"That truth should be silent I had almost forgot"--Enobarbus in ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA, back in Rome after having been too long in Egypt.--------- Melville's PIERRE, Book 4, chapter 5: "Something ever comes of all persistent inquiry; we are not so continually curious for nothing."
Monday, October 31, 2022
Saturday, October 29, 2022
Thursday, October 27, 2022
Slow 2 mile walk in deep sand / mud at high tide--59 minutes. Heart surgery 24 days ago.
It's going to take several more days but I will get back to under 50 minutes, I hope.
Meanwhile, thanks to Dr. Panikkath and his four-hour procedure. I want to pass the pulmonary function test and then the stress test.
Lucky, says the Caregiver. You got TB after Streptomycin. Well, yes, after leaving Louisiana, where they had not heard of streptomycin and making my way West.
Lucky, says the Caregiver. You were dying day by day, deteriorating, a month ago and now you are showing off in the muddy beach. 40 years ago, you would just have died.
Not quite clear yet just how old is the procedure I had, but around 40 years FLAWED TEXTS AND VERBAL ICONS was 1984. The biography was 1996 and 2002. It gives you pause.
Now, the toric intraocular implant has been available to the eye how long? Mine is 6 years or so old, and it survived, intact, the Valley Fever blindness that they thought at Stanford was Lymphoma but was halted by an alert doctor here one millimeter from the macula. I drive legally without glasses. This is wonderful.
Lucky. Jerry Lee is 87 and if I make it till Thanksgiving I will be 87.
It's terrible for a Depression Okie to have to say, but J. D. Vance is White Trash
I bought the book when it came out and saw that it was a phony "Look at me, rising by my boot straps" story. I stopped watching Chris Matthews when he called it as great book. Now the emptiness is on full display. White Trash! Still sucking up to Trump, still buddying with Deniers, sucking up to the man he once called America's Hitler.
Monday, October 24, 2022
Sunday, October 23, 2022
The Rock and the Trees today
Tough going on sand so I crossed at the entrance to the Cloisters over the dunes to the Trees which separate the dunes from the school. First time walking back along the path in many months. Many dogs all on leashes. More than a mile and a quarter--two and a half weeks after heart surgery.
The Pulitzers are in Danger!!!!
Mary Papenfuss
(
Donald Trump announced at his Texas rally Saturday that he is going to “sue” within two weeks to snatch away Pulitzer Prizes from The Washington Post and The New York Times for coverage of the Kremlin’s interference in America’s 2016 presidential election.
“Within the next two weeks, we’re suing the Pulitzer organization to have those prizes taken back,” Trump crowed at a rally in Robstown, where he stumped for MAGA candidates.
He said Pulitzer Prizes should be going to Fox News’ Sean Hannity, Tucker Carlson and Jeanine Pirro.
Saturday, October 22, 2022
Friday, October 21, 2022
The Caretaker's childhood friend on stopping freight trains.
There was some concern here this morning at my setting off to the beach after heart surgery. The childhood friend in Seattle said, "You can't stop a freight train."
Told this on my safe return, I huffed and puffed: "With my little flag or my fusee (day or night) I stopped many a freight train when I was a depot agent and railroad telegrapher."
Have a little respect!
Monday, October 17, 2022
ANTI-SEMITISM HAS BECOME NORMAL. I laughed at this survey of Post-War Jewish Professors in 2012 because of the high class company I was in, but it's not funny now. Listen to Trump this week. Listen to the Republican voices defending Hitler.
11 July 2012--The Tablet--with
additions in square brackets.
Then, almost overnight,
everything changed. Starting in the postwar years, anti-Semitism became
intellectually unrespectable, thanks to its association with Nazism and the
Holocaust, while the flood of new students entering the universities under the
G.I. Bill meant that there was an urgent need for new faculty. Jewish
professors, critics, and scholars were newly acceptable—Lionel Trilling [born
1905] studied Arnold at Columbia, and Harry Levin [born 1912] studied Joyce at
Harvard. Leon Edel [born 1907] wrote the biography of Henry James, and Hershel
Parker [born 1935] wrote the biography of Melville. Alfred Kazin [born 1915] recovered
the history of the American novel in On Native Grounds, a title whose defiant
claim could not be missed.
Saturday, October 15, 2022
Mike Abrams and his successors. Sometimes I need to laugh.
Monday, November 18, 2019
What splendid company. Mike Abrams, Lionel, Harry, Hershel, Leon, and Alfred
Friday, October 14, 2022
A Tragic Real Estate Story--from $83,500 to 19,500,00
This is Milch's Life's Work: "When the Brentwood house was first on the market, a woman wrote to Rita and said she had driven past and then had parked and walked up and looked at the house and the yard and the trees and wanted to raise her kids there. That’s what Rita had done, and it gave her pleasure to imagine this woman making a life there for her family. We sold her the house, and . . . Rita and I moved to a smaller rental farther south. The family who bought the old house in Brentwood demolished it. The thing that upset Rita most wasn’t the destruction of the house itself, or even that the woman lied, it was that she tore down the trees."
