Wednesday
Dec222010

Ninety nine problems but a bitch ain't one

My family is primarily composed of what can only be dubbed crazy dog people. My grandparents have always had dogs (mostly Weimeraners), all my aunts have dogs (a revolving cast of Labradors), and in my youth and adolescence we had a succession of pups: Ruby, Bob, and Dinah. My mother now dotes on Kit, a Walker hound, who is so neurotic that he occasionally becomes too afraid to walk across the kitchen tiles (my mother muses that he once slipped and fell on the slick floor; who can blame his hesitance?).

I've read my share of James Herriott, and whenever a new canine-adjacent book comes out, I can count on being passed along a copy (Marley & Me and The Art of Racing in the Rain both ended up in my possession in this way). But until this year, I had never heard of J. R. Ackerley's My Dog Tulip; catapulted, I suppose, by Paul and Sandra Fierlinger's animated adaptation of the book, though, in the past several months I feel like I haven't been able to escape raves about the slim volume. (Truman Capote: "One of the greatest books ever written by anybody in the world.")

It's a quick read, and the language is light. Expect to read a lot about the mating process. You will learn many, many things about female dogs in heat, including just how glistening their vaginas become and how useful Vaseline is in facilitating the dance of love. None of this was particularly compelling, but then I got to the last chapter.

It is a chapter in which nothing really happens, except that Ackerley and Tulip go for long walks in the woods. And to me, it was so simple and perfect: just a beautiful statement about loneliness, and companionship, and what you do when you love another being very, very much. They come across broken bottles, and Ackerley is concerned about Tulip's paws:

One pounce upon this bottle, with both front feet perhaps ... I pick it up. I pick it all up, every tiny fragment. I seek it out, I root it up, this lurking threat to our security, our happiness, in the heart of the wood; day after day I uncover it and root it up, this disease in the heart of life.

That would be a lovely sentiment to end on. But I can't leave without noting that you, the reader, will become fixated on the number of times the word "bitch" is used. It certainly is correct to use "bitch" to refer to a female dog, but you just don't hear it all that much any more. I started imagining it would be amusing to chronicle all the instances of the word, but searching Google Books takes all the fun out of that: there are 45 uses of "bitch" in My Dog Tulip. (It feels like more.) Some of my favorites:

  1. "What other bitch in your condition has so wonderful a time?" (p. 158)
  2. "This independent, unapproachable, dignified and single-hearted creature, my devoted bitch, becomes the meekest of beggars." (p. 159)
  3. "All bitch-owners must have the same problem ... Tulip is fairly normal and regular, a six- or seven-month bitch, but there are many deviations; some bitches are quite erratic and unpredictable ... No doubt, too, the degree of intensity varies from breed to breed, from bitch to bitch ..." (p. 162)
  4. "Kick her out of the way, the dirty bitch!" (p. 163)
  5. "Perfection of grace. My burning bitch, burning in her beauty and her heat ..." (p. 165)
  6. "How enchanting she is, the coquettish little bitch, putting forth all her bitchiness." (p. 166)
  7. "Matter of fact I did find him a bitch once, but he wouldn't look at her." (p. 178)
Wednesday
Dec222010

Books I bought today

(Or: Oops, I was just taking a walk!)

  1. A Happy Marriage, Rafael Yglesias
  2. Another Bullshit Night in Suck City, Nick Flynn
  3. Oscar and Lucinda, Peter Carey
  4. Various Antidotes, Joanna Scott
  5. American Psycho, Bret Easton Ellis
  6. Beyond Black, Hilary Mantel
Sunday
Dec192010

Make Believe, Joanna Scott

Preemptive New Year's resolution: chronicle all the books I read (perfect for the obsessive in me!). So here are a few (meager, disjointed) thoughts on the piece of fiction I just finished.

Have you heard of Joanna Scott? I hadn't until I came across a trove of her books in my favorite used bookstore (Seaburn, on Broadway in Astoria); I picked up The Manikin and Make Believe because, well, she was blurbed by Michael Cunningham and Rick Moody and David Foster Wallace ("the absolute cream of our generation"), and someone at the NYTBR held, "We haven't heard a voice like hers since Ovid wrote his Metamorphoses." Endorsements like those are hard to deny.

I read The Manikin almost in one sitting; I could not put it down, and it was easily one of the best books I've read this year. (Forthcoming: a list of my favorites? Hrmmm ...) A splash of the gothic, a story about what it means to be a young woman growing up -- there were a lot of themes for me to grab onto. I'll probably need to reread it, because I consumed it so greedily and in such a fever I can hardly cite what it is that impressed me so much.

The cover copy on Make Believe made clear that the book covered very different ground, so it's not surprising that I was not as entranced. Still good, but I've read a lot more books about the intricacies of the American family than I have about creepy old houses stuffed with taxidermy projects. Make Believe is ... well, I suppose you could say it's a story of two families who suffered a common tragedy, and it explores the very different ways that the two groups of people made lives out of the wreckage. This makes it sound a bit like a Lifetime movie, or one of those terrible after-school specials so popular during my formulative years, but it is much, much more than that; it is flashbacks, and shifting narratives, and layers of chaos that are as hard to untangle as the threads that hold together the fabric of any family.

At the end of the book, Scott writes:

As for the cold, well after the first shock you just stop feeling it, you stop feeling any discomfort, instead you’re treated to the very simple certainty that you should be exactly what you are, even as you’re changing.

2010 has been a bit of a shock for me. I am still out in the cold. My fingers are numb, but I think I know better now who I am and where I want to go.

Saturday
Dec112010

Let there be light

Santas converged at Bethesda Fountain in Central Park. The snowflake costume was one of the more ingenious (runners up: pink bunny suit from A Christmas Story, Lady Gaga Santa, Santa's naughty-or-nice list).

Saturday
Dec112010

He's making a list ...

 

Saturday
Dec112010

Ho ho ho!

Merry Santacon, everybody! Two years ago was a blast, last year was a bust, but we still Santa-themed apparel, so we're trying again.

There are starting points throughout Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, and even Jersey. We'll be starting at Paramount Studios -- at 35th Avenue between 35th and 36th Streets in Astoria, and we will (literally!) have bells on.

Monday
Dec062010

Corbis should go into Christmas cards

Because really: how great is this?!

ca. 1961 --- Two young women display their holiday hairdos, each with 42-inch hair decorated with tinsel and ornaments. Claudette Ackrich's hair is decorated with tinsel, and Giselle Roc's hairstyle consists of Christmas tree balls. Both women have never had their hair cut. --- Image by © Bettmann/CORBIS

Sunday
Dec052010

Grumpy.

Even kittens (OK, OK, she's a fully formed cat -- she's a little over five years old!) are grumpy on Sunday mornings. Rrrowr.

(Photo by Sumeet.)

Sunday
Dec052010

Shuttered

Near Astoria Boulevard and Steinway Street in Astoria.

Wednesday
Dec012010

Hannukah, Christmas, heck, anytime gift!