it every year, just like putting up the tree of going to church on Christmas Eve (even if you don't through the entire rest of the year) and all the other stuff, the Christmas cards you don't feel like writing (well, @ANeaterClare is complaining!) and the Christmas shopping (@mruku is having a hard time) or the wrapping of the presents (@Eglentyne offered that job to us all) or dealing with the snow... aren't we all.

For years now I have not participated in this particular tradition anymore, namely the singing of the Oratorio, and there is a story to it.

The last time I was there, we had a bit of a party with the singers before the performance. We were sitting in the dining hall of the church and had broken open the champagne that was really intended for AFTERWARDS and tasted a glass or two... no more than that, I swear! And when it was time to walk over to church we were all in high good spirits, joking and chatting when we should have been solemn and concentrated, and we took our places on the stair-like stage and began to sing with verve. It went really all very well.

The candles were burning brightly on the tree and the altar and in their holders along the walls, the place was well-filled with an appreciative audience, it was nice and warm in the big church, the solo singers were excellent and our conductor well pleased.

Then we came to this part:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6KPdUM_ioW4

and I got drowsy. We were allowed to sit down during the solos and instrumental parts, and so I sat, right behind the altar, my song book in my hands, and gently drifted off.

What happened? Can you begin to guess? My book fell from my fingers, banged on the wooden boards of the stage, and then further down on the tiled floor below with a resounding noise. And at a really quiet moment too.

"Snicker rippled through the rows of singers like pebbles flitting over water."

I had to sing from the heart for the rest of the concert, got many a good-humored but derisive remark afterwards and had to pay for a round of drinks.

And  decided it was time for me to change direction, music-wise.

Merry Christmas to you all, and a healthy and happy New Year.

PS: