I usually don't use blogs like this. Correction. I never do blogs like this. But seeing as this was my first book fair I decided to put down my impressions.
September 12 dawned cool and wet. I decided to hit the 79th Street flea before I went into Brooklyn. Found some good CDs too; Carpenters, Smiths, Geri Allen, a few others. Hit the cell to call Vern before I went underground. She wasn't feeling that well, but was still on her way. Okay, all was normal.
Hoping they'd let me into Brooklyn w/out my passport, as my "Where Is Hip" says. Got lucky as the fair was right outside the Borough Hall station. Took me a while, but finally found Seventh Story/Fractuous Press. The 2 women at the station said Vern wasn't there yet, but as they knew me from Columbia we chatted a while. One said she tried to get Vern to stay home, but hadn't received an answer. I wandered around, and found that most of these small presses aren't that cheap. By the time I got back to the stand Vern had arrived (yeah Vern!) and we set up Fractuous' stand. Next arrival was a 'zine editor whom I'd try and date if I was some 20 years younger. Oh well.
I was slightly bemused when somebody asked me to sign Blonde, Blue-Eyed and Handsome. Talked to a couple of people who were reading it were amused. I think that's where my strength lies. I see the funny side of things...
Which I couldn't do for long as it started raining. We covered up as best we could (I should be an expert, right?) and sold a few more books.One person who'd seen me at the Ding Dong wanted me to do an improvisational piece with a laser harpist. That's the type of thing I'd love to do.
Saw the cover, obi and pages of Mr. Manners. Vern was getting it together. My 2nd book! I've had a lot of editors, but she's the best I've worked with so far. For her birthday I'll get her either a 50-hour day or a time compressor, but she'll have to make do w/ a paper cutter.
Wandered around and picked up a book by the vocalist with the New Bomb Turks. Good book. One of the people at the stand is the owner of my fave CD store, Academy. He was surprised when he heard I had a book out, and when I said I was working on a book on NY rock he said he wanted to see it. Publishing opportunity?
Grabbed Vern and myself lunch at Tim Horton's. They've got surprisingly good food, and they're Canadian. So's Vern.
Raining in ernest, so we packed up for the day. Everybody went to Watt Street to dry out books and I went home. Hoping to hear from the laser harpist and zine editor sometime over the week. Considering how many people showed up in the rain, this must be a total blast in nice weather.
Sunday, September 12, 2010
Saturday, September 4, 2010
CENTER OF THE WORLD
We've all got different ways of getting thru
Men act Manly, act like they don't care (but they do)
Women go all girly, oh you shouldn't have (oh yes you should)
Maybe we don't make a big deal of it
with presents, cake, favors and pin the tail on the donkey
But we'd still like to be noticed by other than our family
Shown that we mean something to our friends
Get all fussed over
and for that day be
Center Of The World
Men act Manly, act like they don't care (but they do)
Women go all girly, oh you shouldn't have (oh yes you should)
Maybe we don't make a big deal of it
with presents, cake, favors and pin the tail on the donkey
But we'd still like to be noticed by other than our family
Shown that we mean something to our friends
Get all fussed over
and for that day be
Center Of The World
Thursday, September 2, 2010
ON RESPONSIBILITY
Still the wheel of blame blindly spins, and blind justice again pins blame everywhere but where
she should. Another child loses her (invulnerable) life and society again avoids the right choice.
Let's run this down, shall we? A 17 year old ambassador's daughter, by her own admission in love with getting and being high, climbs a 34th story balcony to snap a photo of herself and plummets to a 6 AM demise. Blame gets spun, for some there's none.
While some fault lies with the bar that served her, its unrealistic to totally blame them. As the owner of a Columbia area deli states, you see IDs from every state in the union and overseas and verification is hard if not impossible. College age women nowadays empathetically do not look like those I went to school with and in order to imbibe will claim a different birth date. I stopped a local bar from serving my then 17 year old niece, who had both the looks and ID to pass for 21. To blame the apartment owner is equally wrong, for as with the bar, how is he to know his guests' age?
Missing in the blame game are the by now grieving parents. While Daddy was off playing ambassador and Mommy was off doing whatever, their daughter was indulging in a hedonistic lifestyle that led to her untimely demise.
