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

the feminist librarian

the feminist librarian

Tag Archives: family

by special request from the birthday boy

17 Sunday Jul 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in our family

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

british isles, family, outdoors, photos, travel

Dad suggested I share these pictures from a bike ride we took together around Loch Katrine in The Trossachs, Scotland on May 2004. It was at the tail end of a trip during which we had gorgeous weather. I’m not complaining about that, since it allowed us to complete the West Highland Way on foot without getting drenched. But the rain caught up with us on this particular day.

Loch Katrine is a water source for the city of Glasgow, so the only
boat allowed on the lake is the Sir Walter Scott steam launch.
It’s eerily quiet, whether you are riding it or watching from the shore.
You rent cycles and can ride the ferry across the loch,
then cycle back to where you started.
This is where the rain caught up with us.
You can see, if you look closely, the raindrops on the surface of the loch.
We made it back in time for afternoon tea,
and to watch the launch return!

And a lovely couple who worked at the site gave us a ride back to Stirling, saving us the cost of a cab fare.

rainy thursday [photo post]

26 Thursday May 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

family, hanna, michigan, photos, travel

It’s rainy in Michigan, but earlier in the week, during a quintessential bright, clear summer day (we spent part of it in the hammock), Hanna snapped these gorgeous sun-drenched photographs.

lemonjello’s (Holland, Mich.),
the coffee shop where my sister worked in college

I’m not frowning, just squinting in the sun. Also, I look like my mom!
Brewery with bicycles (we bought some to take home)
Detailing from the facade of the building that once housed my bank
Marbles in the sun
Marbles in jars
Hand puppet
Loom in the window

wednesday in the woods [photo post]

25 Wednesday May 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

family, hanna, michigan, photos, travel

Cross-posted at …fly over me, evil angel….

As promised, photos from the Saugatuck Dunes. Photos by Hanna; selection and commentary by Anna.

On Sunday morning we went hiking with my (Anna’s) parents

One of the major things I miss in the city is lack of access to the woods
Woodland violets
I also miss Michigan sand dunes
And the lake (I am hot & sweaty in this picture)
Root washed up on the shoreline
I wish there was a way for us to live & work in Boston
and still spend time here every weekend…

tuesday on twelfth street [photo post]

24 Tuesday May 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

family, hanna, michigan, photos, travel

Welcome to part two of vacation photo posts, brought to you by Anna (text and composition) and Hanna (photographs). Cross-posted at the feminist librarian.

Toby takes a cat nap on the windowseat

Hanna’s personal favorite: sunlight through the
French doors
Dinner preparations
Basil tomato pasta = yum!

The (uncharacteristically tidy!) dining room table
Up to the second floor (bedtime!)

Stay tuned for tomorrow’s photos from our hike at the Saugatuck Dunes State Park.

monday in michigan [photo post]

23 Monday May 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in a sense of place

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

family, hanna, michigan, photos, travel

Cross-posted at …fly over me, evil angel….
 
Hanna and I are in West Michigan (Holland, to be precise) this week, visiting with my parents and various other childhood acquaintances. I haven’t been back here since October 2009. Hanna hasn’t been here ever. I’m showing her the stuff I remember, discovering with her the new stuff that’s happened since I’ve been away, and we’re enjoying not having to go to work for the week. We’re watching Season Two of Life on Mars and catching up on the leisure reading.

As I write this, Hanna is sitting next to me at the dining room table reading a history of coffeehouse culture in Europe, 1600-1720. I’ve been learning all the ways in which the responsible coffee user was supposed to ingest his/her drug of choice at the time (an hour before and after ingesting food, at as hot a temperature as could be tolerated) and all of the wondrous effects it was supposed to bestow.

Anyway. Here are some pictures from our Saturday walkabout. On Tuesday I’ll be bringing you photographs of domestic life at the Cook household and on Wednesday photographs from the Saugatuck Dunes State Park, where we went hiking on Sunday.

Later in the week, there may be more photos … or there might be a Friday Fun video. We’ll see what the vacation brings!

All the photos were taken by Hanna.

