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Author Archives: Anna Clutterbuck-Cook

the long winter continues [updates from minden st.]

15 Sunday Feb 2015

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in our family

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Tags

boston, fanfic, outdoors

The Great Snow of 2015 continues, breaking records of all kinds. It’s hard to believe a month ago, January 15th, we’d had almost no snow so far during the season.

Hanna had her gallbladder surgery on Friday, thankfully during a couple of days’ break in the intense snow. While hospitals are no fun as a general rule — can I say as the patient’s spouse that it sucks 150% not being allowed to sit in the operating room throughout? I would hands-down rather be there than stuck outside in the lobby — the staff were warm and professional, the surgery went smoothly, and the extremely unhelpful gallbladder has been removed to already-evident improvement.

So whew for having that done.

BREAD_2-14-2015

We’re particularly excited about the fact that it looks like Hanna’s gluten sensitivity may have been a byproduct of her chronic gallbladder malfunction, and that now her digestive system isn’t struggling we will be able to bake with wheat flour again! I celebrated yesterday by making homemade bread, which made the kitchen smell absolutely divine.

We’ve stayed in today, what with the snow and bitter cold wind whipping about. It’s been so cold and so snowy for so long that while those of us in more comfortable circumstances enjoy a record number of snow days, many people are reeling from the impact of skyrocketing energy costs, hit-and-miss childcare, and cuts to their wages as stores close early or open late — or the underfunded transit system fails to provide them with a way to get to their jobs.

If you can, consider donating to the Greater Boston Food Bank, a well-respected local organization dedicated to feeding those who face food insecurity.

You can see how the wind is making snow canyons up against our fence. The compost bin is in that drift…somewhere. Hopefully cooking away underneath all the insulation making us good dirt for the spring.

I’ve been spending a lot of my time while Hanna sleeps her way to recovery watching Haven on Netflix — and this morning I wrote a little ficlet that Hanna says gave her cavities. So I guess you’re warned. The title, “A Windless Peace,” comes from a poem by Elinor Wylie that I sang on youth chorale — it would have been two decades ago now! Somewhere my parents have a cassette recording. Here’s a children’s choir from Ann Arbor, Michigan singing it:

I also posted parts two and three of the Jack Robinson/Phryne Fisher porn I started last July and had cold feet about. “Placetne” is now finished, and I’ve invented the tag #queerhetsex because I’ve decided that’s what I write.

This has been an update from Minden St. Now I’m off to watch Duke, Nathan, and Audrey flirt shamelessly over dead bodies and steel myself for tomorrow morning’s shoveling.

the great snow of 2015 in jamaica plain [photo post]

10 Tuesday Feb 2015

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

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boston, photos

On our sixth snow day of the winter, Hanna and I beat the cabin fever by taking a walk out along the Southwest Corridor Path to Ula Cafe for breakfast, and then up to Forest Hills and back via the grocery store for a few essentials.

I took the camera along.

Since my Monday post, Ula has gained a significant amount of snow!

Continue reading →

snow on minden st. [thoughts on urban winter]

08 Sunday Feb 2015

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

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Tags

boston, outdoors

When I moved to Boston from western Michigan in 2007, I was baffled and amused by the seeming hysteria that overcame city residents at the advent of snow season. Schools and businesses closed, people seemingly forgot how to drive, “snow emergencies” were declared … for real? I thought. Sheesh, these city dwellers. Jumping at shadows. Or, you know, snowflakes.

The thing I didn’t really grasp, at that point, and which I’m only really starting to understand eight years later, is that urban density of the kind that Boston and a few other major metropolitan areas in the U.S. feature, fundamentally alter the experience of heavy snowfall.

Walkable urban density is one of the city’s great features — it’s resource-efficient and convenient for those of us who live within it; Continue reading →

does being welcoming mean constantly being “on”?

02 Monday Feb 2015

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in think pieces

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

blogging, comment post, social justice activism, thinky thoughts

Image: Illustration from The Little Book of Love (16th c.). A man stands on a tree extending out over a body of water, chopping the tree off at the root.

This week I’ve been haunting the comment threads over at Student Activism, one of my favorite personal blogs, where we’ve been discussing in wide-ranging form the fallout from Jonathan Chait’s piece (of click-bait) on “political correctness” (which doesn’t exist) and community norms. See this post, this post, this post, and this post if you want the specifics.

