Showing posts with label winter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label winter. Show all posts

Saturday, March 25, 2017

Random Photos

A few from recent months, in and around NYC, Newark, and points north and south. Enjoy!

1 World Trade Center enshrouded in thick
gray clouds, beneath an otherwise cerulean sky
Barbara Epler, New Directions' Editor in Chief and
Publisher, and my editor, receiving the Friedrich
Ulfers Preis from the Goethe Institute in New York 
Part of the flyer for the 8th Annual
Festival Neue Literatur, whose theme
was "Queer as Volk" (March 3-5)
One of the conversations at Festival Neue Literatur
"Translation at the Margins" discussions,
featuring Mexican literary star Valeria Luiselli,
author John Freeman, and translator Tess Lewis

Resistance messages in the windows
of the Cooper Union's Great Hall
A strong wind that blew a trash can
off its moorings at the Exchange Place
Hudson-Bergen Light Rail station
Someone crashed outside my office
at Rutgers-Newark (I never found
out if anyone was hurt, though I hope not) 
Rutgers-Newark MFA Director Jayne Anne Phillips
with Writers@Newark series guests and
my former colleagues Robyn Schiff and Eula Biss 
Subway boxing match--it was choreographed,
thankfully, and not a real fight
Floor merchant, MTA station
Erecting the outdoor Spring Market
at Bryant Park, NYC
The elevated floor for the Spring Market
in Bryant Park 
A lively restaurant in Brooklyn
Erica Hunt and Tonya Foster reading
and conversing about all kinds of fascinating things
at Adam Fitzgerald's East Village apartment 
A group of Rice University students who came
to Newark via the Friends Service, and whom
I met with at the Newark Museum
Downtown Providence, Rhode Island 
During the northeastern blizzard, which
hit while I was visiting at Brown this spring 
The 2017 Spring semester readers, Brown
Department of Literary Arts
On Carole Maso's door at Brown,
two departed but never forgotten literary
forces, C.D. Wright and Aishah Rahman
The Turkish contract for Counternarratives,
which apparently vanished in the mail
on its way to the publisher's agents there
(perhaps one of Erdogan's reps read "The Lions"....)
Graffiti in Providence 
Plein air painter, Astor Place 
Something about his hat made
me photograph him 
Manhattan, still too cold
for outdoor dining 
One of those incredibly filthy
New York City snow mountains 
"Can't Sleep?" 
A sculpture rising in Cooper Square
Before my event with Phil Harper and
Sonya Posmentier, at NYU Center
for the Humanities
A little lost finger penguin 
Only in NYC (Bryant Park)

Daffodils peeping through the mulch,
Bryant Park (42nd Street just beyond the gate)
Meatpacking District, Manhattan 
The line outside the Whitney Museum to
see the 2017 Biennial (Frieda Kahlo
is looking askance at everyone) 
The image speaks for itself
Ernest Montgomery's newest volume
of photos (i.e., Beauty), Hermoso 


Thursday, March 05, 2015

(Sick) Leave

It's been my custom when the new semester rolls around to post something about my upcoming courses, but as even periodic J's Theater readers may have noted, I've posted nothing so far, and we're now into March. That is because I am officially on a research sabbatical--though I cannot get my vacation email program to work and thereby alert people contacting me via my university account that I am not on campus--for the first time since 2009. Like most people on such a break, I had mapped out very specific plans for writing and reading; I specifically was aiming, and still am, to finish my next book, an ample novel that still needs a bit of work. 

The best-laid plans can be derailed by life's vagaries, which in my case, as a few close friends already know, have been a series of health challenges that have followed each other in succession into the new year, and which have meant that I have spent more time at home recuperating and shuttling to various health care facilities in Jersey City and New York City than I have at the New York Public Library, where books I have called up still sit unopened on my research room shelf. I am now on the mend and all told, things could have been (much) worse, but it nevertheless has been tough not being to get out and about, see people, or do many of the things I usually do. As my recent posts probably hint at, I have been spending a lot of time watching TV and movies, and, when I can focus, I have been reading a lot too. The writing goes slowly, but it goes on, thankfully.

I have written in the past about dealing with kidney stones, and they popped up again right around the time I submitted the final version of my manuscript. I wonder if my body, entering middle age, decided to raise a few flags of exhaustion. The kidney stones lingered all summer and became so severe that I had to have surgery right before classes began in the fall. The lithotripsy went well, and I thought I was out of tunnel, so to speak. I taught, served as acting chair, and went into the holidays with excitement for my leave to come. At some point, my meal combination led to acid reflux so severe I thought my chest would explode, which meant that beginning of this new year made me wonder if I would make it to February. It took only a few diet modifications (far less coffee, no sugar, cutting out eating or even a casual drink after 10 pm, etc.), but that is under control. Again, I thought, I can't wait to get started on finishing and extending Palimpsests.

