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March Reads

From time to time, I will share some books that I have recently read. (If you follow me on goodreads, these titles will be familiar.) 

Magic for Liars – Sarah Gailey

Ivy Gamble isn’t magical, her sister is. Well, she was. She’s been murdered. And it’s up to Ivy to find out who did it and why.

Feels like a classic noir mystery novel, but the protagonist is female, and it takes place on the campus of a magic school.  

I love a good detective story, (I am constantly reading mystery novels, especially with lady detectives) and this book ticked so many boxes. It was a creative and original mystery. It had an original (but still classic) detective (drinking problem, embittered, barely making ends meet.) And it didn’t succumb to any pitfalls of the magical school setting. And I totally didn’t see the twist at the end! Which is what one wants in a mystery story. 

Just. Fucking. Great. 

Sarah Gailey is brilliant queer author whose magical stories are just that. Magical. And gritty. 

Marriage of a Thousand Lies – S. J. Sindu

Oof. I liked this in the way a sad smile is still a smile. I’m not spoiling the story by saying that Lucky, the protagonist, is gay, but married to a man. Her husband is gay too, an arrangement they came up with to please their traditional Sri Lankan-American parents, who do not know about their sexual identities. Lucky’s first love, Nisha, is getting married to a man, thinking she can handle it because Lucky did, not knowing that Lucky’s marriage was a sham. 

From there, I won’t reveal more, but this book is about family and being true to one’s identity, when those things are mutually exclusive.

Turning Darkness into Light – Marie Brennan

Who doesn’t like a dragon novel? I do, which is why I read Brennan’s series on the study of dragons. But this book takes place decades after the original series, and follows the granddaughter. A translator. This novel, despite being fantastical, is about (draconian) academia and archeology. I pick up books with linguist protagonists whenever I can, and for what it was, it didn’t disappoint.

The series it’s based on was as grand, adventurous and sweeping as the dragons themselves. This book was a smaller relative, wearing glasses, and whispering because it is in a library.

Man Without a Country – Kurt Vonnegut

A collection of thoughts from Vonnegut’s later life. I enjoyed some more than others, but his voice, hopeful and cynical, humorous and gloomy, encapsulates the weirdness and breadth of Vonnegut’s work. Give it a read, but take it in sips. It tastes better and lasts longer that way.

The Thirteen Clocks – James Thurber

Please read this. Aloud. 

This is such an enchanting topsy-turvy story.  Somewhere between Norman Juster’s Phantom Tollbooth and Grimm’s fairy tales, it is charming in its absurdity, and surprisingly dark with its whimsy. I have it on audio, too and I listen to it probably once a month. In fact, I think it goes on my list of all time favourites. 

The Revolution of Birdie Randolf – Brandy Colbert

I liked the themes in this book, how it gently addresses race, sex and sexuality, coming of age, drugs, etc. But the story itself is average. Not a bad thing! I kind of liked that it was average. That these stories don’t have to be presented in a way that seems to say “THIS IS A VERY SERIOUS BOOK ABOUT VERY IMPORTANT STUFF.” It’s just another coming of age story, that includes all those things, and well. If this is the sort of stuff kids are casually reading as they grow up, hurrah!

The Sound Inside – Adam Rapp

A neat little short I got for free on Audible about a dying creative writing teacher. I enjoyed the conceit, but you shouldn’t feel like your missing out if you give this a pass.

Dispossession – Tayari Jones

You are missing out if you don’t read this. Another free short from Audible but sooo good. A story about Cheryl, a woman who picks up a job at a moving company in order to make ends meet. Her first house is a dispossession, a forced eviction., of a fellow black family in her own neighbourhood. It brings back memories and stirs up questions about why her son never comes to visit her. Race, family, and decisions we make for the best, but have far reaching and unintended consequences. 

My Brother Michael – Mary Stewart 

Thunder on the Right – Mary Stewart

These two are ‘romantic’ suspense (the romance is barely there, which is just how I like them, and back in the 60s when these were written, a novel written by a woman had to be categorised as romance, it seems. Mary Stewart is the pioneer of this genre, (though I would call it Woman travels abroad and there runs into trouble, with a garnish of romance. Granted, that is much longer and more difficult to say. So we will stick with Romantic Suspense for now.) What I love about Mary Stewart is her description. She can make anywhere feel real and immediate, especially her descriptions of nature.

Full confession. I want to be a modern day Mary Stewart. My ‘chic-lit’ novellas will be odes to her and the genre she created. 

Night Boat to Tangier – Kevin Barry

Kevin Barry, a much touted author of Ireland creates an atmospheric trip here, which is appropriate, as drugs and confronting/rejecting/not understanding reality seems to be a theme here. I picked it up because I thought it sounded great. Ageing Irish gangsters/drug runners go back over their lives while sitting at at a ferry port, waiting for an estranged daughter to arrive from Tangiers.

The language was evoking. The way the old gangsters talked to each other was just fun. But, I confess, I didn’t really like the story. We are supposed to feel sympathetic towards them in the end. I felt like shrugging. My sympathies were with the daughter.

Definitely a book for a certain type of people. Just not me.