In death she also had a full house. Being attractive, rich and white meant the media turned its full attention on her. Had she been of merely average looks, black or Hispanic there would have been considerably less media attention.
On an equal level I blame the media. We are bombarded with the news that the smirking cebultard Paris Hilton has gotten off on yet another possession charge or that the celebrity train wreck Lindsay Lohan is crying that well-deserved jail time will cut into her film career. Those reading these gossip column tidbits disguised as news feel that they also deserve the breaks the glitteri are getting.
Consider this a wake up call for society to shift blame from the schools, government and police to where it justly belongs. Its way past time for society to put the blame on non-caring and non-present parents.
she should. Another child loses her (invulnerable) life and society again avoids the right choice.
Let's run this down, shall we? A 17 year old ambassador's daughter, by her own admission in love with getting and being high, climbs a 34th story balcony to snap a photo of herself and plummets to a 6 AM demise. Blame gets spun, for some there's none.
While some fault lies with the bar that served her, its unrealistic to totally blame them. As the owner of a Columbia area deli states, you see IDs from every state in the union and overseas and verification is hard if not impossible. College age women nowadays empathetically do not look like those I went to school with and in order to imbibe will claim a different birth date. I stopped a local bar from serving my then 17 year old niece, who had both the looks and ID to pass for 21. To blame the apartment owner is equally wrong, for as with the bar, how is he to know his guests' age?
Missing in the blame game are the by now grieving parents. While Daddy was off playing ambassador and Mommy was off doing whatever, their daughter was indulging in a hedonistic lifestyle that led to her untimely demise.
In death she also had a full house. Being attractive, rich and white meant the media turned its full attention on her. Had she been of merely average looks, black or Hispanic there would have been considerably less media attention.
On an equal level I blame the media. We are bombarded with the news that the smirking cebultard Paris Hilton has gotten off on yet another possession charge or that the celebrity train wreck Lindsay Lohan is crying that well-deserved jail time will cut into her film career. Those reading these gossip column tidbits disguised as news feel that they also deserve the breaks the glitteri are getting.
Consider this a wake up call for society to shift blame from the schools, government and police to where it justly belongs. Its way past time for society to put the blame on non-caring and non-present parents.
Wednesday, September 1, 2010
"UN"CIVIL SERVANTS
Lately there's been a lot of talk in the media about politicians and other civil servants who rack up huge amounts of overtime. (Wait, that's the civil servants, not the politicians) We're already aware of MTA attendants sleeping on the job and sanitation workers and police officers who take non-scheduled breaks to sleep, or firemen who use their posts as party central. Lately I've become aware of civil servants who feel they can insult the public because they're protected by unions. These very people are the kind that give the unions a bad name. We've got nothing against the unions except when they protect the bad with the good.
I know of a postal employee who spends most of his working day combing the thrift shops on 23rd Street. Lord only knows what his route looks like. Then there are the workers who are just plain disrespectful. On my way to work one day I was caught in a traffic jam on 111th Street between Amsterdam and Broadway. Lined up and causing chaos were the usual number of double parked cars, which could be driven around, but in front of the pack were a Postal truck and a sanitation truck. The driver of the first was working on sorting out bags of mail while blocking traffic, while the sanit truck guys were hanging out and sometimes throwing garbage bags into their vehicle. When drivers started yelling at the postal employee to move his truck and let them through he looked at them as if they were crazy and continued work. One of the sanit men told the crowd that the mailman was a federal employee. At that point more people started yelling and giving the sanit men nasty comments. He answered with some nasty comments of his own, which I punctuated with my middle finger. At the point one of the sanit workers started banging on my cab door, threatening me and calling me some biological impossibilities. Finally the jam broke and we were able to get to our destinations.
Someday somebody will release a "New York Noise" CD for expat New Yorkers. It will consist of fire and police sirens, garbage trucks, horns and subway sounds. These will be sure to soothe any New Yorker stuck in Florida or some other location with an inordinate amount of silence. At least this disc's listeners will be able to choose when to hear it. New Yorkers themselves won't have this luxury. We'll still have to hear car alarms going off anytime, usually in the middle of the night, during a rainstorm of whenever another car passes. Not that anybody ever answers the things anyway. Which brings us to the next incident.
