Tricia Springstubb's Blog, page 11
September 19, 2013
Birthday
Another year, and I’m ready to give it all I got. I celebrated first at a writing retreat with with some of my best friends. We shared work, some fairly heavy duty (for us) critiques, terrific home-made food and late night conversation. Mother Nature was in a benign if slightly elegaic mood, and some of us took a last, langurous swim in Lake Erie.
Home to phone calls with my girls and dinner with Paul. Topping the day off was this post. http://www.happybirthdayauthor.com/2013/09/happy-birthday-tricia-springstubb.html?spref=fb Be sure to scroll down to see the photos of PHOEBE and DIGGER sprung to life! (And my librarian friends, I feel sure Eric got all the sand out of the book before he returned it!)
Thinking ahead now to a week of school visits and then leaving for my four week fellowship in Vermont. Reminding myself that all new experiences, even happy ones, hold an element of terror, right?
September 12, 2013
It’s Time
Latley I’ve been thinking about time,
That acrobat,
That master thief.
That geezer,
That newborn.
Plodder,
Usain Bolt-er,
Magician,
Priest.
And so it was funny to catch up with one of my favorite blogs, http://chavelaque.blogspot.com/by the editor Cheryl Klein, and discover her recent post full of quotes by writers on that very subject. How we use time or it uses us, how it figures in fiction, our conception of it and counfoundment (is that a word?) by it. Here are a few of my favorites.
“The whole culture is telling you to hurry, while the art tells you to take your time. Always listen to the art.” — Junot Diaz
“The writer operates at a peculiar crossroads where time and place and eternity somehow meet. His problem is to find that location.” — Flannery O’Connor
“I get up every morning determined both to change the world and to have one hell of a good time. Sometimes this makes planning the day difficult.” — E. B. White
“All of us have moments in our childhood where we come alive for the first time. And we go back to those moments and think, This is when I became myself.” — Rita Dove
“To achieve great things, two things are needed: a plan and not quite enough time.” — Leonard Bernstein
September 5, 2013
Fish Out of Water
So this is how I felt on Labor Day, when our city pool closed.
I love to swim. I love to be in the water. Maybe this is because I grew up near Long Island Sound, and the merest whiff of salt water is my madeleine.
But I also love lakes and rivers and yes, my city pool, AKA Shang-ri-la. The stink of chlorine brings (happy) tears to my eyes. It’s the magic of bouyancy. Going from land to water creature. It’s the quiet under there, and the absolute inability to do anything but paddle and float. No talking. No listening. No reading or writing. Some people label this sensory deprivation; I call it being alone with my thoughts. I can’t tell you how many lines for stories rise to the surface of my mind while I’m underwater. A few times this summer I’ve had to scramble out of my lane and grab a dry kickboard to use as a lap desk, so I wouldn’t forget. (Sometimes on the way home, I have to get off my bike and use its seat as a desk. At my age, there’s no trusting I’ll still remember by the time I get home.)
But now the pool is closed. At some point I’ll probably walk by and peer in, clutch the chain link and gape like the poor kid dreaming of living in a mansion. June is a long, long way off.
Meanwhile, that book I worked on all summer is on my editor’s desk. It’s made its own journey from idea to story, from amorphous to solid. Or sort of solid. Shimmer and float, little book!
August 31, 2013
Summer’s lease…
But happy back to school, everyone, and even if you’re not going back, may discovery and growth lie ahead!
August 22, 2013
Forty Years
In the summer of 1972, I moved to Boston. I’d just gotten my degree in sociology, a subject I chose because I hoped to be a social worker and make the world a better place. Most of the courses baffled me (think statistics) but I loved the case studies, which were a little like short stories. My minor was, of course, English, but as it turned out, neither degree prepared me much for anything practical.
My college roommate had moved to Boston with her boyfriend and said I should come, too. We shared an apartment with two other couples, and I was definitely the odd one out. I didn’t even have a real bed. At night my roommate (that saint!) and her boyfriend would go to bed and I’d lie on the couch for a long time, pretending to be mesmerized by my novel but really just trying to keep my eyes open until a decent amount of time had passed and I could creep into their room and fall asleep on a mattress in the corner.
I worked at a restaurant where the cook was A Dirty Old Man. I was so lonesome. I had no idea what came next. It was the Fourth of July weekend and the city was empty as my heart. Another one of my roommates told me I should go to the art museum. At least it wasn’t hot there.
And so I met Paul, a fellow gallery wanderer. John Lennon glasses, a ponytail–he was so handsome! We talked about books and food, two topics destined to become recurring themes. He was a conscientious objector, which impressed me mightily, and had lived in Boston for a while. He knew the lay of the land, and we walked out of the museum together, so he could show me the sights. We wound up in Longwood Mall, an enchanted place.
Two hundred or so years ago, some visionary planted it with a variety of beeches–European, weeping, copper–and they are glorious. On a sunny day the light dapples their silvery trunks and pitter-patters among their leaves. These trees offer you a seat, they invite you to step inside and have yourself a day-long daydream. Some are dancers, some heavy-footed elephants. You long to be a sparrow, and call one home.
How, after just a few hours, could Paul understand me better than I did myself? Walking among those trees, I was the happiest I’d been since I got to Boston. Of course I fell in love with him. He gave me those trees.
A few weeks ago, celebrating our 40th wedding anniversary, we walked there again. I said, We should have gotten married here. He said, Who knew, that day? And it turned out he didn’t just mean who knew it was the beginning of us. He also meant he’d had no idea, that summer afternoon, that the beech grove even existed. He’d stumbled upon it. He’d never been there before that day, either.
And I decided I loved the trees all the more, because we found them–or they found us– together.
August 15, 2013
Reason # 978 to Love Indie Booksellers
Who else would bake you a book cake? This one was from Lois of Paragraph Books in Mt. Vernon, Ohio, where I did a reading and signing last week. It was too gorgeous to eat but uh, somehow we did. And it tasted as delicious as it looked. Thank you, Lois! Thank you, booksellers, booklovers, and bookeaters everywhere.
August 8, 2013
Why I Pretty Much Worship George Saunders
A recent article in the NY Times pointed out how many great writers have been not such great human beings. Personally, I’m willing to overlook a lot in exchange for a novel that cleaves that inner frozen sea. In the case of the writer George Saunders, this isn’t necessary. Not only is he one of the most original, witty and incisive writers working today, he’s a big-hearted human being, too.
If any proof beyond my opinion is required, just read the graduation speech he gave this spring at Syracuse University. Here he is on how to view success:
“Succeeding,” whatever that might mean to you, is hard, and the need to do so constantly renews itself (success is like a mountain that keeps growing ahead of you as you hike it), and there’s the very real danger that “succeeding” will take up your whole life, while the big questions go untended.
On what he regrets most in his life:
What I regret most in my life are failures of kindness.
Those moments when another human being was there, in front of me, suffering, and I responded…sensibly. Reservedly. Mildly.
Or, to look at it from the other end of the telescope: Who, in your life, do you remember most fondly, with the most undeniable feelings of warmth?
Those who were kindest to you, I bet.
On his hope for us all:
T hat luminous part of you that exists beyond personality – your soul, if you will – is as bright and shining as any that has ever been. Bright as Shakespeare’s, bright as Gandhi’s, bright as Mother Theresa’s. Clear away everything that keeps you separate from this secret luminous place. Believe it exists, come to know it better, nurture it, share its fruits tirelessly.
For the full speech, click here http://6thfloor.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/07/31/george-saunderss-advice-to-graduates/?_r=2&
August 1, 2013
Dept. of Mid-summer Delights and Revelations
***Reading and loving Kathi Appelt’s new book, “The True Blue Scouts of Sugar Man Scouts”. Here’s one of my favorite quotes so far, “They say that lightning never strikes in the same place twice, but the same is not true for courage. As it turns out, when courage strikes, it almost always begets more courage.” The same’s true of kindness or generosity or, of course, hard-heartedness.
***Touring our daughter and her boyfriend (who’s never been to Cleveland) around town. It’s a little like writing–seeing something through fresh eyes makes you realize and question your own assumptions. Patrick in turn introduced us to a wonderful bookstore he knew through on-line connections, and I only wish it had a website so I could link to it. Suffice it to say if you’re ever in Cleveland, bee-line it to Guide to Kulchur on the west side.
Here we are in Wendy Park, an urban oasis at the foot of the Cuyahoga River, putting on our Cleveland–you’ve got to be tough faces.
***Another daughter and her artist/architect friends just completed a Kickstarter campaign to do an installation in Lisbon, Portugal this fall. Kickstarter is so cool! It was thrilling to watch them inch and leap toward their goal as people contributed anywhere from $1 to over $500. I’ll be backing other campaigns in the future for sure–see delight # 1 above.
***And since this seems to have turned into a Daughter Post, I’ll just brag a tiny bit more and say that next week we get to attend the “white coat” ceremony of our third girl, who’s halfway to becoming a physican assistant.
***Hoping your summer is yielding its own pleasures!
July 25, 2013
Gargantua
For second grade, our daughter Phoebe had one of those teachers you always remember. Her name is Vincetta Dooner, and among the many gifts she gave her students (and their parents) is this wise saying, “Out of bad comes good.”
All that rain and heat I’ve been whining about? My garden has loved the weather. Never seen my lilies or tomatoes so happy.

