'And I never forget an Oola.'

First of all, the drink - well rock my soakin' socks! - exists:
1oz George Dickel Tennessee Whiskey, 3/4 oz Southern Comfort, 1/4 oz lime juice, 1 oz bourbon, 4 oz lemonade, 1/2 oz Pimm's no. 1. This is fit for a writer, no?
As for the movie, must see. Must. See. This one makes it onto my all-time faves list. Douglas is stellar as a pot-smokin' professor/author with major writer's non-block who is strung out while strung along a series of strange happenstance ripe for the printed page.
Downey Jr stars as well. As a sometimes gay publicist. Too good.
Posted at 07:07 PM in Film | Permalink | Comments (3) | TrackBack (0)
Let us go to a place where we are never turning
away from the sun, a place where its rays would
follow us at every angle, angles of mountainside
and volcanic cliffs forged from a sea distracted
by the nymphs that danced on its shores.
Let us go to a place where we feel the tilt of the Earth
inside of us, shaking passports and forgotten worries
from our pockets.
Let us go to a place all in ruins,
where columns finger the tresses
of the sky, tangling the firmament,
waking the Gods who would look upon us
with disdain if it weren’t for the chariot
we’d run like the blazes to the nearest museum
where my love for you is writ in a golden book
that is encased in glass, safe from flash photography.
Posted at 06:30 AM in Poetry | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)
Song of the Day - Voyage agreables!

Posted at 09:57 PM in Music | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Black assam
was perfume for
the throat, eating
flowers down to
their crocus;
Green:
unfurled flags
or seaweed
for a mariner sipping
tobacco washed up
on anchored saucers.
Serpentine, headless,
stingrays dove
at the pearls
of sugar
buried
in the heeltap,
no daylight
at the rim,
just a raft of lemon,
its fleshy planks
striated, curdling pink,
sloshing golden water.
Lilliputians
of a master guild
were doused. On
cinnamon-stick
scaffolding
their eyelash brushes
rendered the globe
(around it:
fat sultans, the Queen
reclining,
an Assyrian princess
with a parasol and
tambourine,
an Egyptian king
costumed in feathers -
of orange pekoe -
armed with arrow and bow,
an alligator at his feet).
Their art was soundless.
They wore
flippers as they worked,
carried paddles –
ready to voyage to
the other side
of the porcelain canvas,
through the breakfasty sea,
where they traced
the zodiac
through that
stained lagoon,
dripping star scents
and crumbs of the sun
into the paint.
Oxygen
for the boil
was cold water, a
serous alchemy.
Gulped down to
leafy starfish,
it was too late
not to empty
what they were deep
into making good fortunes of.
____________________________
A varied collection of poems chosen by Garrison Keillor for his radio show, Prairie Home Companion. Great for the bedside.
Posted at 09:20 PM in Poetry | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Posted at 10:09 PM in Music | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
the snow today is like crème brulee
it cracks with sugary crumbs
like spoons our boots sink in the stuff
that the grass beneath eats up
Posted at 09:46 PM in Weblogs | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
May 2006
First day in Paris: Jet-lagged from the ferries and planes we left behind in Greece, we are out in the rain and, of course, the cheap umbrella we buy in Montmarte folds up into a smile. Fous-toi, Paris.
Rain stops and is replaced by winds strong enough to blow you to the Thames. Yes, the Thames, NOT the Seine. Overexaggeration is key here...As we walk <and walk and walk> our way to Notre Dame - Saints alive, it looks closer on the map, is it a trick? I need another croissant! - Paris says 'Fous-toi' back. A nasty speck of something or other goes whack into Rockstar's eye. Oh, there's a cafe! Rockstar is now alternately rubbing his eye with a knuckle and pulling at his eyelid.
By the time we reach the cathedral, a croissant has been inhaled and Rockstar is blind in his left eye. Photos are quickly taken of the facade and then it's wife leading husband back to the train. Fous-toi, gargoyles.
Second day in Paris, amelioration: Rockstar swears a vestige of that 'something or other' is still at home under his eyelid. Eyeball is a dry marble in his head. But he's a good sport and we carry on, arriving early at the Louvre - there are only 15 or so people ahead of us in line. Should we go see her first? Rockstar shrugs. Ok then, it's our plan of attack. We go in just as it opens, run the gauntlet of signs that lead to her grin and soak in her presence that while so pop-culture cliche-ish is really quite remarkable. From any angle, her eyes follow you. Her eyes say to you, oui, la beaute est en toute chose.
Etonnant.
Off the jardins de Touilleres, tower Eiffel looms in the distance. Again, much further away than expected. There it is through the trees! <click> Wait! This is a great angle, the spire looks as if it's growing out of that Edith Wharton-esque townhouse. <click> At its heavy feet, we look up into Eiffel's skeletal belly: elevators filled with tourists and restaurants too expensive to make the standing in line worthwhile. Clouds billow and blow by in constant succession. Women preen and primp and languish on steps and ledges as their amours snap their pictures. Trim gardens radiate in one direction while arabesque lamposts and fountains line up and spill over in another. I want to buy some miniature towers - at least three. Want to share a croissant with me? Cliche. Cliche. Cliche. And, it's off to more museums we go.
Merci, Paris. Perhaps next time we'll actually see you through your glittering 'something or other.'

'You expected to know to be sad in the fall. Part of you died each year when the leaves fell from the trees and their branches were bare against the wind and the cold, wintry light. But you knew there would always be the spring, as you knew the river would flow again after it was frozen. When the cold rains kept on and killed the spring, it was as though a young person had died for no reason.'
- A Moveable Feast, E Hemingway
Posted at 11:34 PM in Weblogs | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
On our way to the grocer’s
We happened upon
A snapping turtle. He lay
In the middle of the road
Immobilized by the sun,
Not able to turn
Back to the curb,
Back to his molten pond.
His barbed mouth
Parted as we neared.
A black tongue
Did not pant or bark.
Only a hiss
Issued from the shell of him:
An Egyptian curse
Released from a pried tomb
Without clasps
Or locks to pick, nor booby traps.
His forehead
Never mirrored
The heat and his stomach
Never sighed.
He lay ready to exert
A century of effort into one step,
His elephantine legs
Buried to the knees in gravel,
His brontosauric tail
Susurrating behind.
Posted at 10:54 AM in Poetry | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)