Well, my daughter Sabrina drove by it and wept. Nothing was there. Chain link fence, I think she said, and bare dirt.
So it was a vacant lot for years before becoming the most expensive house in a 2nd rate block.
Starchitect Richard Landry’s home fetches record price in Brentwood neighborhood
9,500 sf property in South of San Vicente enclave goes for $19.5M
Memories and realities about "this old Spanish house."
The Milch family had lived in a small house south on the same street, Princeton over in Santa Monica which at Montana became Moreno. Milch describes the transition:
"When Ben was born in 1986 we bought a house in Brentwood. There were six weeks when we were waiting to move that we lived in a hotel on Wilshire, and the tight quarters were wearing. . . . We were lucky the Moreno Avenue house was ready when it was. It was this old Spanish house, built in the 1930s, and Rita made it beautiful. There were old palm trees all around and Rita planted what she tells me was a California pepper in the front, liquid amber trees in the backyard that changed color, a lot of vines and jasmine that grew up the walls. It was all alive."
"Old palm trees?" None I ever saw! The house was old but already beautiful, you know from pictures I have posted. What Rita did was transform the yard (oh, that pool! and the trees) and greatly enlarge the house. I imagine her walking into that narrow old kitchen and saying, "Blow this out toward 26th Street!" and she blew out the west side of the second floor too. She made it enormous and "all alive."
David Milch's LIFE'S WORK mentions who got my wonderful study.
"There was a guesthouse where she could paint and I could put people up."
Rita got it. I had read that he did not use a conventional study but lay on the floor, surrounded by staff, dictating. It worked for him.
Thursday, October 13, 2022
Friday, October 7, 2022
Thursday, October 6, 2022
Wednesday, October 5, 2022
That little procedure we have been begging for these 2 months--one that may give me more years of life.
Yesterday the surgery and the night in the hospital. This picture tonight of living guy.
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Sunday, October 2, 2022
Something I came across just now--Johns Hopkins and the Sendak illustrations of my Melville biography
If I ever knew I forgot about Burris's visit to Sendak.
May 14, 2012
With Melville bio, JHU
Press entered the world of Sendak
The
wild rumpus, university-press style, started in 1996, when The Johns Hopkins
University Press prepared to publish the first volume of Hershel Parker’s
magisterial biography of Herman Melville. As an eminent Melville scholar and
editor of the Northwestern-Newberry Writings of Herman Melville,
Parker knew just about everyone in the close community of Melville experts,
collectors and devotees. Singular among them, perhaps, was the renowned
illustrator and children’s book author Maurice Sendak, who died on May 8.
“There’s a mystery there,” Sendak once said of Melville’s writing, “a clue, a
nut, a bolt, and if I put it together, I find me.”
At
Parker’s request, Sendak completed two portraits of Melville, both pen-and-ink
drawings with watercolor wash, that appear in the JHU Press editions of Herman
Melville: A Biography published in 1996 and 2002. Sendak brought his
lifelong appreciation of the writer, along with characteristic depth and
playfulness, to the illustrations that serve as both jacket art and
frontispiece for the two volumes. For volume one, which covers 1819 to 1851,
Sendak depicts the young Melville in handsome profile with ship’s rigging in
the background, holding a writer’s quill in his hand and wearing a top hat
decorated with a whimsical yellow flower. The illustration for the second
volume, which spans 1851 to 1891, shows an older, more somber Melville,
entwined in ivy and the cares of later life.
JHU
Press designer Glen Burris, who created the jackets and interior designs for
both volumes, worked with Sendak as he prepared the illustrations and later got
to meet him. “I visited him at his home in Ridgefield [Conn.] in 2002,”
comments Burris, “to return the illustration we used on the second volume.
Sendak was a Melville fanatic and something of a curmudgeon. He had lots of
opinions and could no doubt talk to Hershel Parker about Melville the way
another scholar might. But he was also a very gracious host, and I wound up
spending the afternoon with him. He showed me his illustrations for Brundibar,
which had not yet been published, and his copy of the famous edition of Moby
Dick with illustrations by Rockwell Kent. We talked about books and
the work of illustrating. He was a wonderful guy.”
The
Melville biography would be a great critical success for the Press and enjoy
strong sales. The volumes were lauded by The New York Times and
called “an astonishing achievement” by The New Republic. Paperback
editions, featuring Sendak’s portraits of Melville, were published by the Press
in 2005.