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secrets of the flesh…

In books, culture and lifestyle on July 25, 2011 at 2:50 pm

…a life of colette.

my summer reading has gotten off to a whirlwind start.  trish regan’s look at the underground medical marijuana economy, joint ventures tops the list along with the latest tome in george r.r. martin’s series, a dance with dragons. another vastly different offering is judith thurman’s piercing biography of famous french novelist, sidonie-gabrielle colette also known simply as colette.

i have an admitted weakness for literary classics especially those written by turn of the century authors if, for nothing else, because of the window they offer into the societal conventions of their day.  women, in particular, utilized literature as an opportunity to express themselves and rail against the confines of what was then considered ‘a woman’s place.’ as bold and unconventional as colette was for her time; c0-writing with her first husband, henri gauthier-villar, the erotic hi-jinks of boarding school bound, claudine; the scandal and disintegration of their may/december marriage; the lesbian affairs and society shunned stage career; to name but a few, brought her into contact with the most fascinating group of eccentrics paris had to offer.  with the biographical spotlight on the artist, so comes into view the additional cast of like minded creatives who are successful in their own right; rich, bored patrons who are famed for their debaucheries and the usual hangers on; leeches, courtesans, scam artists and the like.  all of this makes for a rich, summer stew of salacious reading that can in turn, take on a life of it’s own.

mathilde de morny, image courtesy of strange flowers

i am the kind of reader who thrives on break out google sessions perusing the wiki’s, extra bits of information and photos of these side show characters who surrounded colette.  i want to see the “old man” who was able to sweep the naive 16 year old off her feet.  i want to know more about the tragic transgendered marquise, mathilde de morny who, following colette’s divorce, became her lover and patron.  from their connection with colette, i learn more about french intellectuals, poets, playwrights, artists and the like and with every other page, performing online searches to flesh out their portraits.

by and large i begin to recognize a commonality of sources and find much of the material provided courtesy of strange flowers.  aptly described as “cultural archeology”, strange flowers is a wordpress blog dedicated to those individuals who lived and died on the fringes of society often times producing some of the most groundbreaking creative work of their generation.  as many of those who were known for their successes, there were so many more who were famous for their excesses and blogger, james conway does such a brilliant job of bringing those individuals to light.

gay rights, civil rights, women’s rights, many of the boundaries were being pushed and explored by these pioneers during times when it would not have thought to have been possible because of crippling social shunning. my heart goes out to these misunderstood, often discarded people, struggling for the right to exist according to their own perceived values and they do not disappoint in their dedication of living by their own creed right up until the, sometimes tragic, end.  forget about the summer blockbusters and boring remakes of half baked hollywood, give me the independent films, plays and bios exploring the lives and contributions of these compelling people!

la informacion es bella!…

In art & design, books on January 12, 2011 at 11:55 pm

…as evidenced in this beautifully compiled book by london based info-graphic guru, david mccandless. if anything says stop and smell the roses, this book does as it points out the beauty in information packed charts, graphs and workflows. simple but brilliant in observation, the mundane takes on a whole new translation when packaged in this thoughtful, well crafted book.

in print throughout europe and asia, these covers are from iceland and germany. i love the way the finnish people see design! it’s tribal but in such a unique look at chroma… i wish the uk version had a cover as lovely as these… maybe i’ll buy two! ;)

the indifferent stars above…

In books on May 20, 2009 at 3:47 pm

51scxqn7bwL._SS500_…as a kid growing up and shuffling through various public schools, i was exposed to the same urban myths and lurid stories that appealed to the morbidity of thirteen year olds. bloody mary, chupacabra’s, the night stalker and so forth peppered our conversations like trained mccaws repeat oft heard phrases. of course the donner party tragedy was bandied about hollowly, all speculation but no real facts behind it. just wildly distorted “truths” passed on from older siblings, a distracted parent or an irritated teacher. what i knew of the donner party was simple: they got lost, snowed in and began to eat each other. end of story. fast forward thirty years and without it even being on my mind, i manage to find a book that reveals so much about the tragedy and the forces that put it into play. written by daniel james brown, “the indifferent stars above” comes across with so much heart.

the author didn’t set about writing another dry, factoid chronology and nor did he attempt to write some creepy historical novel replete with fictional dialog. instead he chose a young woman from the party close in age to his own daughter and full of the dreams of starting a new life with a loving young husband in the bargain. he traced sarah graves from her home in illinois and sketched out a picture full of life, family and community which breathed life into a young bride who would in the end, withstand the horrors of the donner tragedy. tragedy doesn’t begin to do justice for these series of events which were doomed from the very beginning. rather than list all of the gory details, he introduces the characters who take advantage of the donners, the graves and other emigrants and who through their own greed and gross negligence, seal their doom. he speaks about the mountain men and trappers who lent their help to so many lost emigrants and he describes the native american tribes who were exploited and exploited others in turn. throughout the recounting gleaned from historical reference and old fashioned sleuthing, brown weaves in medical information, historical comparisons and relevant facts to give the story a context to which we can relate. this in turn enables the reader to better understand the hard, often brutal circumstances, the cultural and psychological traits, durability, strengths and frailties of the individuals involved. i was riveted!

what i took away was the perspective their experience put my own life into. it was definitely a look into an extinct way of life that nothing in the modern western civilization could prepare you for. we are surrounded by so many creature comforts and conveniences, our modern plumbing, gps, computers, internet, medicines and so forth that have cocooned us in selfish narcissism. i believe the author said it best as he contrasted the stark reality of what was happening to sarah and the rest of the donner party with the industrial revolution and then modern advances that were happening on the east coast. he said that basically, the further the party went west, the further back in time they traveled leaving behind all of the modern conveniences that were transpiring in civilized cities. that their situation and the tools at their disposal was in comparison to the stone age. what really stung was knowing that so much of it could have been prevented but for the predatory greed of others and their own naïvete.

that said, of course the gory details were fascinating too! every five to ten minutes i kept interrupting my partner with groans of “oh no!” and “oh, my god”. at every turn it seemed that whatever you thought was bad could be topped with something worse. i’ve never seen so many disasters compounded and by the end of course, i’m wondering why they had to go all the way out to california in the first place when things were just swell in illinois. you’d have to know a thing or two about the pioneer spirit but for most of us, that means backpacking through vietnam or a holiday trek through india. the one thing that i can attest to, having worked in a morgue, was the comment on the smell of cooked human flesh. for those who turn up their noses and exclaim, ‘i could never’, i can attest to the fact that it does indeed smell like any other juicy roast or charbroiled burger you may have consumed during your lifetime. a comparison so certain that finally turned me to vegetarianism.

for someone who knew of the donner party without really knowing the true saga behind it, i had to say this was the best book to go with. not dry and removed, nor is it sentimental in the telling but it does pull at your heart to see the sadness of the whole incident laid bare. brown takes you across dry prairies, over baking salt flats and up sheer basalt cliffs and manages to educate his readers all without any interruption to the flow of the tale. i do have to quote mary roach from the new york times sunday book review: “One of his (brown’s) goals is to restore dignity to the Donner emigrants, whose courage and decency have, over the years, taken a back seat to their menu.” a must read for lovers of american history and dare i say, tragedies…

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