What We Don’t Talk About When We Talk About Fat –  Aubrey Gordon

Definitely do pick this up this book of essays of cultural criticism. Not only is readable and accessible, Gordon is unflinching in her story-telling, about her own experiences and others’, of the how society has failed fat people. Not just failed, but persecuted, and what we can do to stop fat-phobia and fat-shaming, and how being fat can be yet another layer of intersectional discrimination (ex. of being a woman and fat, a person of colour and fat, being a woman of colour and fat, queer and fat, etc. 

I think everyone should read this, especially ‘straight-sized’ people who have no idea what it is like to live in a fat body. Even if you don’t think you are fat-phobic, you might still learn something not just about fat-phobia in general, but about yourself and things that you do that are, indeed, fat phobic. I was ashamed several times reading this, and thought, “Oh god, I am afraid of that,” or “I have said that to myself.”  

So, I’m sharing this book in the hopes that everyone reads it, learns how pervasive and harmful fat-shaming is, and do what they can for fat justice.

I read (and reread) other books but this post is long enough already and I think I included a good selection. 

Next one of these I do will take the more interesting ones from April and May combined.

What are you reading? What have you read recently (or not so recently) that you would recommend to me (or to anyone)? I am always taking suggestions. 

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For Readers of Every Other Midnight,

It has been five years. Five years since I’ve posted on this blog and five years since I updated EOM. I want to say the world has changed, and in many ways it has. Some for the better. Chapter 83 (where James finds out getting a marriage license is impossible) was written before gay marriage was legalized in the United States. So hurrah! (It would be a surprise to no one who reads EOM that real-life issues inspire many elements in the story.)

But more obviously, the world has become a darker place. I am from the United States, and while the world as a whole is dealing with Covid19, here there has been a steady dissolution, or hollowing out, of the institutions that make democracy possible.

In the last few chapters of EOM, we saw specific groups in society arrested with no provocation and often killed in the process–those in law enforcement facing no consequences. This has not changed in five years.

In chapter 83, a panellist on a radio programme said, “Wizarding world for wizards,” and that muggleborns should be locked up or not allowed entry into the wizarding world. This was written before Donald Trump’s presidency. White nationalism was already alive and thriving, but the Trump presidency has invigorated and (seemingly) legitimized it. But this is a post for another time.

Also, I would like to take this opportunity to apologize now for future chapters. I took a five-year break. An athlete who does not train her body for five years will not perform at the level she did at the peak of her career. So it is with me. 

I wrote most of Chapter 84 a long time ago, and it (and I) got stuck in a dark place. Azkaban is not a happy place for your mind to be stuck. (Spoiler alert- dementors = depression. That feeling like you’ll never be cheerful again? And I could no more write my way out of that chapter than I could write my way out of depression. Indeed, I’m still in Azkaban, I’m pretty much always in Azkaban. 

Just some days the dementors are nearer than others.

But mental health is also a post for another time.)

So at the time of publishing chapter 84, mostly old work, I was struggling to write the chapter that is to follow. My writing is weak— my creative muscles are barely capable of lifting a pen. I know I’m a worse writer than I was five years ago. 

Blogging will be my cross-training—reflective non-fiction to do in between daily prose sprints. (I’ve also started running during the pandemic, and I’m afraid the mindset is leaking into my other pursuits.)

I often fear that two fanfictions, EOM and Professor’s Discretion, will be the best work of my life. I’m certainly proud of PD, it’s the only writing endeavour I’ve ever finished and been satisfied. I’ve never gone so deep—politically, emotionally, and in terms of plot— in my original fiction as I have with those two. But those characters were already formed, people’s attachment to them already steadfast. I cannot create that from scratch, nor carry over the care I took with those. I don’t know that I can do it again, even now. 

And as I was going back through previous chapters to prepare to work on the next, I was surprised by my own writing—everything I’ve written recently is so staid and colourless. I was actually impressed with past me, at the description and the depth and the intricacies of it, and disappointed with the present me. I tried to write up the rest of the chapter but couldn’t. I tried multiple times. Somehow, I couldn’t get any traction, couldn’t find any footholds. I just couldn’t get a purchase on the story to pull it, and myself, forward.

Until one day (yesterday, as it so happens), by some miracle, I found the old falling apart notebook in an old backpack that had fallen apart, but I hadn’t been able to bring myself to throw away because it had given me ten years of faithful service and I kept telling myself I’d find some use for it. The notebook inside contained 76 pages of chapter 84 and parts of Chapter 85. 

The notebook itself I bought in Serbia and I’d taken it with me all around the Balkens. Inside the old thing was a single-page print out map of a city where I had stayed—Prizren, in Kosovo.

It was folded and tattered, but I opened it, and on the back, in blood-brown ink, was part of what will be the next chapter. And I suddenly remembered. 

In Prizren, there is a tall hill. Near the top, was a cafe, perhaps there still is. I had had spent the better part of an afternoon hiking up it. My plan had been to tarry in the cafe a while and write, but I finally got there only to find I had somehow managed to come all that way without my notebook. I had the map of the city though, and filled the page with tiny handwriting. 

