Author Archive
Friday, March 13th, 2020
Last Thursday, Jeremy asked what it would take for us to decide to cancel or postpone our planned trip to Australia. On Monday, we rescheduled our flights. Yesterday, the public schools and our kids’ school all closed. In grocery stores, people are calm and brave, Londoners during the blitz. Online, we take turns being scared and comforting one another.
I’m sitting on my back deck drinking coffee with Jeremy. The gardens are full of birdsong. Hummingbirds are having fierce air battles over the shrubbery. And now I know why the pair of crows I’ve been trying to befriend have been so preoccupied. They’re building a nest.
Posted in history, little gorgeous things, mindfulness, san francisco | Comments Off on well, that escalated quickly
Thursday, March 5th, 2020
It feels like all four of us have let out a collective breath. The kids were champions during the long wait to move in, and instantly happier after the move. They assembled their own IKEA beds. We have dinner at the dinner table, like dinner-having people. During a brief spat earlier, the big kid said: “Fine. I’ll go to my room,” and she did, and it was glorious.
Children can have little a personal space, as a treat.
Posted in children, san francisco, they crack me up | Comments Off on that feeling when you live in an house
Tuesday, March 3rd, 2020
…is how long we lived in the apartment on Eugenia Avenue. On Monday we moved again, into a house half a mile up the road. The neighborhood is called College Hill. No one has ever heard of it. I say it’s still part of Bernal Heights, but the kids insist it’s Glen Park.
It’s two years since we bought this place. It was a very sweet Queen Anne with just a little deferred maintenance (termites, wood-boring beetles, asbestos, a mummified cat in the walls), waiting for a naive tech couple to come along and pour their life savings into it. There are a lotta construction photos, if that’s your jam. Our architect and general contractor are both local, women-owned businesses, and they did such a good job, I can’t even tell you, you would fall off your horse. My Fireclay tiles, let me show you them.
Tonight’s our second night here. I’m hoping to make friends with the crows, but they were distracted today with yelling at a redtail hawk. There’s a toyon full of hummingbirds. Our neighbor Lucinda brought around a basket of Meyer lemons from her tree with a note that said: “Welcome home.”
Posted in adventure time, happiness, san francisco | Comments Off on sixteen years and one month
Sunday, February 16th, 2020
“You were an orphan?” Stephen frowned. “I’m so sorry.” “Almost everyone is, eventually,” said Grace. “It’s not a big deal.”
Posted in bookmaggot | Comments Off on paladin’s grace, by t. kingfisher
Sunday, February 16th, 2020
I had my first existential crisis when I realized that it was not possible to have a pony in the city.
Posted in bookmaggot | Comments Off on farm city, by novella carpenter
Thursday, February 6th, 2020
Such is the inconvenient truth of globalization: it is based more on market sleight of hand than on Adam Smith’s invisible hand.
Posted in bookmaggot | Comments Off on the outlaw ocean, by ian urbina
Friday, January 24th, 2020
…the real disaster is everyday life, which alienates us from each other and from the protective impulse that we harbor.
Posted in bookmaggot | Comments Off on how to do nothing, by jenny odell
Wednesday, January 15th, 2020
…there is no escape and nowhere to run. There is no outside capitalism anymore. Capitalism has contacted all of our tribes.
Posted in bookmaggot, ranty, san francisco, women are human | Comments Off on initiated, by amanda yates garcia
Saturday, January 4th, 2020
When I think of my father, I think of my heart breaking in stages.
Posted in bookmaggot, grief | Comments Off on long live the tribe of fatherless girls, by t kira madden
Wednesday, January 1st, 2020
Doctors found, paradoxically, that the people most prone to this type of anxiety were not the active combatants, who were out on the street and had a sense of agency, but the women and children stuck sheltering behind closed doors.
Posted in bookmaggot, grief, ireland, politics, women are human | Comments Off on say nothing, by patrick radden keefe
Wednesday, January 1st, 2020
You cannot write out of someone else’s dark place; you can only write out of your own.
Posted in bookmaggot, grief, hope, ranty, san francisco, women are human | Comments Off on know my name, by chanel miller
Wednesday, December 11th, 2019
The hills of Montgomery Pass had seven permanent springs. Though the region comprises more than 100,000 acres, the springs, when combined, would maybe cover only a single acre. Nearly all of the region’s wildlife had to pass through this tiny bottleneck. That is where the lions waited.
Posted in bookmaggot, horses are pretty | Comments Off on wild horse country, by david philipps
Monday, December 9th, 2019
“Is this the way the world works?” she wondered. “That men get away with this?”
Posted in bookmaggot, ranty, women are human | Comments Off on catch and kill, by ronan farrow
Sunday, December 8th, 2019
A lazy morning in bed with cups of tea and books and Alice cat, followed by Rebels Within and lattes at Craftsman & Wolves. (Two dogs came in: “Wolves! Truth in advertising.”)
To the house, where Jeremy expressed glee over the extremely solarpunk radiant floor and hot water heating system, while I sat on the stairs daydreaming, only for our starchitect Bonnie to show up unexpectedly for a look around. We all agreed that it is turning out to be a very cute house indeed.
To the barn, for a lazy amble on Bentley. Freya my war mare has a new family, and family photos were being taken in the golden hour. Freya, fat and happy, was striking warlike poses. “This is my person. This is my dog.” God bless the war mares and starchitects and wolves and craftsmen and rebels, every one.