On Saturday morning we went to the local farmer’s market

It was nice, after two days in the car, to be out walking.
Miquel Fuentes, age 11, on his cello.
The turtle in the cello case is named PeeWee.
This was an addition to main street since my last visit.
We purposefully missed Tulip Time but the flowers are still blooming.
Sailboat on Lake Macatawa (latter-day Swallows & Amazons)

Stay tuned for Part Two (Hanna’s lovely photographs of the interior of my parents’ home) tomorrow.

vacation reading

19 Thursday May 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in book reviews

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

family, michigan

Today, Hanna and I are setting out on a road trip to visit my parents in Michigan. We’re driving because Hanna’s ears have painful trouble with flying. Which means we’ll be on the road for two days there and two days back, and we’re staying about  a week in between.*

I’m gonna give myself the option of Not Blogging While On Vacation, so things might be lighter than normal around here until after Memorial Day. I already have a ficnote in mind for the Tuesday after the long weekend, so you can have that to look forward to.

I’ve been planning this vacation for a few months now which, by my way of planning, involves stockpiling books in a major way. Here are the titles I’m packing in the suitcase and hope to make time to read while we’re gone.

Best Sex Writing 2010 edited by Rachel Kramer Bussel. None of the libraries around here had a copy and I finally had to resort to buying my own … not that I’m sorry. The 2009 anthology rocked. I used a gift certificate from my friend Minerva to Trident Booksellers to buy this one and I’m really looking forward to checking out the roster of essays by Diana Joseph (“The Girl Who Only Sometimes Said No”), Brian Alexander (“Sex Surrogates Put Personal Touch On Therapy”) and Betty Dodson (“Sexual Outlaws”), Violet Blue (“The Future of Sex Ed”) and many more.

Feel Bad Education: And Other Contrarian Essays On Schooling by Alfie Kohn. Education and parenting activist Alfie Kohn is definitely one of my “auto read” authors, ever since I devoured his Punished By Rewards as a teenager (yes, I was that nerdy). This latest I ordered with a Christmas gift card from my uncle and aunt and I’ve been keeping it as a treat for after my thesis was finished.

A friend of ours recently lent Hanna and I the first six volumes in Naomi Novik’s Temeraire series described to us as “Napoleon … with dragons.” Although we’ve been told Napoleon doesn’t actually ever ride a dragon. I will report back and let you know whether this is true, or whether one gets to actually glimpse the military leader aloft. Stay tuned!

LibraryThing’s April Early Reviewer batch yielded a memoir by Patricia Harman, Arms Wide Open: A Midwife’s Journey. As I was saying to friends this past weekend, I’m at a point in my life where I honestly don’t see myself becoming a parent, and I’m not only okay with that but more than a little relieved. I think I’d be a damn good parent — just like I think I’d be a damn good educator — but neither of those life paths are something I’m passionate about choosing. (The dissonance between what one is “good” at and what one is passionate about is a whole separate blog post). But being a non-parent has not lessened my interest in the lives of children and families, or in how we as a society can better accommodate children and their families at the very beginning of their lives. Hence my pleasure at being offered an advance review copy of Harman’s book. If I’m lucky, it’ll arrive before I hit the road and I’ll be able to take it with me. Regardless, look for a review of this one in the future.

Garden of Iden by Kage Baker. Yes, I’m still working my way through this one, the first in Baker’s “Company” novels. Hanna assures me 1) that the first one is a slog and 2) that it’s absolutely necessary to reading the rest of the novels, novellas, and short stories set in the ‘verse. So … yes. This one will be in my bag. And it’s time travel, so I’m committed on principle.

Also Perdido Street Station by China Mieville. Who writes books that are amazing and difficult and trascendent and messily corporeal all at once. Made it halfway through this one last summer before I had to put it down. Maybe I’ll have more luck this time around. I’d really like to, ’cause god it was good.