I don’t want to rehash complex debates from the comment threads here; what I want to riff on is the question of the responsibility of any group to outsiders who are considering becoming insiders. Chait, and those who agree with his perspective, argue that certain ways of enforcing group norms in a given community (in this case the political left-liberal coalition) end up alienating newcomers who are embarrassed, shamed, or vilified for transgressing a community ground-rule. This, they assert, is bad politics: The community will not grow into an effective force for political change if people are made to feel bad and leave never to return.

At is most basic, this is a question to take seriously: how welcoming is the left? Or, more generally, how welcoming is [insert group of choice herein]? Back when I attended church on a regular basis, this was a perennial question, the question of the welcoming church. How did we greet newcomers? How did we invite them to stay? Were we too hands-on, not hands-on enough? How would we ever grow the congregation if adherents never became members … and so forth and so on.

It seems like a goal — being welcoming — that few people could or should disagree with. But I’ve been mulling over a couple of facets of this question in the past few days and I want to share my questions and concerns with y’all here.

Continue reading →

virtual book tour: ultimate guide to sex after fifty

02 Monday Feb 2015

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in book reviews

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gender and sexuality, sexuality, virtual book tours

Today, I am participating in the virtual book tour for Joan Price’s The Ultimate Guide to Sex After 50 (Cleis Press, 2015).

Price, author of the book Naked at Our Age: Talking Out Loud About Senior Sex (Seal Press, 2011) returns to book format with a compilation of advice and information drawn from her extensive web presence and experience educating others about the joys of life-long sexual pleasure. The eighteen chapters are thematically organized around such topics as “Sex With Yourself and Toys,” “You and Your Doctor,” and “Cancer, Cancer Treatment, and Sex”; each chapter has a brief narrative interspersed with anonymous quotations drawn from Price’s online discussions and breakout sections with advice from experts, case studies, and further resources. The back of the book provides a brief recommended resource section, though some of the subsections of the bibliography are sparse and the selection criteria is unclear — could she really only find one recommend resource on the subject of body image, for example? And no trans- or gay male specific sexuality resources under the LGBT heading?

My reader’s response to The Ultimate Guide was mixed. Setting my age aside for the moment, I did not feel like I was the target audience for this book. My crunchy granola queer feminist sex nerd attitude toward human sexuality was unevenly represented within its pages. I agree with Price’s premise that we must counteract our youth-centric culture with targeted sex-positive resources for those whose bodies and experiences are not shaped, for example, by the college relationship scene or decisions about whether or not to procreate (and how). Yet I remain unconvinced that The Ultimate Guide (or its like-minded successor) will be my resource of choice in thirty, forty years’ time.

Continue reading →

subject/verdict: stuff I’ve been reading in two-sentence reviews [no. 7]

26 Monday Jan 2015

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in book reviews

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subject verdict

I’ve been reading a number of good books for review lately (see list at the end of this post) that I can’t write about here, but have also enjoyed a great deal of genre fiction recently so I thought I’d share a few titles with y’all.

Cross, Kady. The Girl in the Steel Corset (Harlequin Teen, 2011). I’ve been enjoying works under Cross’ various pseudonyms (see also: Kate Cross, Kate Locke) but I think this series of YA adventures set in the same steampunk universe as her Kate Cross novels may be my favorite. Here we follow a merry band of teenage misfits (again, no identified queers, alas) with mutant powers as they wrestle with romance, politics, and the eternal adolescent questions of where they come from and where their place in the larger world might be.

Gleason, Colleen. The Clockwork Scarab (Chronicle, 2013). First installment in a steampunk YA series featuring Miss Mina Holmes (daughter of Mycroft, consulting detective) and Miss Evaline Stoker (sister of Bram, vampire hunter) in a steam-powered alternate London, the plot of Clockwork turns on an Egyptology club somehow involved in the murder of several society girls in apparent suicide. Delightfully fast-paced fun with a high degree of sexual tension between the two heroines I hopewish — though don’t expect — the author will follow through upon.

Holmberg, Charlie. The Paper Magician (47North, 2014). A quiet little magician-in-training story with disquieting undertones, Paper Magician introduces us to a world in which individual magic is channeled through specific substances: paper, metal, glass. We follow the coming-of-age (and romantic) adventures of Ceony Twill and her troubled mentor Emery Thane as they are forced to confront malevolent magicians from Thane’s past.

