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The wedding is over, I leave for Ireland in two weeks, and I've done a lot of reading & writing here and there. I've got some exciting things planned for the blog, some oh so marvelous interviews lined up, and quite a lot of bookish news to discuss. 

Posting will be light as I re-acquaint myself with the wonder that is typepad, but when I get back into the groove...watch out.  Posting may be crazed and plentiful. A non-posting bride is a bride with a hell of a lot to say that has remained unsaid until posting resumes. Which is, you know, any moment. Or, now, actually.  Glad to be back & thank you all for your kind wishes and congrats.

September 17, 2007 in Wedding | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

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The Deed is Done...

Weddingflowers ...and my, what a glorious time we had.  The last of the wedding guests leaves tomorrow so we're laying low and taking it slow. So, so, so much to say when I return next week.

September 11, 2007 in Wedding | Permalink | Comments (15) | TrackBack (0)

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Swan Show Interrupted

You have, I'm guessing, noticed that my not-so-quiet mind has gone quiet.  At least, on the page. I can see how it might be easy to suspect that I've gone quiet on the page because I'm busy being noisy, noisy, noisy on other pages. Namely, short story and novel pages. Written pages intended for print.  Alas, that is not the reason for the silence this time.

The real reason I've been absent (more painful for me than you, I'm sure): Nine house guests in the span of 2.5 weeks.  Six of them at once. In a loft. A large loft, yes, but a loft with no walls nonetheless.  A live+work loft which means, by extension, my office. My office where I need to get work done. Getting work done with children running about and adults waiting around to be entertained is...well...it is not conducive to getting work done.  Any kind of work. Actual work to pay bills or writing work.  I'm behind on work, I'm behind on writing, I'm behind on blogging. I'm in a state of perpetual catch up but can't seem to find an escape hatch to a space that is not occupied by a visitor.

I also had a birthday celebration.  33. Yes. Getting up there. 

Hence the silence. Hence the I'm-too-busy-ness.

And then, out of nowhere, there is this: I'm engaged. 

Yes. Yes. All very exciting. I have much to say on this as well.  Much. But I will at least say this now, to be clear: I do not approve of the wedding industry. I think it is crap. I think it ruins women's minds. I have been a bridesmaid 14 times (I'm a few days into 33, so do the math -- 14 weddings in the past 8 years -- and you will begin to understand my particular brand of bridal-industry/wedding hoopla loathing) so I know the game and I'm not going to play it.

But strangely, strangely -- what a divine thing -- this engagement.  I knew I'd be with this man forever, this lovely man who is silly and serious and expands me in a way that no other me+another combination quite does. I knew we'd be "life partners" no matter what. He knew that too. We've often talked about how cool we'd be to never get married. To throw sand in tradition's eyes. Sting her a bit. Yet strange how the formalization of it has shifted something in me. Ever so slightly. Almost imperceptible..but just so.  A confirmation of sorts?  For someone who never had her sights on getting married, I'm shocked by how delighted I am. Not quite sure what it all means.  But I do know this: I am still me, he is still he, I have a lot of writing to get done and now is not the time to go all soft and mushy at the center (literally and figuratively!)

Also, this: I refuse to purchase a single bridal magazine during this entire process.  Simply refuse.

The final Swan Show post, my A.M. Homes reading experiences, and many other things will follow.  As soon as the shock wears off, the house guests scurry away, and I've had time to mellow. Adjust. Soak & seep.

June 15, 2006 in Authors, Birthdays, Bridal Industry, Engagement, House Guests, Loft Life, Wedding, Work, Writing | Permalink | Comments (5) | TrackBack (0)

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What I'm Reading

  • Zadie Smith: NW: A Novel

    Zadie Smith: NW: A Novel
    We shall see...

  • Nicholson Baker: The Way the World Works: Essays

    Nicholson Baker: The Way the World Works: Essays
    My all-out crush on Baker is nearly complete.

  • Robin Sloan: Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore: A Novel

    Robin Sloan: Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore: A Novel
    Because it's more than a pretty (glow in the dark) cover.