I can’t believe I used to write it longhand. I have written over half of EOM with pen and paper. Half a million words. So many notebooks. Where are they now? (I know one is in Saldanha Bay, South Africa, when both notebook and I took a tumble into the drink.) 

Did my hands used to cramp? I don’t remember.

I have therefore decided to write EOM in by hand, rather than on the computer. It might solve part of the problem. 

Another might be that I’ve always written elsewhere. Travelling and writing were part of the same process. If I travelled, I wrote. If I was writing, I was travelling. But now I am implacably stuck at home. No real possibilities of the yonder.

At least I know I’m not alone with this.

In any case, here’s to trying again.

~Kathryn

Let me know in the comments below any questions or topics you’d be interested in hearing about! (I can’t promise to answer all questions completely, but I’ll do my best!)

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I shall return….

I’d abandoned this blog –abandoned writing all together– but I’m making a comeback.

Coming soon…

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Veniceland

July, 2015
Venice

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Limited time offer

come see it before it’s gone!

If you’re lucky

you might even spot a real Venetian

in its natural habitat.

Would you like a fan?

A mask?

A bag?

It might even be made in Italy!

Here is the Grand Canal.

Gondola ride?

Here is San Marco Square

and the Rialto Bridge.

Would you like to make this moment more special

with a selfie stick?

Don’t forget to visit the gift shop on your way out,

in, and through

Veniceland!

Limited time offer!

 

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Little Nothings from Montenegro and Croatia

July, 2015
Podgorica, Montenegro

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I sat waiting for my bus at the station in Podgorica. I don’t remember what I was thinking about, but it must have been gloomy because a woman after waving for a bit to get my attention blew me an enormous kiss, both hands, and smiled and waved at me again. I looked around, but I was the only one in that direction. “Yes you!” her smile said.

She succeeded in cheering me.

Thank you, sweet lady.

 

 

July 2015,
Split, Croatia

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I sit down at the table near the stall where I’d ordered my sandwich, only to be soon confronted by a waiter of a different establishment to which the table actually belonged. When asked what I wanted I panicked and said “beer” though I never want beer. The first and second sips only confirmed that my taste hadn’t changed. I scowled for a bit at the innocent beverage (Karlovačko) until I remember that morning, I’d been given honey with my tea. Don’t sweeten my tea, but I’d kept the honey packet to put on my bread the next morning for breakfast. So I rummaged through my bag for it and squeezed its contents into my beer. Did it magically transform it to my favourite drink ever? No. But it did make it palatable.
That’ll do.

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Ode to an Alphasmart

October 4, 2014

Currently Reading: This Blinding Absence of Light by Tahar Ben Jalloun

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(The book mentions this very spot: Jemaa el Fna, in Marrakech)

I’ve been horribly lazy in keeping up with the blog. I was a week in Tangier (my hostel perpetually reeked of hashish, but was right next to the tomb of Ibn Battuta!) and am now in Marrakech for week, where I’ve found a good café to write in, and someone to play chess with.

 

October 10th

Now in Essaouira for a week. The hostel is criminal. Not because there is no soap in the bathroom (though it is concerning) but because of this.

 

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Using a book as a wedge to keep a bed steady. Bad form.

 

 

It’s a bit of a mission in each city—finding a newsagent that has English newspapers, or French newspapers that report international news but I’ve managed so far.

 

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Why bother with newspapers at all in this day and age, when the internet is everywhere?

For the same reason I write this on my Alphasmart.

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BECAUSE THE INTERNET IS EVERYWHERE.

And I am weak.

So weak…

 

If I read news online, then there are links to other things, also interesting and relevant. And those interesting things have links to other things equally interesting, and less relevant, and on and on down the rabbit hole I go till I’m watching videos of baby horses splashing around in paddling pools and I realise I’ve been on the internet for 3 hours and have read only a few worthwhile things (and several lists about signs you are in your 30s.)

I’m so easily distractible, and when I just want to read the news, it’s safer just to read a hypertext-less newspaper, made of actual paper. Just as when I want to get some writing done, I do it on paper or on a internet-less machine.

And for those of you who don’t know what an AlphaSmart is, voila.

So, it’s not curmudgeonly antipathy to technology that keeps me devoted to the old-fashioned, it’s the desire to be at least semi-productive.

 

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Letter the third

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June 18th, 2014

Dear Sean,   I had a dream while I was taking a siesta today.   I was writing a poem when a little flame spoke to me. Although it was a few feet away in the fireplace, its voice reached me as almost uncomfortable warmth in my ear.

 

“I’m going out!” it said, and begged me to feed it something before it starved to death.

 

“I don’t have anything,” I said, but I really did worry for it.

 

 

“That paper, in your hand. I can eat that.”

 

“But it’s my poem!”

 

“I’m dying! Hurry!”

 

Panicking, I threw my fresh-writ poem to the fire.

 

“It’s not enough, said the little flame, who had flared for a bit was small and weak again. “Can I have the rest?”

 

I held a notebook full of poems, it seemed. “I can’t. All my poems…”

 

“You wrote them before, you can write them again,” it reasoned. I wasn’t sure about this at all. “But when I go out I’m gone forever!” So I agreed, tore out the poems and fed the fire, despite my regret all the writing.

