Starting day with a few good items

Reading a book ain’t what it used to be.  Steven Johnson decides he has a yen for a novel, presses a few Kindle buttons, and has one in hand, presto.  That’s book-buying and reading these days.  He has more about the revolution in same here . . .

Chi mayoral brother and Cook County board member John Daley recuses himself often (votes present) on county board issues, so involved is he commercially with politically important insurance customers.  Mark Konkol and Tim Novak have that story of tangled webs here . . .

Banks aren’t lending as much as the Treasury Dept. says they are, because Treasury uses the median amount, but WSJ uses the totality of lending.  Another case, it seems of governmental body claiming success in business matters beyond what’s true.  A Journal team — David Enrich, Michael R. Crittenden and Maurice Tamman — has it here.

Roger and me about “State”

Roger Ebert and I have had our differences (none that he has known about), but this latest is major.  It’s how we feel about R. Crowe’s latest movie, now at Lake on Lake in Oak Park and many other places.  The movie, with an utterly forgettable name, “State of Play,”  taken from the BBC mini-series which it represents as feature film, is direct and to the point, without:

* sex, i.e. extended face-eating scenes and titillating nudity

* big-bosomed (I mean big) open-necked smart-ass females (rather, smart, small-bosomed, big-eyed, engaging but not cleaved at chest area)

* blood, including instant hole in forehead of bad or good guy plugged from near or far

* the word “fuck” and its derivatives

* time and screen space wasted on stuff that doesn’t spell out character or move ahead action, leading to periods of squirming in seat

* lingering by camera on every dot and blemish or blank-staring face of one or more DRAMATIC characters, leading to periods of squirming in seat.

And with:

* smart dialog, as Helen Mirren: “Don’t look at me like Bambi the cub reporter looking for a break” (or something like it: Mirren never better here, far better than the alcoholic moon face she adopts as that hyper-serious, hyper-conflicted detective inspector on British TV)

* characters credible enough to keep you wondering, not worrying (got my own worries, thank you) what will happen to them

* background sound that does not make you think this is a musical

* plot twists and turns that leave you (left me) trying to figure it out, not deprived but amused by the noodling.

Go see “State,” which is PG-13 and is an elegy in part (here Ebert and I coincide) to newspapers as we know them, but unfortunately gives homage to leftist conspiracy-thinking and Rupert Murdoch as unreliable, as in the bought bar girls’ testimony splashed on P-1 of the NY Post (briefly, but can’t be missed).

Why beef with Ebert (and the Chi Trib man)?  Because I loved the picture and he (they) merely liked it.  Reason enough!

Later: Another notable leftist tint was given by the ex-GI-gone-wild theme and major character: Rambo as nut case, a thoroughly unsympathetic villainous individual.

First ounce, second ounce, on to Washington

Helpful item here on cost of first class mail, from Andrew K. Dart’s “The History of Postage Rates in the United States,” giving date of rate start, 1st ounce, each additional ounce, postcard:

May 12, 2008 42¢ 17¢ 27¢
May 11, 2009 44¢ 17¢ 28¢

So get your postcards mailed by 5/10 midnight, because a penny saved is a penny earned.  (Hat tip Ben Franklin)

And while you’re at it, get those ounces and pennies right for the coming Day of Replenishing the Big ATM on the Potomac, a.k.a U.S. Treasury, a.k.a. the Master Prestigitator (Now you see your money, now you don’t).

Happy mailing.

Elizabeth reads at the Art Institute

Elizabeth Alexander, the Obama inauguration poet who teaches at Yale in its African American Studies department, held forth last night, 4/8, at the Art Institute, reading for 45 minutes or so and commenting now and then.

She came across as one who should have gotten the advice I got from novelist Vance Bourjaily at the U. of Iowa in 1963. Don’t write your fiction for Catholic publications, Bourjaily told me. “It’s too easy.”

For me as a priest, he meant, but more to the point, too easy for anyone. So should Alexander not write or write less for a black audience, which she does quite often, to judge by last night’s readings.

Her frequent references to black troubles extort a respectful response, as in the story of Prudence Crandall, the Connecticut white woman who tried to teach young black women in the 1830s and was thwarted by white chicanery and violence. Alexander found the story “interesting,” she said. That’s all? a listener asked himself.

She rendered a dignified account of atrocities, but to what end is not clear, except to memorialize the victims.

