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Author Archives: Anna Clutterbuck-Cook

Three weeks from today . . .

11 Saturday Aug 2007

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in life writing

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travel



. . . I’ll be moving into my dorm in Boston and trying to orient myself to the new normal of life as a grad student. Orientation (which seems to consist mainly of alcohol and socializing) is on September 4th, and classes start September 5th. I’m having minor freak-outs, but they seem mostly to be due to the fact that my body hasn’t caught of with the fact that I’ve planned and prepared for the transition.

Last week, with the help of Maggie I dyed my hair auburn in honor of Ginny Weasely, who deserved way more presence in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows than she got, and also because messing with my hair is less drastic than getting a tattoo. It was either that or cut it short and dye it purple, which I am tempted to do, but thought perhaps wasn’t the best idea before starting a new job and life as a graduate student!

I’m spending the last few weeks, aside from working up until the 25th, cramming in as much fiction reading and friend-farewelling as I can. My friend Cara is throwing me a big going-away party for everyone at Barnes & Noble, which was sooooo sweet of her, and entirely unexpected. I don’t think I’ve had anyone throw me a party before, aside from my family (who count, but in a different way). When I’m not working, I have a heady schedule of luncheons and coffees and teas and dinners and movie dates to attend to. And packing will happen somewhere in there . . .

I’m equal parts thrilled and terrified . . . wish me luck!

Aww . . . My Very Own Succulent

31 Tuesday Jul 2007

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in life writing

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domesticity


Joseph visited this past weekend, and we went to the garden store looking for a plant I could take to my dorm and keep alive. Unfortunately, I fell in love with this lovely succulent. Joseph says it needs lots of sun, so I’m praying to whatever deities may be listening for a south-facing window. Meanwhile, since Joseph pointed out it was hermaphroditic, I’ve named it Calliope after the main character in Middlesex.

Harry Potter Release Party: Photos!

21 Saturday Jul 2007

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in fandom

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books, fun


Weary yet glowing with the successful release of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows at 12:00 midnight this morning, I’ve posted a few pictures to my website, and also uploaded pictures to my Facebook page, if you are linked to my profile there. Check them out!

0545010225

20 Friday Jul 2007

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in fandom

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books, fun


Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows is being released to the general public at 12:01am midnight, 21 July 2007 (in case any of you have been living in the back of beyond for the last year . . . and I’ve taken so many orders for the book at Barnes & Noble that I had the ISBN number memorized (or at least, my fingers did) weeks ago. In spite of being a congenital non-joiner, I can’t help being pleased: there’s something insanely wonderful about the world getting so excited over a book.

At the little old Barnes & Noble in Holland, we’re having a midnight party, like most bookstores. We’ll be open until the last customer leaves in the wee small hours of the morning, and then return to do it all again starting at 8am Saturday. The only disappointment is that we aren’t allowed to serve wine to the patrons as they wait in line.

I’m going to wear my grandfather’s Hogwart’s School of Witchcraft and Wizardry collegiate sweatshirt, which until his death this spring he wore to every Hope-Calvin Basketball game with pride. On Saturday, once I’ve woken from my Harry Potter hangover, I’ll be driving Grandma’s copy of The Deathly Hallows out to South Shore personally. I’m sorry Grandpa won’t be with us in person to see how the story comes to a close.

Pictures will be coming soon!

Radical Librarians

15 Sunday Jul 2007

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in library life

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feminism, history, librarians


In my application to Simmons last year, I wrote that “as a scholar at heart, I am also committed to working for social change,” and that a degree in library science would enable me to “translate my knowledge of radical pedagogy and feminism into hands-on activism.” Becoming a librarian and historian will, I firmly believe, “make it possible for me to bring together all my commitments–to education, feminism, and history–in a vocation that is both intellectually rigorous and politically engaged.”

