I gave off a hoot yesterday when I heard that Robert Bly was named the first poet laureate of Minnesota, by Governor Tim Pawlenty. The governor, a born-again, pretty-boy creep, who is jonesing for a VP nomination when the Republican National convention comes to town, had actually vetoed a bill in 2005 to establish a […]
- Jim, It’s Him
- A Poet is Reborn or What the Hell are you doing with Your Spare Time?
- Writing the Moment
- The Man in the Blizzard: The Video
- Westward, Ho!
No Country for this Old Man
Now that it’s won the academy award for best picture of the year, I’ll claim my status as the only guy in America who didn’t fall in love with the Coen Brothers flick. It so happens that I read the Cormac McCarthy novel last summer and brought with me to the theater a fresh memory […]
Hillary’s Toast
Watching CNN tonight as Obama wins Louisiana, Nebraska, and Washington, and “the best political team on television” is still going nuts yaking about super delegates and the possibility of a brokered Democratic convention. Seems clear to me that if Obama sweeps through the next three weeks, and Hilary’s puts all her resources into winning Texas […]
Keillor Says Nay to Marijuana
It was an icy night out there. One of those freeze after thaw deals with little mountains of slick ice rising everywhere. My son and I had to park four blocks from our caucus site, the junior high he’d graduated from a few years back. I slipped at nearly every curb. We had to wait […]
Al Franken House Party
Here’s an image of Al from a site called alfrankenidiot.com. I’m not going to bother linking to it as it’s pretty much as you’d expect. One can imagine all the ways Franken will be demonized in word and image if, as expected, he wins the Democratic nomination for senate in Minnesota. I worry that he’ll have […]
Poet Laureate
Last Friday night I had the great pleasure of seeing my old buddy Mike Tuggle installed as Poet Laureate of Sonoma County. A night of pouring rain, and yet a huge crowd turned out to the downtown Santa Rosa library. My first thought: the world needs more artist celebrations like that, free, well-catered affairs where everybody […]
Doing His Homework to Coltrane
This morning my seventeen-year old son Anton laid his Environmental Studies homework out on the dining room table, switched his iPod with mine in the Bose dock, and put on Coltrane’s Blue Train. I was thrilled that he chose this album from the hundreds he has. I first got a copy of Blue Train when […]
Obama in Minnesota
Got a chance to see the man today, with twenty thousand other Minnesotans, when he appeared at the Target Center in Minneapolis, three days before Super Tuesday. The lines wove around the arena, up a blocked-off freeway heading north, and through a mile of skyways. I wondered if anybody beside Minnesotans would line up outside […]
A Single Man
So I’d been seeing this woman and we enjoyed each others’s company, for the most part. The existential question being how long can two people, healthy, but no longer young, go on enjoying each other without making any kind of commitment? It’s a little like playing a game of chicken. Which is to say it’s […]
AUGIE’S ALPHABET OF APHRODISIACS
Augie Boyer is a pothead Minneapolis private investigator and the hero of my forthcoming novel, The Man in the Blizzard, to be published in August. I thought I was finished with the dude, or that he was finished with me, but, obviously, he’s not done. Here he’s compiling a curious alphabet. I just try to stay out of his way.
A
ABSINTHE
My taste for this stuff goes back to early childhood in San Francisco. It was an ice cream store on Balboa called Frosty Bosty that featured exotic flavors, including licorice. Which is why I take my absinthe on the rocks. When I’m back in S.F. I visit Absinthe Brasserie and Bar on Hayes.
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ANNA AKHMATOVA
My detective buddy Bobby Sabbatini turned me on to the Russian poet and tried to talk me into memorizing one of her poems. I wasn’t having any of that. Then he showed me a picture of her on the back of one of her books. I don’t know which affected me more, her eyes, her cheek bones, or her clavicle. I took the book to bed with me. By morning, I’d nailed one of her poems. You can get a good hit of her here.
B
BALINESE DANCE
I’m knocked out by the sound of the gamelan. And check out the way each women’s arms move, both supple and disciplined as if they were multiple limbs. All I got to do is put on a CD from Bali and I can see it all. Here’s a good place to start.
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BLOOD ORANGE CHOCOLATE TRUFFLES
It was an Israeli client, whose wife I was tracking, that first turned me on to the blood orange chocolate truffle. After I handed him photos of the wife in a compromising position, the dude had a box of a dozen shipped to my office every month for a year. They never failed to impress. Here’s where he got them.
C
CLIFFORD BROWN
All I’ve got to hear is the bright, buoyant head to Clifford Brown’s “Joy Spring” and I’m ready to participate. The fact that poor Clifford died at twenty-five, returns me to that age and I could swear I’m channeling the virtuoso of swinging bop.
CONCH
Nothing awakens romance in me as easily as the sound of the ocean, even if the sound’s only an illusion. I’m reminded of my romance with a girl named Jeannie and our teenage trysts at China Beach in S.F. Although Jeannie’s long gone, I have a nice collection of conch shells. But be careful, it can be bad luck to bring them inside. I keep mine outside on the porch where I visit them when I want to be roused by the sea. You can fill your needs at Sea Shell City.
D
DELORES DEL RIO
I heard that Orson Welles was nuts about her. I’ve never actually seen one of her movies. But I came across a picture of her in a used bookstore in Mankato, one of those movie star files. I took her home with me and had her matted. Delores Del Rio. I just like saying her name.
DUNGENESS CRAB
I spent the summer I turned seventeen hitching up and down the west coast. The best part was being picked up by a woman, twice my age, in Coos Bay. She brought me home with two enormous crabs. Three pounders. I watched her clean ‘em and crack ‘em at the kitchen sink. We ate and ate. Sweetest meat I’ve ever had.
E
EBONY
An ebony-finished grand piano is clearly one of the most sensual bodies I’ve ever run my hands over. One summer during college, I took piano lessons in the studio of Berkeley matron who’s Baldwin baby-grand was a pleasure to sit down to. The woman did nothing for me, but the curves and the deep, black finish of her piano truly turned me on. Now, in middle age, I’d be happy with an upright.
EGGS
Eric Burden, the ancient rocker from The Animals, got his nickname, Eggman, because he loved cracking eggs open on the bodies of naked girls. I’ve never so indulged. But the egg, symbol of both fertility and fragility, is a constant wonder to me. I have taught myself to crack them open with one hand and pour them into the sizzling butter of my fry pan. Salute the sunny side up beauties, my version of a morning miracle.
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