“You can smell the semen in the walls,” she wrote (and read to us) of the secret room where the white man bedded with his black woman, who was later cheated of her inheritance by “distant white cousins.”

She spoke of “amazingness,” giving us a taste of clumsy diction. In what she read, she eschews verbs. Her subjects rarely have an expressed predicate, giving the effect of a parade of nouns and phrases, without syntax. 

She can’t honestly sing Cole Porter’s famous song, having no rhythm. None whatsoever.

Wit is not be found, rather a lugubrious affect.

She violates rules, and not in dialect: “. . . who I did not know well . . . “

Her tone is a sort of delphic oracularity, so restrained as to be practically telegraphic.

Half-sentences abound. Nouns are rushed together.  Her verse is a vocabulary exercise. But bland.

Phrases come across meaningless, as “the sweet affinity of true knowledge.” Vs. false knowledge, we presume. Affinity with what?

She considers — introducing a poem — “how we approach the quotidian,” the everyday material that some have immortalized.  Pope took the snipping of hair in an 18th-century drawing room and made it “The Rape of the Lock,” a mock epic.

Alexander seems content with in-jokes, as in noting to the audience that black politician Adam Clayton Powell photographed with racial agitator Stokely Carmichael in the 60s both looked “fine,” eliciting titters from blacks.

Her touch is so light, it’s a skimming.

A poem tells of “a baby’s need to sing.” But babies gurgle and howl — and do many other things, as she tells in her quite evocative “Neonatology.” But baby has a need to sing? How does Alexander know?

The poems she read were short to the point of being slight. And sometimes banal: “We encounter each other in words . . . The mightiest word is love . . .” She asks in closing, “What is love?”  What indeed?

You can’t judge a poet by hearing her read, in a museum or at a presidential inauguration. She can hardly give up Afro-Am themes, I guess. What she does about and with them is something else. Maybe what she should give up is reading her poems.

Later: I must go back to what I wrote after the inauguration, quoting New Republic’s Adam Kirsch:

Kirsch says her weakness lies in her “consciousness of obligation,” in her “poetic superego” that

leads her to affirm piously, rather than question or challenge. This weakness is precisely what made her a perfect, an all too perfect, choice for inaugural poet.

That’s it.  She affirms piously, even primly.  I saw that last night but couldn’t put my finger on it.

How our library can win its medals

Chatting with Debby Preiser, the events lady at Oak Park Public Library, yesterday, I got a glowing account of a recent session with Iraq and Viet Nam war vets, all but one of whom (five in all) regretted their and our participation in those wars.  Interesting, she said with a smile, and I smiled back.  She had glimmed my No Obama ‘08 cap (my Rohrshach test of tolerance levels) before recounting the vets’ session, held I assume in the library’s Veterans Room.

I felt somewhat buffeted by the account, but Debby is a sales person, and selling gets that way sometimes.  In any case, it put me in mind of a trend I have been noticing and storing in the back of my crowded, cluttered mind, that our library serves its supposed constituency a steady diet of progressive (let no man say liberal) programs. 

In this case, the vets endorsed an anti-war position, and that could have been merely the luck of the draw, reflecting Oak Park and literary Chicago’s widespread firmly held convictions.  A similar program in Mississippi or Oklahoma would have produced a different response, I imagine.

Nonetheless, assuming it was accidental in this case — pure chance, let us say — we cannot help notice that library programs tilt heavily to the left.  That’s us in Oak Park, yes, but we are also literate, urbane, highly educated, and keenly interested in intelligent, even intellectual debate and discussion, are we not?  Including conservative ideas in a debate atmosphere. 

Why not a debate, to give an example, between an Al Gore acolyte (Al would be great, but he declines debate) and a nay-sayer, each of some professional heft and platform style.  Sounds like money to me, and not available from the Great ATM in Washington probably, but who knows?  Stranger expenditures have happened and will happen, now that happy-go–lucky times are here again.  Meanwhile, our library movers and shakers might give it a thought.  After all, why be left all the time?

Quiet, village government at work

Oak Park village president David Pope is moving on two commission-chair appointments, of seven waiting to be made, village clerk Sandra Sokol told one of the commissions last night, 4/1. 

He’s very thorough about it, said Sokol, who noted that the issue, or at least commissions in general, had come up the night before in a candidate-forum debate.  Indeed, opposition candidates in the April 7 election have accused incumbents of downgrading the commission structure.  Commissions and boards are volunteer groupings of citizens whose job is largely to advise the village board.