Joyce, Graham. Some Kind of Fairy Tale (Doubleday, 2012). A haunting stolen child narrative set in rural England, Joyce’s novel turns on the reappearance of Tara one the doorstep of her childhood home twenty years after she vanished — but no older, and with an outlandish story about a stranger on a horse and a wild, libertine land. While the novel is beautifully and compellingly written, overall I was disappointed in the way Some Kind of Fairy Tale turned on Tara’s manic pixie dream girl status: She becomes the catalyst for change (good or ill) in the lives of half a dozen men, but remains herself a martyred cipher.

Lafferty, Mur. The Shambling Guide to New York City (Orbit, 2013). On our inaugural visit to PapercutsJP — the new neighborhood bookshop — Hanna bought me this lighthearted story about an intrepid travel writer on the rebound who stumbles into an unlikely opportunity: editing travel guides for monsters the coterie. Lafferty has followed her first book up with a sequel set in New Orleans and has hinted at a third set in Boston — sign me up!

Mantchev, Lisa. Ticker (Skyscape, 2014). A young woman with a heart defect saved by a surgeon who implants a clockwork “ticker” in her chest; the surgeon now on trial for murderously unethical practices; an infernal device gone off in the family factory; Penny Farthing’s brilliant parents gone missing — the events and players are all connected, but can Penny unravel the intrigue before it’s too late? A rare genre novel that isn’t blatantly sequel-hunting, Ticker is an excellent one-off from the author of the Theatre Illuminata series.

Reviewing Elsewhere This Spring

Ahmed, Sara. On Being Included: Racism and Diversity in Institutional Life (Duke University Press, 2012). ~ NEA News

Hartman, Andrew. The War for the Soul of America: A History of the Culture Wars (Univ. of Chicago Press, 2015). ~ Library Journal

Yoshino, Kenji. Speak Now: Marriage Equality on Trial (Crown, 2015) ~ Library Journal

week in the news … from minden st.

16 Friday Jan 2015

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in our family

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boston, thankfulness

So this new relationship we’re in with 2015 has gotten off to a rocky start. First there was the Boxing Day visit to the emergency room — technically the final throes of our dysfunctional relationship with 2014, but resulting in a diagnosis for Hanna (gallstones) that will be following us into the honeymoon period with 2015. And then last Friday, January 9th, we came home at 7pm to this:

100_4417

Frozen pipes, caused by the improper winterization of the foreclosed unit below us, had thawed and burst during the workday. Water was pouring down the outside wall of the building, had saturated the unoccupied flat and the basement, and had finally started to bubble up through a crack in the kitchen cabinet of our apartment. Flooding the kitchen floor into the hallway.

100_4415

 

The blue bin above, at the source of the leak, was filling about every 20 seconds as we frantically hunted for the water main shutoff (protip: if you are a tenant and don’t know where the water main and electric main are in your building, find out!) and got on the phone to our landlord’s maintenance guy. He eventually had us call 911 for assistance from the fire department (wonderful, wonderful emergency workers who arrived when we needed them!) who shut off the water, electric, and heat pending a full inspection and restoration of utilities the following day.

Did I mention we’re in the middle of a below-freezing cold snap? Thank heaven our cats can self-warm with fur and we were able to decamp for a hotel that night.

100_4419

(When I returned Saturday morning to meet the plumber, this is what the outside wall looked like.)

We are back in our apartment now, with the utilities mostly functional, and face only the long tail of damage assessment and repair. Thankfully, our own belongings were minimally damaged — it could have been so much worse! As it is, we only lost one advance review book I’d left on the kitchen floor and a scratching post of the cats that was on its last legs anyway.

It’s been a rough week, but we’ve had lots to be thankful for:

  • Hanna’s parents, who were willing to wake up in the late evening to let us decompress.
  • My parents, who offered to help with some immediate out-of-pocket expenses.
  • The fire personnel who were there when we needed them, and did a professional job.
  • The kind hotel staff who warmly welcomed our rather careworn selves at 10:30pm.
  • The waitstaff at the Paris Creperie who made me crepes and hot chocolate to go fifteen minutes before closing.
  • The barista who, the following morning, made me a mocha free of charge (I tipped him generously) after hearing my response to “How are you this morning?”
  • Our landlord, who was on the phone with us almost daily this past week to ensure we were on the same page and that we were back home as soon as possible. We are so grateful to have a good working relationship with him and hope to continue that partnership for years to come.
  • Our landlord’s plumber and electrician who both put in long hours on the weekend to get us safely back into our apartment.
  • The city inspectors who have followed up to ensure the situation was being addressed properly and in a timely manner.
  • All of the colleagues and friends who’ve listened to the telling and retelling of the story with sympathy.
  • The colleagues who have accommodated scheduling hiccups as we need to rendezvous with various service providers.
  • The fact that our own living space was minimally damaged, and that we can continue to live in an apartment/neighborhood we are growing to love.
  • The fact that our cats were a bit freaked but safe and sound when we got home to the flooded kitchen.
  • The opportunity this experience is providing us for learning all about how condo associations, foreclosures, and homeowners insurance works!
  • Our childhoods, which provided us both with the rough-and-ready experience of managing when faced with sponge baths, jury-rigged plumbing, and the necessity to bundle up in the short-term as long-term repairs are being made.