 

I didn’t even know what any of them were about, and I thought I’d never be able to write them again.

 

“More,” the flame demanded, though it was almost a proper fire at this point. Looking around the room now I saw lots of things that would burn, things I hadn’t seen before. Notebooks all over the place. It didn’t seem as difficult this time to throw them whole into the fire. I could feel the heat now, burning the whole of my face.

 

Then someone came into a room, a man, furious, screaming at me that I’d ruined him, that I’d burned all of his work.

 

“No, they were my poems,” I told him, but even as I said it, I was afraid that they hadn’t been. I couldn’t remember what they were about after all, nor did I have any memory of writing them other than the one I’d burnt first, the one I’d been writing when the fire first spoke. So the man kept shouting at me that I’d ruined him, and the fire wasn’t speaking anymore, wouldn’t back me up, just acted like a normal fire that was now getting really hot and out of control.

 

 

I woke up before finding out what happened, if the room burned down or if the man tried to get revenge.   The fire starting out in the ear was undoubtedly the result of the sun coming through the window where I slept, which would have reached my ear first then moved across my face as time went on, spreading to the rest of my face. The other parts of the dream, however, I don’t understand.

This is not the first dream I’ve had recently about writing poetry, but all the others before this have been normal. Giving poems to writer friends for feedback (and them telling me “eh… keep trying.”) I thought perhaps this was my subconscious trying to give me a not so subtle hint, but now I don’t know.

 

 

Apparently I needn’t have worried about not having anything to update you with aside from the state of my sunburns (none, as yet.)   The very evening after I finished your last letter, some strangers broke into the buffalo paddock and were trying to get at our beasts. B. had gone to the stables to feed the rabbits (there are several, but I’ve only named the two that allow me to pet them: Somerset and Maughm.) She had been gone for a bit so I went down the road to check on her and found her, standing with her arms crossed, surrounded by three people who drove an old red car.

The ringleader I heard before I saw, him speaking very crude German. In my best, “What’s all this then,” police officer voice, I asked them what they are doing, in English.

 

“Oh. English, English.” He says. “Maybe no problem.”

 

“Oh, maybe BIG problem, I said, and turned to B. “What’s up?” I asked.

 

She was clearly on guard and confused.

 

“What’s up?” he repeats, laughing, trying to make fun of me.

 

“What are you doing here?” The group look around. Ringleader is trying to laugh it off. (At this stage, I didn’t know that he’d actually been caught in the paddock. Before he left, M. said that he thought people were stealing hay from the barn, so I thought this is what had been happening.)

 

The woman looks annoyed, not with me but with the man who is trying to laugh his way out of this. I made a decision. “Big problem,” I told him, and jerked me thumb at the road. They got in the car and left, and we called M. and L. to find out if we hadn’t just rudely kicked out some of their friends.

 

We hadn’t.

No idea who they were. That was good; I would have hated to have wasted my best John Wayne impression for nothing. There is something satisfying in running people off. That’s twice now. There’s something empowering in it. But that sort of thing makes me sound like a bully, so I’ll stop.

 

We didn’t even make it back to the house before another drama occurred. I won’t bore you with the details, because I realise it’s probably not as interesting to you as it is to me, so I’ll sum up. I’ve mentioned Leyla, the wounded mare who stays in a little paddock beside the house at night. Someone, M. suspects P__ovich (it’s his land, he thinks he can do whatever he wants with it”), had tied up a strange horse in her paddock. We heard the whinnying and neighing and ran over. The two beasts were kicking at each other. A kick to her belly is the last thing she needs, with that wound. I separated them, in the end.

 

The following day the stallion ran to the neighbouring farm to insinuate himself with the mares there. So I had to run and find him and bring him back. But, when I went out there, searched the large field and the neighbour’s field, no stallion. Found him in the end, just left of the apple tree near the rest of our herd. I’d say it was a lot of trouble for nothing, but it was actually a very scenic walk, one I wouldn’t have taken otherwise. I don’t regret wandering the afternoon away.

 

My forefinger on my right hand is stained a purple/blue. The romantic in me likes to pretend it’s ink stains, from all that writing I supposedly do (with fountain pen, or better yet, a quill) but in reality it’s the antibiotic I have to get into Leyla’s wound, which gapes in her underbelly and oozes and drips large quantities of yellow pus.

My stomach just growled. Either something is very wrong with me or I didn’t eat enough at breakfast.

 

I’ve just resigned myself to being filthy until September. Still haven’t showered, but neither has anyone else. Either I’ve stopped stinking, or I’ve stopped smelling the stink. I’m pretty sure my room smells like horse. I really should leave my shoes outside. Perhaps today or tomorrow I can convince B. to go to the river Tisa for a swim.

 

I used a scythe yesterday. I’m supposed to clear Leyla’s paddock if I want. I have no idea why I thought they had a lawn mower, or a tractor mower, when we get our drinking water from a well and the facilities are just an outhouse. In any case, I said I’d try to clear the field and was handed a scythe.

 

Such a wicked looking tool, or maybe that’s just because one associates it with the grim reaper. If he uses his scythe on people they way I do on tall weeds… that makes him all the more terrifying. I always imagined death as a quiet, stately fellow who gathers people up like a gentle shepherd, and the scythe is just a glorified walking stick. To think of the grim reaper actually reaping… Brrr… Heebie jeebies.