Posted in fulishness, happiness, horses are pretty, i love the whole world, little gorgeous things, mindfulness, san francisco | Comments Off on o happy day
Friday, December 6th, 2019
“You know those books that you can’t stop thinking about, won’t shut up about, and wish everyone around you would read? The ones that, if taken in aggregate, would tell people more about you than your resume?” Yeah, I do. Here are some of mine. (I’m going with the obscure ones. If you haven’t already read Dark Emu and The Body Keeps the Score, go, do.)
Nuclear Rites (1996) – Hugh Gusterson embedded himself as an anthropologist at Lawrence Livermore National Labs. He talks about bomb tests as rites of passage for the weapons scientists, and I find myself thinking about this whenever I think about douchebag VCs investing in horrorshows like Uber. A Cold War kid, I saw The Day After on TV and followed the news trickling out of the Chernobyl disaster. I couldn’t conceive of why anyone would build such fucking appalling weapons. This book helped me understand, at least a little.
The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down (1998) – I constantly quote Michael Frayn’s “In a good play, everyone is right.” This is a book-length version of the same idea. Her doctors had one framework for understanding Lia Lee’s epilepsy, and her Hmong family had another. However kind and well-intentioned Westerners think we are, when we tacitly assume the superiority of our version of the truth, children die.
Depression: A Public Feeling (2000) – This book introduced me to “political depression”, the idea that anxiety and grief are a wholly reasonable reaction to the destructive and hypercompetitive economies in which we are forced to live. The first chapters are a poetic memoir of one of the author’s depressive episodes, and I find myself reading them over and over. I’ll always be grateful that Ann Cvetkovich gave me a way of thinking about my relationship with my landscape of origin as a settler seeking to right the wrongs of the past.
The Language of Blood (2003) – A wrenching memoir that changed the way I think about transracial adoption and motherhood. If you like it, see also All You Can Ever Know.
Mother Nature (2005) – An anthropologist and primatologist considers the evidence for how best to raise children. A book of radical kindness. If you like it, see also A Primate’s Memoir.
Postwar (2006) I’ve called this the missing manual for Generation X. It provides the context for the political climate in which we were born – the fading of the postwar consensus and peace dividend, setting the stage for the attack on social institutions by Thatcher and Reagan, and the collapse of the social contract that brought us to where we are. You’re not going to like this book, exactly. It’s hard work and heartbreaking. Judt died before seeing his worst fears fulfilled, but if you want more, his student Timothy Snyder’s Bloodlands is basically the prequel.
This House of Grief (2014) – Another dumb joke of mine is that Mad Max: Fury Road is a keenly observed documentary of my childhood. This book is, however, a keenly observed documentary of the middle-class Australia in which I grew up, its lonely and angry men, its frightened and angry women, and the horrors it inflicts on its children. In some ways it’s the distillation of everything I’ve talked about here: the slaughterhouse of empire, and ways in which it drains our private lives of meaning.
Horses in Company (2017) – Lucy Rees, who wrote some of my favorite pony books when I was a child, has spent the intervening thirty years catching up on new science around equine ethology. Much as alpha wolves and cocaine-addicted rats illustrate the stress of being an experimental subject rather than authentic wild animal behavior, the received wisdom about dominant and submissive horses reflects domestic animals under resource constraint. Rees argues that wild horses, who can eat the grass beneath their feet, live in the real-world version of Willy Wonka’s chocolate factory, and that in this state of nature they’re feminist matriarchal gestalt entities. I jest, but only a little. If we could take violence out of the way we interact with animals and children, maybe we could take it out of the way we interact with one another.
Posted in bookmaggot, grief, history, horses are pretty, politics, ranty, sanity, women are human, worldchanging | Comments Off on an annotated bibliography of the inside of my head
Tuesday, December 3rd, 2019
When the British were deprived of their American Colonies, they were at a loss for a gulag in which to dump their political dissidents, especially the Irish, their petty thieves and social inadequates. Australia was a godsend, better even than America. It was as good as the other side of the moon.
Posted in australia, bookmaggot | Comments Off on the voice that thunders, by alan garner
Saturday, November 30th, 2019
The Bay doesn’t always remind you that it’s saltwater, but today there was surf.
If you looked into the wind…
…you’d get sideways raindrops in your eyes.
It was glorious.
Posted in adventure time | Comments Off on heron’s head in the storm
Wednesday, November 13th, 2019
…horses form intimate social bonds, just as elephants do. With horses, though, those bonds, while strong, are also quite fluid. As with humans, friendships come and go…
Posted in bookmaggot | Comments Off on the horse, by wendy williams
Tuesday, November 5th, 2019
Many patients secretly wish to be their therapist’s only patient. Or, at least, the favorite—the funniest, most entertaining and, above all, most beloved.
Posted in bookmaggot | Comments Off on maybe you should talk to someone, by lori gottlieb
Monday, October 28th, 2019
You wonder if you’re a bad daughter, a bad friend, a selfish asshole placing her own intellectual wankery above the living, breathing people who poured everything they could possibly give into her, and were rewarded with the sight of her walking away forever. You never answer that question, and you never will. You strap into your rocket ship anyway. Somehow, you leave.
Posted in bookmaggot | Comments Off on to be taught, if fortunate, by becky chambers
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