I devoutly hope 2015 has thus far treated you and yours well! Enjoy your long weekend & look for more regularly scheduled programming soon (I’ll be back to reading books, fingers crossed, as our life settles back to a hum of routine).

new year’s eve epiphany presenting!

31 Wednesday Dec 2014

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in our family

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cat blogging, holidays

Given that the last few days of 2014 has kicked our asses, it was nice to wake up this morning feeling halfway normal and be able to walk out in the winter sunshine for breakfast at Fazenda and a visit to Harvest Co-op for groceries and Papercuts JP for a few final Christmas-cum-Epiphany presents. This evening, after naps, Teazle and Gerry assisted us in preparing hot cocoa mix to be included in some of the Epiphany parcels.

Has there ever been a prouder kitten? We think not.

Teazle wishes you all a 2015 full of muttering to yourself, eating things not meant for consumption, chasing your buddy’s tail, touching your toes to your nose while you sleep, and going out … and in … and out … and in … and out.

christmas on minden st. [photo post]

25 Thursday Dec 2014

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in our family

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Tags

boston, cat blogging, holidays, photos

It was raining steadily in Jamaica Plain when I woke up this morning. While Hanna slept in, recovering from a long night of bad dreams and insomnia, I unboxed the gifts that had arrived in the mail. We’d left them packaged until this morning because Teazle (as you will see below) loves ribbon.

One of our neighbors had departed yesterday, leaving a small tree “gratis” out on the curb, which we rescued and put out on the back porch. We left it undecorated so Teazle wouldn’t electrocute herself.

Last night I made us tea and thumbprint cookies rolled in coconut and filled with wild blueberry jam. They turned out a bit on the toasty side, but that really only enhanced the coconut flavor.

Once Hanna had woken up and done yoga, we sat down for our eggnog au lait, corn honey muffins, and of course unwrapping of packages. Teazle helped.

Y’all are so generous! Epiphany packages and thank yous will be in the post before our Christmas vacation is finished, but in the meantime some thank you snapshots . . .

Who doesn’t need TARDIS (TARDII?) Christmas lights to adorn their houseplants?

. . . and Hanna’s face lit up when she unwrapped this adorable coloring book . . .

Having a mother-in-law continually working on spinning, dyeing, knitting, weaving projects means that Christmas is often full of new handmade things to keep us warm and our home beautiful.

My brother and sister-in-law sent, among other small goodies, this delightful tin ornament that we’ve hung on the knob of a kitchen cupboard, where it swings in the heat from the stove.

Art from my parents (right) and brother and sister-in-law (left) gave us an excuse to finally get out the stepladder and move our collection of stuffed creatures up atop the kitchen cupboards where Teazle cannot steal them for cat toys.

Yes, the rabbit print does — delightfully! — proclaim “fuck you.” And the print on the right is this whimsical Kliban.

Now there is a cake in the oven, Gerry is asleep on a kitchen chair, I have a glass of Merlot, and am off to find a broadcast of Handel’s Messiah or similar before settling in to finish a crocheting project or perhaps a bit of steampunk YA for the late afternoon.

This has been a photo post from Hanna, Anna, and the cats. Hope all is well with you and yours.

twelve days of christmas

24 Wednesday Dec 2014

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in our family

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holidays

100_4260Merry Christmas Eve to one and all!

This year, Hanna and I have twelve days off between Christmas Eve and January 5th, when our libraries open back up for the new year. We’re looking forward to doing … not very much. 2014 whupped us good and hard, as it did many folks in our circle, and we’ve chosen to clear the final days of the year as a time and place of rest and recovery. I hope that wherever you are, whatever you’re doing, and whomever you’ve chosen to share those activities with, is exactly where you want or need to be this season. Be enough. Care for yourselves. See you on the flipside.

(Except maybe for some photos … if this damnable rain clears or snow begins to fall!)

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