This is a vocation I came to through my life-long need to be surrounded by the printed word (physically as well as intellectually), and the realization that I was happier in libraries and bookstores than almost anywhere else in the world. Maureen Corrigan wrote in her memoir Leave Me Alone, I’m Reading that “like so many bookworms, I was timid and introspective, and yet reading, my earliest refuge from the unknown world, made me want to venture out into it, instead of sticking with my own kind” (xxiii). No one I know would call me “timid,” but I do have a tendency to be introspective, absorbed in my interior life. Books are an integral part of this interior landscape of mine. Yet like Maureen Corrigan, I find they fuel my curiosity, empathy, and determination to be a part of the living, breathing exterior world. The library seems the perfect solution, a balance between the privacy of books and the engagement of political activism.

Turns out (at least according to the New York Times) I’m riding the wave of a generational trend. In July 8th issue of the newspaper, they ran an article called A Hipper Crowd of Hushers that breaks the “news” that we bibliophiles have known for a damn long time: librarians are an awesome people.

(P.S. Thanks to the several friends who brought this article to my attention!)

Me: Diane Kruger? and other revelations of an almost-grad student

07 Saturday Jul 2007

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in library life

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librarians


This weekend, I’m moving house from one place on 12th Street, where I’ve been house-sitting for the past two months, to the house of our friends Lyn & Larry, where I’ll be bunking until I leave for Boston. With all this moving, by the time I get to Boston, I will (hopefully) have pared what I need to absolute essentials (plus lots of books).

I’ve been working a lot lately . . . even more than usual. I’m being trained on a new computer program at my second job (Lean Logistics, Inc.) and at Barnes & Noble we’re gearing up for the great Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows unveiling, 12:01:01am on 21 July. Festivities start at 6pm and I’ve been recruited (well, strictly speaking, I volunteered) to paint lightening bolts on people’s foreheads. Since we have hundreds of reservations, I am hoping I have a whole crew of house elves to help or my wrist will be totally useless by the end of the night.

Yesterday, when I was at Lean Logistics, my supervisor said her eleven-year-old son had been in with her the day before, and asked about me. When he heard I was going to grad school, he wondered if I was going to become and engineer and build robots like his uncle (who also went to graduate school). She said no, that I was going for something else, and then tried to think how to explain what I was going to do in a way that would make sense to him. “Then I remembered that his favorite movie in the world,” she told me, “is National Treasure . . . you know? . . . with Nicholas Cage?” I thought about this, and remembered, vaguely, trailers that included lots of exciting chase sequences and something about the Declaration of Independence . . .”Yeah, I think I remember.” “Well,” she continued, “there’s this character in the movie, Dr. Chase, and she’s got a degree in library science and in history and she works as an archivist. So I said, ‘Anna’s going to be Dr. Chase!’ “

Who knew that being an archivist was soooooo sexy?

American Activism(s)

02 Monday Jul 2007

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in book reviews

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bn, feminism, politics


My colleague at Barnes & Noble, Tony, who runs the music department, has decided to set up a display in my honor come August, when I am abandoning the store and moving East. I was asked to come up with a theme. After some consideration, I picked (for obvious reasons) the theme of political rabble-rousers in twentieth century American history. The movies must be fiction (no documentaries), but be based on actual true-life people or events. It’s a completely subjective list of movies that I have enjoyed, and from which I learned something about our collective history.

In order of historical period, they are:

1. Newsies (1992)*
2. Iron-Jawed Angels (2004)
3. Reds (1981)
4. Entertaining Angels (1996)
5. Cradle Will Rock (1999)
6. Dash and Lilly (1999)
7. Good Night & Good Luck (2005)
8. Kinsey (2004)
9. Norma Rae (1979)
10. North Country (2005)

They are all worth watching . . . so add them to your Netflix queue!

*be warned, this is a (thoroughly enjoyable) Disney musical about the newsboy strike of 1899–okay, almost the 20th century–so if your taste doesn’t run to musicals, this may not be your first choice!