But as I was trying to mow the field I thought of Levin and his peasants. He wasn’t the best, and many times he got tired, but he stuck with it the entre time. But I’m not a Levin, more’s the pity. I didn’t last as long nor did I reach his level of zen whilst I was working. Maybe this was because of the unevenness of my field, and the amount of weeds and other plants that made uniform cutting, that made finding a rhythm, impossible. But my mind did go blank for a time. I thought of nothing but mowing that field. My imagination didn’t wander too far, as it’s wont to do. No further than Levin.

 

Pitchforks and scythes. I feel I could be quite lethal with farm equipment by the end of the summer. Or ready, at least, for a peasant revolt.

 

The gashes on my hand and knee are healing niceish. And I’ve just received another email about Berlin’s War edits. Fills me with shame, the amount of work I’m not doing. Well, I’m doing plenty of work but none in a literary or academic nature. (I originally wrote, but none in my field, which I had to change because it was precariously close to a pun. Ignominious sneaks.)

 

We (jerry-)rigged a short of shelter for the firewood yesterday, as it looked like rain. I feel more and more like Slim Chance the cowboy every day; I have an entourage of dogs.

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My favourite isn’t even our dog, but a shepherd’s dog who follows me around when I’m out.

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I was with the horses last night (horses, not buffalo, are my main responsibility. They are wild Hutzl horses.) I was with them, sitting on a stump on the edge of the river, when one of Igor’s bulls spots me and approaches, head down. I didn’t know if he was curious or angry, but I had nowhere to go but backward and down (brings me back to my great tumble down in the Arbuckle mountains, or was it the Wichitas?, after being set upon by a bison. I wonder if this will be a recurring theme in my life.) In any case, Sikan (which means Gypsy in the old local dialect that the villagers speak, which is partly Hungarian, partly Ukrainian, partly something else entirely) runs at the beast, places himself in front of me and snarls and barks and runs the bull off. He knew he was a hero too, because he came trotting, no, galumphing back, jumped right in my lap and started licking my face demanding his reward of pets and belly rubs for saving me. I happily obliged.

 

The other dogs, Leika and Emily, are officially attached to the farm, but another dog has appeared, and follows me everywhere. B. has named her Ivanka (it was Ivan before we realised it was a girl.) I watched her eat a dead bird today. My first impulse was to stop her, as I’d be horrified if one of our dogs back home did that. But this is how stray/wild dogs survive. Who am I to say no to the poor beast’s meal? I don’t feed her, so I shouldn’t stop her feeding herself.

 

 

Finally finished Elegance of the Hedgehog (which mentions Levin as well, and other situations in Anna Karenina) recommended to me ages ago by Britni Halbert. No, Britni Brecheen. (Well, she was Halbert at the time.) I put things on my to-read list and I eventually get around to them, even if it’s a few years later.

 

Now reading Kafka’s The Trial. I won’t give my opinion yet; I’m sure it will sound ignorant anyway.

 

 

June 24th We have a neighbour, Igor, who is perpetually grumpy, but actually very kind and helpful. He does favours for us and is always ready to lend a hand, with a frown. I only tell you about him because he smiled at me yesterday. Granted, I think it was my stupidity that amused him, as he speaks not a word of English or German and as yet, my Ukrainian is very limited.

I came across him at the back of the stable and he asked me a question. No idea what he was saying, so I smiled stupidly at him and shrugged. He did it again, and got the same response from me. Then he smiled, actually smiled, and said. “Good. Okay,” (words that are in my Ukrainian word bank) and went off again.

I know he was laughing at me, but the fact he wasn’t grumping made it worth it.

 

Sikan (Gypsy) my favourite dog, the one that rescued me from that bull last week is nowhere to be seen today. Yesterday there was an odd canine cry and everyone in the house rushed out to see. He was lying in the street, teeth bared strained, in obvious pain and distress.

At first I, like everyone else, though he’d been attacked. After a moment I remembered, and saw Peter in the road instead of Gypsy.

 

“He’s having a seizure,” I said. “We just have to wait until it’s over.”

 

And it was in another minute. I told them he was probably epileptic, but I’d never seen him have a fit before. Sikan tried to get up and run away, but his back legs weren’t working, so he just flopped back down and panted.

 

Poor thing.

 

I sat with him and petted him until he was well enough to drink and come sleep on the porch. I left for some work and haven’t seen him since. Though B. said she saw him having another fit not even an hour later. The shepherd has a new dog, looks like one of Sikan’s sons. This upsets me greatly. I wonder if my friend hadn’t taken a blow to the head, and wasn’t epileptic at all. I fear he’s lying dead somewhere, all alone.

When I can walk again, I’ll have a look around the territory for him.

 

Surely I shouldn’t end the letter here, on such a sad note, but I don’t know what else to say.