LA Readings of Note

  • 04-04: Aleksandar Hemon
  • 04-06: Marisa Silver
  • 04-02: Rachel Kushner
  • 04-17: Gish Jen
  • 04-23: Granta's Best Young British Novelists Discussion
  • 04-23: Kate Atkinson
  • 05-16: The Making of the Great Bolano
  • 05-21: The Graphic Canon: Illustrating the World's Great Literature

Recent Posts

  • Lit Bits & That Book Everyone Loved (Except for Me)
  • Reader-Writer Moment #583
  • This Deafening Silence Means Something
  • #LANovels Shortlist
  • Social Reading, Story and The #LANovels Project
  • Swiftian Sadness
  • The Weight of Ink
  • I Was Bad at Book Alley
  • I Was Bad at Vroman's
  • Reader-Writer Moment #515
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Books Read in 2013

  • Jeet Thayil: Narcopolis: A Novel

    Jeet Thayil: Narcopolis: A Novel

  • Deborah Levy: Swimming Home: A Novel

    Deborah Levy: Swimming Home: A Novel

  • Michel Houellebecq: The Map and the Territory (Vintage International)

    Michel Houellebecq: The Map and the Territory (Vintage International)

  • Enrique Vila-Matas: Never Any End to Paris

    Enrique Vila-Matas: Never Any End to Paris

  • Antoine Wilson: Panorama City

    Antoine Wilson: Panorama City

  • Alex Shakar: Luminarium

    Alex Shakar: Luminarium

  • Junot Diaz: This Is How You Lose Her

    Junot Diaz: This Is How You Lose Her

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    Books Read in 2013

    • Jeet Thayil: Narcopolis: A Novel

      Jeet Thayil: Narcopolis: A Novel

    • Deborah Levy: Swimming Home: A Novel

      Deborah Levy: Swimming Home: A Novel

    • Michel Houellebecq: The Map and the Territory (Vintage International)

      Michel Houellebecq: The Map and the Territory (Vintage International)

    • Enrique Vila-Matas: Never Any End to Paris

      Enrique Vila-Matas: Never Any End to Paris

    • Antoine Wilson: Panorama City

      Antoine Wilson: Panorama City

    • Alex Shakar: Luminarium

      Alex Shakar: Luminarium

    • Junot Diaz: This Is How You Lose Her

      Junot Diaz: This Is How You Lose Her

    Books Read in 2012

    • Richard Lloyd Parry: People Who Eat Darkness: The True Story of a Young Woman Who Vanished from the Streets of Tokyo--and the Evil That Swallowed Her Up

      Richard Lloyd Parry: People Who Eat Darkness: The True Story of a Young Woman Who Vanished from the Streets of Tokyo--and the Evil That Swallowed Her Up

    • Etgar Keret: Suddenly, a Knock on the Door: Stories

      Etgar Keret: Suddenly, a Knock on the Door: Stories

    • Graham Swift: Wish You Were Here

      Graham Swift: Wish You Were Here

    • Elaine Dundy: The Dud Avocado (New York Review Books Classics)

      Elaine Dundy: The Dud Avocado (New York Review Books Classics)

    • Ben Lerner: Leaving the Atocha Station

      Ben Lerner: Leaving the Atocha Station

    • Steve Erickson: These Dreams of You

      Steve Erickson: These Dreams of You

    • Dana Spiotta: Stone Arabia: A Novel

      Dana Spiotta: Stone Arabia: A Novel

    • Heidi Julavits: The Vanishers: A  Novel

      Heidi Julavits: The Vanishers: A Novel

    • Fernando Pessoa: The Book of Disquiet (Serpent's Tail Classics)

      Fernando Pessoa: The Book of Disquiet (Serpent's Tail Classics)

    • Jennifer Jordan: The Last Man on the Mountain: The Death of an American Adventurer on K2

      Jennifer Jordan: The Last Man on the Mountain: The Death of an American Adventurer on K2