One Saturday in late January, I went with friends to hear a performance of 20th century Japanese music. One of my friends had spent six months in Japan, though she had not attended any contemporary music concerts while there, so we thought it would be a great plan to do so in New York. My knees, which have been a bit rickety for years, were hurting, and it was cold and snowy, which seemed to make them ache even more, but I didn't think much about it. We went to the concert, I came home, and felt okay. The next day I could barely stand on one of my legs, both knees were so sore I was not sure what had happened, and I seriously wondered if I would be able to walk at all. Since then, I have had to slowly rehabilitate both legs to get around. Old injuries, fallen arches and pronation, and too much weight (though I have lost about 15 pounds since the knees began to act up) all have combined to create a very difficult, painful month and and half. Things were so bad that I found myself almost hopping, to the extent possible, to make it through a wake and repast for a friend's late father.

As I mentioned, though, I am on the mend. I am in physical therapy (the therapists are wonderful), and now realize that instead of cutting out the leg portion of my gym workout about two years ago and telling myself I'd get back to it at some point, with walking taking its place, and instead of rationalizing the creeping pain I was feeling when I barreled through the streets with my too-heavy backpack or messenger bag slung over my shoulder, I probably should have redoubled my exercises while also getting things checked out as soon as possible. I have been able to avoid surgery so far, knock on wood, and hope to be back up and running fully--walking, I can do without running, having done quite a lot of it when I was younger--very soon. Including the library, a conference in Montana, and whatever venues materialize for my new book. I also hope this is it for the health challenges. I would like to devote far more mental energy to that novel, among other projects, and have this leave be, even for its final portion, a very healthy one.



Monday, March 25, 2013

Random Photos

Last week was spring break week, though I was mostly under the weather, so to speak, so it was more recuperation than anything else. The term is nearly halfway through, though, and despite the lingering chill and today's snowfall, I can feel spring waiting to spring. More posts soon, including one in tribute the late, extraordinary Chinua Achebe, on their way!
***
The polka-dotted man at the supermarket
Man in a spotted outfit, Jersey City
In a restaurant, East Village
Café Mogador, East Village
Untitled
42nd St. Station, mid-afternoon
Untitled
Bryant Park ice rink (since disassembled)
Untitled
Bookseller, in front of the New York Public Library Research Branch
Modern Leather Goods
Modern Leather Goods, Midtown
On 5th Avenue
Punk, 5th Avenue
On the subway
Man watching his iPad, PATH train
Working out, late winter, Astor Place
Late winter workout (it was chilly outside), Astor Place
Working out, late winter, Astor Place
Late winter workout from another angle
East Side Books
East Village Books, St. Mark's Place
Untitled
Playlist, bathroom door sign, Powerhouse Café, Jersey City

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Random Photos

Bouncer throwing drunk man into the gutter
A bouncer throwing a very drunk man
into the street on 3rd Avenue
(I'd never seen this happen in real life until this night - several people nearby had already called the police before I could. The extremely drunk man, covered in snow and filthy water, nevertheless kept dragging himself along the sidewalk because he couldn't stand. Finally the cops, followed by an ambulance, showed up.)

Fashion student, examining her portfolio, Manhattan
Young fashion student, examining her portfolio at a West Village copy shop
Snow, West Village
Snowy evening, E 13th St.
Patrick Rosal, Jessica Hagedorn, and Jayne Anne Phillips, @ Rutgers-Newark
Patrick Rosal, Jessica Hagedorn, and Jayne Anne Phillips,
at the first MFA reading of the spring semester
Through the gold screens, NYU's Bobst Library
Bobst Library's atrium, from the 8th floor,
behind the suicide-proof gilded screens
(which weren't in place when I was a student there)
Squash court, Grand Central Terminal
Temporary squash court,
Grand Central Terminal
Voguer, Union Square
Voguer/performer/dancer, Union Square Park
Two skateboardres, watching the light rail preacher
Two skateboarders, watching
the light rail preacher, Newport Station
"The Ultimate Sacrifice"
"The Ultimate Sacrifice"
42nd Street
Lenox Ave, Harlem
Food cart, 135th Street, Harlem
Gold Man, in the subway
Gold man, with his ATM radio
50th Street station
Mae Ngai, delivering her talk at NYPL
Columbia University professor Mae Ngai,
lecturing on trans-Pacific Asian diasporas
at the New York Public Library
A common sight in Manhattan
A hungry, homeless man (a common
sight all over Manhattan, especially in Midtown)
Gotham!
Gotham, on a rainy day
photo
A temporary oil tank, West Village
Repairing the Fulton St. station
Workers repairing the ceiling,
Fulton Street station
Young man with mohawk
Young man with a mohawk,
3 train heading uptown