 

Well, I suppose I could tell you about Ina, the wild mare whom I’ve been assigned to try to tame. I’ve made progress. She lets me approach and pet her, something she allows no one else to do. Attempting to ride her worked really well, except when her baby ran away (a colt who is more a teenager than a baby.) She panicked and ran after him, throwing me off quite neatly. That wasn’t so bad. No broken bones, only bruises and scrapes. (To be honest I’m just glad she didn’t throw me into the nearby beehives.)

I got her and her baby back, and continued riding. At the end, when we were almost at the stables, silly baby runs away again but this time it was as I was getting off Ina. She turned around quickly and knocked me over with her hind legs and proceeded to trample my feet, dancing on my left foot and landing hard on my right heel. At first I thought the heel was the worse off, as she’d put a lot of weight on it. But it’s only bruised on the inside, and there’s lots of meat and one strong unbroken bone beneath.

It’s the left foot, the lighter injury, which seems to be worse off. She landed right on top, with nothing but my shoe between her hoof and my ickle bonesies. I think two might be fractured (though I haven’t told them that. They felt guilty enough, like they personally stomped all over me. I don’t want them to feel bad, or that my tarsals are too delicate for the work.) There was no ice in the house to put on my rapidly swelling feet.

 

 

I had to use cheese.

 

 

 

Your limpy sister,

 

~K

 

P.S. This happened.

 

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Categories
Travel Uncategorized Writing

Letter the Second to my Brother – Ukraine is not weak!

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June 12-13, 2014

 

Dear Sean,

 

I arrived at the Ukrainian border town just after one in the morning, with stormclouds and lightning in the distance. If this were a novel, that would be fraught with symbolism or foreshdowing. As it is, I can only hope that the only thing it portends is rain. Wouldn’t mind it. Budapest was hot, and my cabin on the train didn’t have a window that opened, or a fan. Quite sweltering. It’s been over a day since I’ve showered and I’m feeling rather sticky. My hair doesn’t even bear thinking about. I wonder how I will appear to my future employers, wandering up to them with my huge pack on my back, 2 days dirty and smelling like a gymsock. (My actual socks also do not bear thinking about, or smelling. They are, what one might call… overripe.)

I was glad when the sun set. I couldn’t see the scenery for more than an hour so after the dusk, but the lightning was pretty. Can’t compare to even an medium Oklahoma storm, though. Still, it smells of proper rain here. Cardiff, though it rained all the time, never smelled like rain, only damp. Probably the nicest smell in the world (rain, not damp, obviously). That and Petrichor, petrichor, petrichor.

 

Got through a book on the train, one I’ve been looking forward to for some time. When Mr Dog Bites. I’ll lend it to you if you like, when I’m back.

 

I’ve only got one eye in, so my depth perception is rather poor, which makes reading more of Tibor Dery’s short stories rather tough going, tougher than usual. A Greek friend had one eye permanently slower than the other, so when the dominant eye got to a word, his other eye was still lagging behind in the sentence. I can’t imagine how difficult it is for him to read. I would just use an eye-patch, like Sir. That reminds me, I didn’t say goodbye to Alexandros before I left. Come to think on it, I don’t think I said goodbye to anyone outside my course. Whoops. Wait, no. I said bye to the receptionist of my building. She’s always been so lovely.

 

I had a compartment to myself for most of the trip (a lady did join me later, which I admit, was disappointing), and after the sun set and I was done with Mr Dog, and had done a little bit of tip-tapping on the story that shall not be named, I played my harmonica. Either the people in neighbouring compartments couldn’t hear it, or they didn’t care enough to complain. I made up a new song to go with the lightning—A variation on a theme of John Adams’s Gnarly Buttons. Do you remember that CD I lent you? I still don’t think I’ve ever heard such perfectly peripatetic music.

I need a new harmonica, though. Two of the notes drag on the in-breath. I think some of the inner metal is warped.

 

Let me tell you more about my train compartment. Right next to the window was a little writing desk, It was perfect really. Like the old school desks, and when you lift the top, you could push it all the way back so that it sticks to the wall and beneath is a little basin with running (non-potable) water. I wish I’d spent more time at the desk typing away, but I had to finish Mr Dog. Still, I made use of it. There was a large wide upholstered seat. Though I suppose it’s not really upholstered because you can take it off and underneath is the same red faux velvet as the bunk above. The train employee gave me a hand towel and some sheets (pillows were on my bunk above) but I didn’t use them. I did lie down for a moment but it was really too hot to be comfortable. So I sat up with Mr Dog and my Alphasmart. Above the desk was a cupboard that opened up, revealing a light that comes on automatically, a mirror, an outlet, and what looked like bottle holders, I took photos before the lady came, I’ll attach them. Pictures may be worth a thousand words, but it certainly does feel like cheating a bit., sort of removes the challenge of description. Jane Austen didn’t have that luxury when she wrote to her sister, Cassandra. P.S. Since I couldn’t be bothered to describe the tea at Mrs. Fairfax’s, nor our niece’s embroidery, I’ve enclosed a sketch… (Cassandra had the sense to burn all of Jane’s interesting letters, so only the boring ones remain. Pity for us, but well done on Cassandra’s part.)