Work in Boston: Addendum

28 Thursday Jun 2007

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in life writing

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bn, boston



So I actually bought a map of the City of Boston that was large enough for me to mark things on in red marker. So far, I have “school,” “home,” and “work” written in. More will surely follow . . . but that’s a good start.

Work turns out to be sandwiched between the Christian Science Center (left) and the Boston Public Library (below), a direct ride of the T (subway/train system) from both my dorm and the Simmons campus. I really couldn’t ask for a more convenient location.

Work in Boston!

16 Saturday Jun 2007

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in life writing

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bn, boston


Yesterday, my manager at Barnes & Noble told me she had spoken with the manager of Barnes & Noble’s store in the Prudential Center, downtown Boston, and they would be happy to accept me as a transfer employee when I arrive in the fall. It is a huge relief to have a part-time job already arranged before I leave town.

Books on My Bookshelf

13 Wednesday Jun 2007

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in book reviews

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books

. . . Or more precisely, books on the table, in my book bag, in the car, in my hands . . . they seem to multiply when I’m not looking at the most alarming rate. With graduate school looming, I have been industriously attempting to reduce the number of books on my “to read” list–an entirely futile and entirely pleasurable activity. Much to the despair of my family (who bear the brunt of my post-literary rantings), a disproportionate number of books in my reading list have been political in nature. In rapid succession over the last six weeks, my beside table has accommodated:

  • Perfect Girls, Starving Daughters: The Frightening New Normalcy of Hating Your Body. In case anyone had doubts, Courtney M. Martin reminds us that the personal is profoundly political, as she describes the embodied lives of young women of my generation and connects the cultural obsession with women’s body management to the stalled feminist revolution. I picked up this book skeptical that anything new could be said about disordered eating, and came away humbled.
  • Women aren’t the only ones hurt by the lack of gender equity, as evidenced in The Package Deal: Marriage, Work and Fatherhood in Men’s Lives, by sociologist Nicholas W. Townsend. While not explicitly political in his analysis, Townsend’s interviews with men about their family lives lead him to a firmly feminist conclusion that a revolution in the gendered nature of family life and parenting is urgently needed.
  • After reading a glowing review of Melody Rose’s book on abortion law, Safe, Legal, and Unavailable?, in The American Prospect I knew I had to own a copy–and I wasn’t wrong. Accessible, comprehensive, and terrifying, Rose gives us a concise history of abortion law and politics and provides and invaluable tool for placing current news in a broader context.
  • Al Gore‘s latest contribution to politics, An Assault on Reason, was a worthwhile read, even if it started to feel repetitive (at least to someone who doesn’t need to be convinced that the Bush administration is morally bankrupt). As evidenced by the subtitle, he has not learned how to turn his complex thoughts into media sound bites–and I love him for it!
  • The dense but engrossing Reluctant Capitalists, by Laura Miller, tells the story of 20th century book selling and the tension between books-as-sacred-cultural-objects and books-as-product (distasteful word). I read it once, and plan to read it again with pencil in hand.
  • Finally, I just closed the covers of One Perfect Day: The Selling of the American Wedding, by Rebecca Mead, which confirmed me in my determination (if/when I get married) to resist as much as possible any concession to the wedding industry’s faux traditionalism (wedding rings, white dresses, lavish honeymoons, wedding photography). The contrarian in me basically wants to spend less than $0.00 on the event . . . which I guess is probably an extreme reaction. . .

Given this reading list, Mom was understandably relieved the other day when I came home from the library and announced that I had checked out a stack of mysteries (along with a book on human rights, the ethics of genetic manipulation, and a literary novel about children growing up on a hippie commune in the 1970s). So, this last week, I have found myself wholeheartedly enjoying the escapism of Tasha Alexander’s historical mysteries featuring the young widow Lady Emily Ashton: And Only to Deceive, and A Poisoned Season. Who could possibly resist an intrepid bluestocking who enjoys ancient Greek, 19th century potboilers, port, and solving the occasional murder? (Not me).

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"the past is a wild party; check your preconceptions at the door." ~ Emma Donoghue

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