• anna j. clutterbuck-cook
  • contact
  • curriculum vitae
  • find me elsewhere
  • marilyn ross memorial book prize

the feminist librarian

the feminist librarian

Tag Archives: boston

week in the news … from minden st.

16 Friday Jan 2015

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in our family

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

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).

christmas on minden st. [photo post]

25 Thursday Dec 2014

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in our family

≈ 1 Comment

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.

brookline in fall [photo post]

02 Sunday Nov 2014

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in our family

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

boston, outdoors, photos

Last Sunday was another idyllic weekend, so as a nor’easter slams us with wind, rain, and snow-ish this weekend, here’s a last gasp of early autumn from New England.

Although Teazle continues to go out on the porch despite the weather, retrieving maple leaves and bringing them in as trophies, Geraldine is more selective. She likes to test the “out” before venturing out. Last Sunday was quite lovely. Continue reading →

the arboretum in fall [photo post]

26 Sunday Oct 2014

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in our family

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

boston, outdoors, photos

Last week Sunday, we took the Orange Line from Jackson Square (pictured above) to Forest Hills station so we could take a walk around the Arnold Arboretum. Continue reading →

forest hills cemetery [photo post]

19 Sunday Oct 2014

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in our family

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

books, boston, photos

We were supposed to travel this weekend, but Hanna was unwell so rather than push ourselves and land her with three weeks of pneumonia like last fall — that was fun! — we revised things and stayed in place. On Saturday morning we took our coffee and pastries (thank you Ula Cafe!) and went out to Forest Hills Cemetery to sit and read in the October sun. Continue reading →

october monday [photo post]

13 Monday Oct 2014

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in our family

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

boston, outdoors, photos

Hanna and I walked into the city center this morning via the Southwest Corridor Park, from Jamaica Plain to the Back Bay. Here’s a selection of images we took along the way.

The Southwest Corridor Park was almost a freeway.

Instead, neighborhood activists came together to stop the freeway & today
the Orange Line T / commuter rail lines run alongside a nearly 5 mile urban park. Continue reading →

theoretical blog posts

10 Friday Oct 2014

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in our family

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

boston, education, family, librarians, professional gigs

turtles on Jamaica Pond (May 2014)

turtles on Jamaica Pond (May 2014)

Here in Massachusetts we’re looking forward to a three-day weekend in honor of some exploitative white explorers, some indigenous first peoples, and of course small, swift boats on the Charles.

Our plans include a lot of napping and reading. Maybe some long walks, used bookstores, libraries, and coffee shops.

In the meantime, here are some things I’d like to write blog posts about at some point:

1. I’ve been reading sociology books on home education lately — Kingdom of Children and Home is Where the School Is — and would like to write a post about unschooling at work (what does it look like to bring the values and structures of the unschooling ethos into a workplace?) and unschooling at adulthood (can you have a family that practices “unschooling” when you’re not raising kids? spoiler: I think you can).

Continue reading →

booknotes: people’s history of the new boston

22 Monday Sep 2014

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in book reviews

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

boston, history

I was excited to pick up A People’s History of the New Boston by Jim Vrabel (UMass Press, 2014) at our local branch of the Boston Public Library a few weeks ago; I’d heard about it through the Boston history grapevine and really wanted it to be good. It promised, in its opening pages, “to tell the other half of the story”:

It gives credit to many more people — women as well as men; black, brown, and yellow as well as white; the poor and working class as well as the well off. This story focused on how those people made Boston a more humane and morally better city (1-2).

Vrabel, a journalist and community activist, was involved in the very remaking of Boston that this narrative covers — the postwar struggles of a vacated central business district and “blighted” neighborhoods up through the community organizing of the 1970s and the unsuccessful attempts to desegregate Boston’s public schools. An inside observer, he is in many ways well positioned to write an accounting of grassroots change at the neighborhood level.

However, two major flaws make it difficult for me to recommend this work. The first is his near complete erasure of queer and feminist activism from his narrative (more below). The second, Vrabel’s nostalgia-ridden concluding chapters, a glossing of the present that ignores continued local agitation and sweat equity around affordability, equality, local control, and the role of city and state government in supporting or destroying communities. Continue reading →

forward intentions: an introduction

04 Thursday Sep 2014

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in life writing

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

art, boston, domesticity, forward intentions, hanna, michigan, oregon, west coast

Reflections on local intentions in this eighth year of my Boston residency, and a long melancholy weekend at the end of summer, has pushed me to think about what my forward intentions actually are. Now that I’m done with grad school (*weeps with relief*), doing the whole “emerging professional” thing at a job a genuinely like, married with two cats, I’m like … so what’s next, life?

View from the Sylvia Beach Hotel (Newport, Ore.), 24 Sept 2013.

I never really had a plan, per se. I mean, I almost didn’t go to college? I was emotionally allergic to school and considered some sort of roguish apprenticeship instead. I wanted to run a writer’s colony in the U.P. (“upper peninsula” for you non-Michiganders), feed people and fix septic systems, maybe have a lot of time for hiking around with a compass in the back woods. Or maybe open a bookshop by the sea, with the writers tucked away upstairs in garret rooms overlooking the surf. Again: Tea, biscuits, quiet, thoughts, maybe a puppy and obviously cats.

Continue reading →

local intentions: year eight

01 Monday Sep 2014

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

boston, boston summer seminar, domesticity, family, hanna, librarians, professional gigs

Photograph of the hallway in our new Jamaica Plain apartment (May 2014)It’s become a tradition here at the feminist librarian for me to pause and take stock every year around Labor Day. It was on Labor Day weekend in 2007 that I first arrived in Boston, trunk packed with dorm room necessities, to begin a new chapter of my life as an East Coast urbanite.

read year one | year two | year three
year four | year five | year six | year seven

2014 has been a tough year for us, so far. As Hanna said back at the beginning of August, “I’ve decided to break up with 2014. We’re through.” Things started last fall with a positive but tiring whirlwind trip to the West Coast, out of which Hanna barely had time to recover before coming down with a pernicious case of pneumonia which required multiple courses of antibiotics and several weeks of bed rest. Then we began the new year with a Midwest polar vortex, then returned to Michigan in March to sit with my family during my grandmother’s deathtime. Hanna sprained her ankle the day after we got back to Boston, and while she was still on crutches we got the call to view what is now our apartment. We moved in May, then got the call that my grandfather had cancer. I’ve just come through the busiest summer on record at the MHS library and at this point we’re both looking forward to what we hope will be the most peaceful, boring autumn Jamaica Plain has ever seen.

At the same time, it feels good — more than good — to be looking forward to fall (my favorite season!) in Jamaica Plain, which in turn is here in Boston. We’re so pleased to be living here, in fact, that when we take our vacation in September we decided to stay put.

We’ve done a hell of a lot of traveling this year and it’s good to be home.

Which brings me to the point of this year’s post: local intentions. Continue reading →

← Older posts
Newer posts →
"the past is a wild party; check your preconceptions at the door." ~ Emma Donoghue

Recent Posts

  • medical update 11.11.22
  • medical update 6.4.22
  • medical update 1.16.2022
  • medical update 10.13.2021
  • medical update 8.17.2021

Archives

Categories

Creative Commons License

This work by Anna J. Clutterbuck-Cook is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License

Meta

  • Create account
  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.com

Create a free website or blog at WordPress.com.

  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • the feminist librarian
    • Join 37 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • the feminist librarian
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...