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Like I said, I arrived at the station in Chop just after one one the 13th. Quite an unwelcoming sounding name. Again, quite glad real life’s occurrences don’t have to be steeped with ulterior meaning. Did I mention that it was a full moon? It was yellow and had a large halo, though I’m not sure if that wasn’t just because my window was dirty. But it was lovely all the same, to sit in the dark and see it peeping through the clouds. I confess, I spent much of my night journey just staring out the window. I seem to spend much of my time staring out of windows, whether it’s on a train or not.

 

The train ride, at 6 hours, was still too short. I wished it had gone on, straight on till morning. Trains are their own sort of Never neverland. But now I’m just being silly and ridiculous.

I’ll stop here for a bit. I thought of something to add to a story. And I’ve run out of rambles.

 

 

June 16th, 2014

 

We did the hard hay work this morning, and M. and L. (the couple that run the farm) left to go to Odessa for a few days, so I have several free hours together to write to you.

I suppose I could have written Sunday, because we don’t work Sundays— not because they are religious but because it would offend the VERY pious villagers.

And we don’t want to be offensive, so…

 

B. (the other worker here) and I went down to the orthodox church to hear the singing. We didn’t go in, only sat in the street outside. I didn’t have my head covered and she had bare legs. It bothered me, but only a bit. To hear the orthodox chanting, it sounded like followers of a cult, especially knowing that they would dislike us, judge us, for doing work that needed to be done or for being dressed the way we were. After several minutes staring at the grape vines that the villagers use create shade in front of their houses, I got used to the singing.

 

It wasn’t my idea to go, but B. wanted to. She is 40 and East German. So, unlike me, she never had religion pressed onto her at an age where one too young to both understand or protest. Having grown up with atheist communism, church services and religious ceremonies are interesting things, tourist attractions. She said as much. I wish I could enjoy them as she does.

My fingernails are perpetually dirty. Mother would be ashamed. And Sir would chide me for the shape of my hair already. (He was unimpressed when I came home for Christmas from Cardiff, which is first world-land with running water and everything.) I’ve got so many tangles but I can’t be bothered to get them out. I’ve showered once since coming. And calling it a shower is excessively generous, I think, because really it’s just filling up a bucket and taking it outside behind a tarp. One uses a cup to pour water over oneself. I can’t use my normal shampoo and conditioner, because those chemicals go right into the earth again.

I thank the gods, old and new, for the patchy wifi. We have WIFI! And electricity! Granted, not in my room, or indeed, in several of the rooms, but it means internet, and the charging of devices that give us music.

Usually they cook on the firewood stove, but as it’s high summer, that would be entirely too hot. So they’ve bought a little camp stove, like that green one our father has for longer camping trips. It’s hooked up to a tank of gas (that B. never remembers to shut off after cooking.) It’s the exact same set-up as the galley on so many of the yachts I’ve sailed. I would say that it makes me nostalgic, but nostalgia implies longing, which I don’t feel. Primitive toilets, infrequent bathing… the situations have their similarities, but there’s a lot more work involved on a farm, but oddly, a lot more sleep as well.

Oh! I’ve been sleeping! Out like a light just after sunset, and up again after sunrise! It’s rather a miracle, but then again, I suppose not. I’ve read that camping resets one’s circadian rhythm. (Does the adjective circadian describe any noun other than rhythm? Or is that an exclusive collocation? Circadian demand? Circadian impetus? Circadian suggestion? Circadian business hours? I’m sure I don’t know.)

I also haven’t written a word on my portfolio since Budapest. I enjoy the work, in a painful sort of way. But I’m usually so content after a hard spate of hay lifting or some such that when I’m done I’m all too content to just sit and enjoy the not working. Sometimes I read but even that has somehow lost it’s relaxing quality. I can usually get in about 20 minutes of reading once I’ve tucked myself in bed, but I fall asleep so quickly after that. I’ve been reading he same book for the last 4 days without finishing it. This is what normal working people must feel like. How appalling.

I’ve been listening to a Handmaid’s Tale when I’m doing work that allows it. Usually wandering around the few miles looking for the horses in the evening to bring them back into the paddock for the night. That can take some time. Also, I listened to it while peeling and chopping vegetables for the mediocre dinner I prepared yesterday.

Strange that, actually, that I was cooking dinner at all. I’ll tell you the tale of it.

V. P__ovich, he’s the one who technically owns this farm house and lands. He lets the people who run it stay here for free, on account of the butchering of buffalo some years ago that he feels, if not guilty about, at least would like everyone to pretend it never happened. I suppose he feels it’s awkward more than anything. He owns a lot of the village, and knows people, apparently. The Ukrainian version of the Godfather. He tells people to do things, treats them like they’re his to do with as he likes. In our case, since we are staying here for free, it’s awkward to refuse him.

I first met P____ovich day before yesterday as M. and I were coming back from collecting hay from someone across the village, who had it growing in his back yard and didn’t want it, so he gave it to us for free, if we’d come and collect it. We spent the cool morning hours (and the hotter late morning hours) loading the hay via pitchfork into the horsewagon, pulled by the sturdy and powerful Tibor—a stallion who knocked me down the first time we met, as I was holding onto him, looking off into another direction when he spotted a mare (Leyla) and took off after her. (this little altercation cost me a gashed open knee and hand.) Poor thing, she was tied up and tried to run but got caught in the rope and nearly took a tumble, which would have been bad news because, she’s got a nasty wound in her belly.