To End All Wars: A Story of Loyalty and Rebellion, 1914-1918 by Adam Hochschild. Ever since reading Hochschild’s King Leopold’s Ghost for a class on modern imperialism in undergrad I’ve been a fan. (He’s also on my auto-read list). I particularly admire the way this activist journalist blends detailed primary source historical research with a passion for human rights and nonviolence. This latest work looks at peace activism during the war to end all wars. I have it on old at the library and, again, it might not come in ’til after we’re gone but a girl can hope, yeah?

And finally, I have been sent a PDF advance review copy of Jessica Yee’s much-discussed anthology Feminism For Real: Deconstructing the Academic Industrial Complex of Feminism which has the honor of being the latest work in a long tradition of dissident feminist voices speaking from the margin of what is (still today) a far from mainstream movement. I’ve been avoiding full reviews of the work since I plan to review it myself, but am excited to discover new voices and new perspectives on the activism I hold near and dear to my heart.

*If you’re reading this and you’re in Michigan and I haven’t been in touch with you, please don’t feel hurt. A week, I’ve learned, is a really really short time to spend in one’s hometown and there just isn’t enough time to do everything and see everyone and stay sane. At least if you’re me and you’re also bringing your girlfriend to visit your childhood home for the First Time Ever. (She’s met the parental units, but not been to Michigan). So we’re trying to take it slow and not over-schedule and burn out spectacularly.  If you’re reading this and you want to see me, email and maybe we can work out coffee or something.

post-thesis thursday

28 Thursday Apr 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in media

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

family, fun, thesis, web video

So yesterday at 4:57pm Eastern Standard Time, I sent the following tweet to my twitter account:

And then Hanna and I put on our sneakers and sandals and walked out into the beautiful spring evening to visit our local Staples and print out two complete copies of my Master’s thesis, “How to Live?: The Oregon Extension as Experiment in Living, 1964-1980.”

I’ll be presenting my work at the Simmons College History Department’s graduate colloquium on May 9th. At some point shortly after that, I plan to post details over at my OE Oral History blog about acquiring a copy of the thesis and viewing the presentation online. I’ll cross-post or link out from here, so those of you who are interested can stay tuned for further details.

Meanwhile, I offer this music video in self-congratulations for the past four years of work. I don’t know why this was the song I found rattling around in my head during these final days of revision. I haven’t listened to this album in ages — not since shortly after I moved to Boston. Maybe it’s my subconscious trying to come full circle. Anyhow. As someone who’s always found her work to take longer than originally planned, and who has (as my mother wrote in a recent email) found myself living an “unexpected life,” I like the underlying message of this song.

More soon!

booknotes: stuff I’ve been reading

21 Thursday Apr 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in book reviews

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

family

With one week (!) left until I hand in my completed Master’s thesis, my brain for writing blog posts has wandered away somewhere … hopefully to return. In the meantime, I thought I’d take the opportunity to clear out the backlog of unfinished “booknotes” in the queue via one omnibus booknote highlighting some of the titles I have actually been reading, in and around thesis revising and fanfiction perusing.

1) Sara Vowell, Unfamiliar Fishes (2011). My father sent me a signed  (have I mentioned my dad is awesome?) uncorrected proof of this latest book by NPR essayist Sarah Vowell for my 30th birthday. I considered saving it until after thesis revision, as a treat, but it didn’t last that long. Vowell’s last book, The Wordy Shipmates explored the founding of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Unfamiliar Fishes takes up as its subject the U.S. relations with Hawaii, beginning with the arrival of the first American missionaries (from Boston, unsurprisingly) and ending with the forced annexation in 1898. If you enjoy Sara Vowell’s style, then I’m pretty sure you’ll like this book. As an historian, I appreciate the way she takes history seriously and doesn’t shie away from the contradictions and paradoxes inherent in human interactions.

2) Patricia Briggs, River Marked (2011). This is the sixth installment in Briggs’ series starring shape-shifting car mechanic Mercedes Thompson. In the interest of avoiding major plot spoilers, I will just say that while this isn’t my favorite of the bunch, I continue to like the way that Briggs balances Mercy’s relationship with her lover (now husband) Adam Hauptmann with Mercy’s own independent explorations of her shape-shifting identity, her family history, and her development as a new member of Adam’s werewolf pack. The nature of the story took Mercy away from the usual cast of characters, which was a little sad since I’ve grown fond of following the lives of her supernatural friends. At the same time, we delved a bit further into Mercy’s shadowy genealogy, which was an interesting new element. I’m hopeful that in the next installment, Briggs will take this new knowledge of Mercy’s and return her to the extended family and friendship network I’ve grown to love. Meanwhile, I’m looking forward to the latest installment of her Alpha & Omega series (tentatively due out in January 2012).