Last night’s meeting was of the Community Involvement Commitee (CIC), which recruits and recommends members for the 25 other commissions and boards, including the Zoning Board of Appeals, which is more than advisory but has statutory authority.  Each commission has an appointed village board liaison.  Sokol, who is retiring as clerk after 16 years, is laison to the CIC. 

Four citizens came before the CIC last night as prospects for appointment to a commission:

* a historic-preservation professional, with a view to joining the village’s Historic Preservation Commission

* a lawyer willing to take on the time-consuming and sometimes-hot-seat zoning-board or Plan Commission duties

* a building-rehab contractor who has served on other commissions and for whom CIC members seemed to prefer the Community Design Commission

* a woman in her early 20s, raised in Oak Park (she named the junior high), who had got off class in her master’s program early so as to make the meeting.  She mentioned two commissions, Community Relations and Housing Programs Advisory.

The members, eager to find younger citizens willing to serve, were especially glad to see this woman.

All four, none older than in his or her 40s, were typical in my experience of watching CIC prospect sessions, being earnest, willing, and apparently quite competent.

Rose at breakfast

Up betimes Saturday morning at cri de coeur from Lily, 4, desperately wanting to do something — go upstairs, best I could figure.  A much more modulated voice, also female, was urging patience.

The voice was 8-year-old Madeline’s.

Later I ask Rose, 4, how’s the toast I just made her.  “Lovely,” she says, and I am gratified.  She eats it standing up, on the breakfast table chair.  This works for her.  I have no opinion, and decline to comment.

I ask Rose what she plans to do today, she says, “Color,” which sounds good to me.  I say “Fine.”

We interrupt the interview to let Leo in.  Little trouble unlocking the glass door to the deck, on which Leo waits, scratching with paws against the door.  Rose helps, we get door open, Leo enters, as usual lord of all he surveys, which is only right because he is a cousin of the king of the jungle.

Rose leaves the table, now I have the earlier highly vocal Lily at table with me.  She is now a church mouse, silently spooning her cheerios while Johnny, 6, does justice to his grahams under milk.  It’s a quiet time.

Also here is Grandma, who lets me in on her plans for the day, all of which sound harmless at worst and lovely at best.

So begins another day in vicinity of Lititz PA, a few miles north on 501, then east a mile or two up a winding hill with horse farm and planted fields to the right and houses on a hill side to the left, then left up a steep hill past an old church cemetery on the right, houses on the left, to the road on the left and into this very merry subdivision.  Brickerville is the town.

Travels with Johnny et al.

Blogging one two, in trip to Lititz. OK, this works. In air on way to Phila. airport, where SUV awaits us at the Enterprise Car Rental facility.  9:35 flight left more or less on time, arrival to be noon-ish.

We will take the scenic route from airport, most of it on Pa. 322.  (Rough going in-flight here, 45 minutes out, plane rocking to and fro.  For little kid behind me it’s fun, she keeps going “Oh” with each rocking.  Amusement park ride for her, sitting with parents, to whom she frequently chatters.)

Traveler’s tip: Online ticket buying, as thru Orbitz [correction thanx to Maggie below], which we did, lets you pick a seat, but that seat is not confirmed, so that you and your loved one or other traveling companion may not be seated together as planned.  You have to call to confirm it.

Orbitz did not tell us that, even if they were kind enough to call us at home this morning to say the flight was on time (and to wake us, of course).  Recorded message but effective nonetheless.

So we sat apart, and wouldn’t you know it, I struck up a conversation with a young personal trainer from Utah, now living in Chicago and working for a national p.t. company whose name escapes me.  Nice young lady, on way to visit expecting sister in Richmond.

At the airport we got our Enterprise Rental medium SUV for $35 a day plus various fees and taxes.  OP-based Red Cab to O’Hare had been as usual a good choice on getting to O’Hare from OP, @$32 including taxes and tip.  When we go cab, it’s Red, not Blue, which as it happens matches our politics, which is irrelevant, in that service is the thing, Red having arisen in the last very few years as good alternative to the longstanding Blue Cab, which got sloppy in our (limited) experience.

Drove to outside Lititz, named after Lidice, the city in then-Czechoslovakia which was infamously decimated by German occupiers in WW2 in reprisal for assassination of a bigshot Nazi, I discovered reading a plaque in the town park, next to the park’s glorious duck channel, where mallards, and one AFLAC-style goose, gather to loll about when not chased by little boys.