Tempers were already frayed with 97 degree temperatures when a car alarm sounding like a horn went off. A quick glance showed a truck blocking a car, and people felt while the driver may have been overdoing it a little he was within his rights. When the same alarm went off ten minutes later it was noticed that (a) there was nobody in the car and (b) the car had official plates. I'd started treating some bystanders, including the owner of Milano and the manager of Deluxe with the probable lineage of the car owner, when somebody came into my face with a loud "you talking about me?" I told him his horns were blaring for 10 minutes at least twice, and that he should turn off the damn thing. That was the way the city set them, and he was on the fourth floor of a Columbia building and couldn't hear anything.
"Oh, you're a flunky?" I answered. He then loudly threatened me with jail, which galvanized the crowd and propelled me to new heights. I took my phone and snapped pictures of both he and his license plate. "I'll hsve my state trooper friend run these plates. In this country I can legally call an insensitive boor an insensitive boor without being threatened with jail." Others in the crowd echoed my sentiments and he started to back down.
The very fact that people like this work for the city and state is an affront to any hard working American. These people work for us and not the other way around. And calling the Mayor's 311 is another joke. With over three hundred city agencies its impossible to get action on anything.
But I still like the idea of a New York Symphonies disc.
I know of a postal employee who spends most of his working day combing the thrift shops on 23rd Street. Lord only knows what his route looks like. Then there are the workers who are just plain disrespectful. On my way to work one day I was caught in a traffic jam on 111th Street between Amsterdam and Broadway. Lined up and causing chaos were the usual number of double parked cars, which could be driven around, but in front of the pack were a Postal truck and a sanitation truck. The driver of the first was working on sorting out bags of mail while blocking traffic, while the sanit truck guys were hanging out and sometimes throwing garbage bags into their vehicle. When drivers started yelling at the postal employee to move his truck and let them through he looked at them as if they were crazy and continued work. One of the sanit men told the crowd that the mailman was a federal employee. At that point more people started yelling and giving the sanit men nasty comments. He answered with some nasty comments of his own, which I punctuated with my middle finger. At the point one of the sanit workers started banging on my cab door, threatening me and calling me some biological impossibilities. Finally the jam broke and we were able to get to our destinations.
Someday somebody will release a "New York Noise" CD for expat New Yorkers. It will consist of fire and police sirens, garbage trucks, horns and subway sounds. These will be sure to soothe any New Yorker stuck in Florida or some other location with an inordinate amount of silence. At least this disc's listeners will be able to choose when to hear it. New Yorkers themselves won't have this luxury. We'll still have to hear car alarms going off anytime, usually in the middle of the night, during a rainstorm of whenever another car passes. Not that anybody ever answers the things anyway. Which brings us to the next incident.
Tempers were already frayed with 97 degree temperatures when a car alarm sounding like a horn went off. A quick glance showed a truck blocking a car, and people felt while the driver may have been overdoing it a little he was within his rights. When the same alarm went off ten minutes later it was noticed that (a) there was nobody in the car and (b) the car had official plates. I'd started treating some bystanders, including the owner of Milano and the manager of Deluxe with the probable lineage of the car owner, when somebody came into my face with a loud "you talking about me?" I told him his horns were blaring for 10 minutes at least twice, and that he should turn off the damn thing. That was the way the city set them, and he was on the fourth floor of a Columbia building and couldn't hear anything.
"Oh, you're a flunky?" I answered. He then loudly threatened me with jail, which galvanized the crowd and propelled me to new heights. I took my phone and snapped pictures of both he and his license plate. "I'll hsve my state trooper friend run these plates. In this country I can legally call an insensitive boor an insensitive boor without being threatened with jail." Others in the crowd echoed my sentiments and he started to back down.
The very fact that people like this work for the city and state is an affront to any hard working American. These people work for us and not the other way around. And calling the Mayor's 311 is another joke. With over three hundred city agencies its impossible to get action on anything.
But I still like the idea of a New York Symphonies disc.
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