3) Stuart Biegel, The Right To Be Out: Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity in America’s Public Schools (2010). Biegel is on the faculty of the UCLA School of Law and an expert in the field of education and the law. In this highly readable volume, Biegel tackles the rights of students, teachers, and administrators to be open about their sex, sexual orientation, and gender identity in the context of America’s public schools. Through an examination of case law, Biegel argues that there is a growing precedent for youth and adults alike to claim the “right to be out,” that is the right to be open about fundamental aspects of their identity, in the public sphere — including public schools. Furthermore, they have the right to be out and to expect protection from persecution (bullying, workplace discrimination, harassment) for their beliefs. Biegel explores the legal ramifications for schools that will be held accountable for protecting their students and employees from discrimination and violence. It was a quick read, and I am glad to have it in my list of sources on the intersection of education, sexuality, and the law.

4) Michael Cart (editor), How Beautiful the Ordinary: Twelve Stories of Identity (2009). Our friend Diana picked up this anthology of short stories at a recent book swap and forwarded it on to Hanna and I. As is the nature of short story anthologies with multiple authors, I enjoyed some of the stories intensely and felt unmoved by others. I particularly liked David Levithan’s “A Word from the Nearly Distant Past,” Ariel Schrag’s comic strip about attending a dyke march, and “First Time” by Julie Ann Peters, the story of two lesbians who are very much in love and in lust (positive depictions of teenage sexuality for the win!). It’s a mark of how far queer YA fiction has come in the past two decades that the stories in this anthology are so diverse and multivocal. As Levithan observes (in the phrase from which the title is drawn), “how beautiful the ordinary becomes once it disappears.”

5) Kage Baker, In the Garden of Iden (1997). And finally, now that thesising is winding down, I picked up book one of Kage Baker’s science fiction / historical fiction series about the mysterious Company. The Company is a corporation of immortal operatives who travel through time and space supposedly rescuing the planet from human destruction while profiting enormously from their skillful maniplations of human history. I’m not far enough into the book (which Hanna assures me is both essential to understanding the series as a whole and also one of the clunkier installments) to offer much by way of informed review. I’ll just say that as someone who has had a more or less life-long affair with novels involving time travel, the basic concept is definitely something I can get behind. And the handful of short stories I’ve read in the same universe definitely tell me I have something to look forward to.

That’s all for now folks! Look for a “harpy week” post this Sunday, a ficnote on Tuesday, and perhaps in the next month or so a return to more regular narrative blogging. And actual full-length booknotes to boot!

from the archives: fun with reenactment photography

14 Thursday Apr 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in library life

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

family, history, humor, MHS, michigan, photos

Some things never change.

This passed week at the MHS, some colleagues and I posed for mock Victorian daguerreotype photographs to promote our new photography exhibit on the blog. Here I am with my awesome boss, Elaine:

Anna (standing) and Elaine (seated)
at the MHS, April 2011

(The shawls are courtesy of Hanna‘s mom Linda.)

When I sent the blog post to my mother she responded by digging out these photographs, circa. 1988, when we created our own mock portrait studio and spent an afternoon posing for Edwardian-era black and white photographs.

Yes, before you ask, we were indeed that sort of homeschooling family.

Anna (age 7)
Brian (age 4)
Maggie (age 1)

happy birthday, birthday boy!

08 Tuesday Mar 2011

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in our family

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

family, holidays

So today’s my awesome brother Brian’s 27th and so we’re going to take a moment to celebrate.

At Tim Burton’s Alice in Wonderland Portland, Oregon (March 2010)
 Yo Bro! Many Happy Returns of the Day. Hope your art students bring you cupcakes.
← 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