I'm short, but still--the star gazers are sky scrapers.

I'll need a ladder--or Paul--to pick all the black cherry tomatoes.

Flora and fauna of Cleveland: morning glories and Paul
*****
I haven’t done much writing about writing lately, have I? It must be summer…
July 19, 2013
Divine
I’m a really cheap date in New York City. Buy me a bagel and a nice cup of coffee and I’m good for hours of walking around, watching people, looking in windows. This past weekend we found ourself in our daughter’s old upper (upper) West Side neighborhood, Morningside Heights, where the sidewalks are chock-a-block with book stalls and students. I saw a little boy in a Superman cape dash into a corner phone booth. (maybe the only one left in the city?) Also an old guy with dreds playing sidewalk chess with a pink-cheeked, red-headed little girl, and a woman with legs as long as an egret’s swinging in a playground.
But it was hot–let’s not talk about it–and we wound up ducking into the lovely grounds of the cathedral of St. john the Divine, an enormous, as yet unfinished Gothic Revival building. There I took a few photos of the sculptures ringing a fountain. In 1984, the cathedral had a children’s competition for sculptures of animals, and these are a few of the winners. Enjoy!

I love his spiral spots!

I'm sure he's about to sing--maybe "The Bear Went Over the Mountain"?

This sparrow flew down to join the penguins, no doubt hoping to chill with them.

This has to be the world's plumpest, jolliest unicorn.