(The first time I tried to type out wound my fingers put would instead. I only now notice there’s only one letter difference between would and wound… like laughter and slaughter. Something quite unpleasant in the realisation.)

Anyway, that was the first time I met P____ovich. M. told me that every meeting with the man is like a performance, you have your lines to read and you must laugh on cue at his jokes and basically pander to his grand ideas of himself. He tried to make conversation with me, but I didn’t really care that his granddaughter’s name was the same as mine (or near enough, Katya). I just wanted to get out of the sun and get the hay in the stables. P___ovich was eventually satisfied with his peasants and let us continue on our way, but a few minutes later some men in a car pull up beside are cart and ask M. very rudely something in Ukrainian. I only understood one word, and that was P___ovich’s name.

“Who was that?” I asked, once M. had pointed them men vaguely in some direction, with a non-committal shrug.

“Someone from the bank or the police,” he replies. “P____ovich is in trouble with them, and they are always trying to find him.”

“Oh.” What else can one say to that?

The next day, M. comes up to me and says, almost awkwardly, that P__ovich has just called and said that he’d come over within the hour, and that I was to go over there and help him do some work. “Okay,” I said. I know nothing about running farms, I just do as I’m told.

M. told me that I didn’t have to go, that he doesn’t own me and I don’t have to do anything I don’t want, and then I understood. ­Ew. I asked him what he thought was best. He said that they weren’t in a position to refuse him any favours, but that he didn’t like that he acted liked he owned any of us. The other three were talking in the kitchen for a time then B. knocked on my door.

“I think it’s best if you stay here. That way you can start dinner and bring in the horses while we are away.” Actually, that’s a summary. She went on and on about the logic of her plan, which might have been necessary if she were trying to convince me to do the harder work, but she was trying to explain why I should stay in the house and peel vegetables (that mediocre dinner I mentioned). I was happy not to go, but she needn’t have been so delicate about it.

They weren’t gone very long, but something odd did happen while I was on my own. I was working on the supper when I heard the front door open. I thought it would be one of the workers but it was a stranger. He stepped into the kitchen, were I was struggling with some vegetables.

Lucky I had been peeling; the knife was already in my hand. It was like a magic wand, I just had to point it away from the potato and toward the stranger and presto! He disappeared. When the others came back (not too long after they had left, indeed several hours before horses needed to come in or indeed before dinner, making B.’s logic a bit faulty, but I’m not going to complain) I told M. about the man who’d come into the house.

“He had eyes like this,” I said, putting my hands in front of my face and pointing in opposite directions.

M. and L. were both kind and concerned and asked if he touched me.

“Nope!” I answered cheerfully, and told them about my magic trick.

“If he ever comes up to you again, just hit him, punch him, or kick him. He’ll do anything he can get away with.” I understand that this man had bothered many of the female workers in the past, even L. herself.

“Absolutely will do.”

I haven’t seen him since, though. I like to think the crazy knife lady has scared him off. Who knows, though.

Now I must pause in this letter, to go fetch some drinking water from the well.

 

I would rather go to the well twice a day with the bucket rather than once every other day with the tub. The thing is too unwieldy to carry and I end up with a fifth of the contents splashed down my leg.

 

My old iPod (the large black one I got in Japan… 7(?) years ago, yikes) isn’t working any more. Perhaps because I dropped it. Anyway, I’m sad, because it was the only place that most of my music is stored. I particularly wanted to listen to Schubert’s Wintereisse this afternoon at tea (I plan out the music I listen to when I intened to have a luxurious tea, be it in duration or preparation, and today I wanted Gute Nacht especially). In any case, my plans have been thwarted by my faulty iPod. Ah well. First world problem. Still, it’s a pity that all that wonderful music is lost to me. It’s also where some of my old audiobooks are, were, stored. Le sigh.

Let it go. It’s only stuff.

Wait, is it stuff? If I can’t even hold it, see it, like a song or an audiobook, which are more feelings, aural art (set to music or word) than they are items. Because it’s not the iPod itself I regret, which obviously is an object. I mourn the information, the opera (pl. of opus, not the musical genre, but lots of opera music has been lost, come to that), which are unsaved anywhere else, irretrievable. (It now occurs to me what a lonely, woeful word irretrievable is—lost forever.)

 

I’m afraid that the letters from the next three months will just be about hay and horses, with a few buffalo thrown in (gratis).   1559293_520295773574_2956242193434565873_o He just came up to me and started licking my leg, brazen bovine.

 

Maybe an update on sunburns (currently none, or perhaps one very minor on my nose.)

 

This letter is already over 3,000 words long. If writing my portfolio were as easy as writing to you, dear brother, I should have already finished by now. Ah well.

Give my regards to Ali and Ali’s sister.

Best wishes and all that,

~Katya

 

P.S. As a special treat to myself I’ve added a dollop of honey to my spot of fog. What shall we call it? Honeysuckle spog? Think on’t.

 

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(On the other side of those mountains is Romania. I would walk there if I chose. Might ride one of the horses there one of these days.)