Johnny, age 6, chased them as Grandma and Grandpa walked with him and his twin sisters, Rose and Lily, age 4.  Older sister Madeline, age 8, was in class.  We were to bring Johnny to the school, on a sprawling site opposite a farm field, on time for his aftenoon kindergarten session.

Johnny also worked out on every muscle-using climbing and swinging vehicle in the park, as if he had his own personal trainer operating in his brain.  The kid takes pleasure where he may and finds it everywhere he looks.

He and Madeline, for instance, on the ride last night back from the Little Gym, where they each had hour-long gymnastics sessions with 20 or so other urchins, they judged buildings we passed, one by one — “good, good, good, good” — on what grounds it was not clear, and spotted various kinds of cars, the two of them eagerly announcing what kind — “big, big, white, white.”

More later . . . .

Barney, we hardly knew ye

Barney Frank, of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac overlook fame, has had enough and won’t take any more:

Just a day after Rep. Barney Frank excoriated federal bailout recipient AIG for “rewarding incompetence” by paying out $165 million in bonuses to its executives in a year when the insurance giant nearly collapsed, the Massachusetts Democrat introduced a bill rescinding all bailouts for failing firms or for homeowners in foreclosure.

So reports Scott Ott, of “News fairly unbalanced. We report. You decipher” fame.

“When I said AIG bonuses reward incompetence, it suddenly occurred to me that these bailouts do the same thing,” said Rep. Frank. “Instead of giving hundreds of billions to the likes of AIG and to people who bought too much house, we’re going to invest in companies and individuals who have managed their money well. From now on, we are going to reward competence.”
 
Rep. Frank said his plan has two simple steps:
 
* Immediately recover the bailout money already disbursed.
* Loan it to companies and individuals who have played by the rules, invested prudently, and didn’t spend beyond their means.
O. would never sign it.
 
P.S. Be sure not to miss this from the doughty Frank:
The lawmaker also said he plans to “go after whoever was supposed to be keeping an eye on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, but who ignored history and economics in a vain attempt to implement their Utopian ideology about home ownership for everyone regardless of income.”
Utopian ideology.  That would be your Democrat platform.

F.L. Wright, Archbishop Tutu, Gary Sinise, spanking

A Wisconsin housekeeper stiffed by the skinflint architect Frank Lloyd Wright, referring to immoral goings-on at Taliesin: “Sin and pay” OK, “sin and no pay” not OK.

It’s in a review by Tom Shippey of T.C. Boyle’s novel The Women in the 3/6/09 Times Literary Supplement. All in all, the review is quite a shoot-down as I read it, at best ambivalent.

Final words:

At the end of each section you really don’t know whether to laugh or cry, and the way Boyle tells the story, that feeling gets stronger every time. And that, I think, is why the telling is the way it is.

Clever without turning cerebral, passionate without forfeiting emotional range; when there are novels like this to read, why would anyone bother with Aga sagas [household melodramas centered on the kitchen and domestic crises] or Sex and the City [Sarah J. Parker and friends]?

That said, the ambivalence fades away. In Shippey’s view, Boyle has authored a potboiler — in several meanings of that serviceable figure.

Shippey, if not also Boyle, presents Wright as a bounder of the first water, with no socially or other redeemable features but his genius.

* Today ChiTrib and Sun-Times have (Archbishop) Tutu the Clown scolding newsies for pressing Daley on plane trips taken for free from highly suspect donors: “I will absolve you and make you holy,” says Tutu.

* Yesterday Gary Sinise was questioned aggressively by a Trib writer about Brian dePalma’s Iraq war movie, to which Sinise, a supporter of the military, objected on unfairness grounds.

Sinise, briefed on the film and knowing dePalma, hadn’t seen it? And this? and that? It’s always a surprise when a reporter pushes a celebrity that way.

Robert K. Elder, the reporter in question, may be an exception. He did have fun with NPR’s Ira Glass in an LA Times piece in 2000, peppering him with nervy questions.

* Yesterday in S-T Mary Mitchell said spanking is “obviously not a black thing,” though she supplied the black word for it, as if it is, “whupping.” (That’s a black word?) She means it’s not more prevalent among blacks than others?

But Rev. Geo. Clements told me in the 70s that it was, in an interview about corporate punishment at his Holy Angels school on the South Side, which he claimed was the world’s biggest Catholic elementary school and where whupping was always an option.