things they don’t tell you about living in new york

You become a pack animal if you’re going to be out of your house for any length of time exceeding three hours. This problem is compounded if you are trying to save money or exercise, because it increases the amount of stuff you’re schlepping by orders of magnitude. Today I am working only one of my jobs (well two, if you count the fact that I can do some of my PA stuff from my laptop at Job 1) and I brought with me three bags. Between my backpack, my tote bag full of gym stuff/my lunch and breakfast, and my purse, I took up two seats on the train. This is why I leave earlier than I need to–so I can have a seat and not worry about the delicate Tetris situation of getting all my stuff wrangled onto my lap/onto the floor (but resting on my shoes, so that it doesn’t actually touch the disgusting grimy floor of the subway car.) If you’re trying to save money by either making your own coffee or, in my case, getting it from the cafe where you work for free, one of your hands will be occupied with a reusable cup of some size and bulk. This prevents the easy reading of a physical book, so you need to make sure you have something loaded onto your phone for entertainment purposes or else you’ll be left alone with Your Own Thoughts.

Whenever I see people on the train without a big bag I think: do you have so much disposable income that you can buy yourself lunch out every day? Do you work at one of those magical unicorn tech establishments where they feed you for free in exchange for your fourteen hours of labor? Are you one of those Truly Better Than Me people who can work out at home before leaving for work? (I can never manage to get up early enough to swing a morning workout.)

Anyway, all of this is just to say that I walk around New York feeling like this lady :

As you can guess, it’s going very well

For the tens of folks reading this you may have noticed that I started off July full of vim and vigor and excited about my July Challenge, which I have not updated since the 2nd. That’s not to say I haven’t been making an effort in the areas that I outlined. I have–not as much as I might, but not as little as I feared. I’ve gotten quite a bit of writing done. I’ve moved more, if not as much as I’d hoped. And I’ve made a non-zero number of social media posts.

One area where I have made a particular stride (I hesitate to say strides plural) is that of conquering Avoidance Mountain. At least, one little peak of Avoidance Mountain. To belabor the metaphor even further, I’ve attained Base Camp on Avoidance Mountain.

Booyah. I have no unread messages.

Well, that’s not entirely true. I’ve gone through about six years of email and identified receipts, important documents, and a whole pile of shame. I’ve declared amnesty on a lot of this–a key component of Inbox Zero, if you’re familiar with that. I’ve had to admit that too much time has passed to respond to some of these. I can only mark them read, hang my head in shame, and resolve to do better in the future.

This feels like a very silly thing to be excited about, but I am. My unread count has been hovering in the low thousands for a while now, and it’s been an enduring source of stress, even as I am aware (and found out) that 95% of the emails I purged were come-ons from startups that don’t exist anymore or notices that my credit card bill was due/paid/coming up.

So, onward!

July Challenge Day 2

A bit of a mixed bag on day 2! I’m realizing that unless I’m very coordinated and write in the morning before I leave for work, I usually don’t have the wherewithal to write after a shift at the coffee shop. BUT it was still a pretty good day.

1 movement – check! 15 minutes on the bike this time, and ten of stretching. Not too bad for a day where I was also on my feet for four and a half hours.
1 creative – nope.
1 social media – check! I made a facebook post about my book!

level one: 2 points

1 self care: check! Sundays are Everything Shower days so I did a hair mask.
1 Conquering Avoidance Mountain: Check! I got my inbox down to 1,125 unread and sent some emails I’d been putting off.
1 bedtime/wakeup without screens – nope! Definitely watched asmr videos to fall asleep, and looked at tiktok first thing.

Level two: 2 points
Total points for day 2: 4!

July Challenge day 1

I wrote about my July challenge in the last post, so here is my Day 1 update!

Level One:

1 Movement: Check! I spent 25 minutes on the Peloton bike, free-riding and watching an episode of The Untamed. I’d been meaning to rewatch it (genuinely one of my favorite shows) but it felt like a waste of time, but by stacking my workout with the TV I felt virtuous. I finished out the episode by doing a light free weight workout. About 40 minutes of activity!

1 Creative: Nope. I worked a six hour shift, exercised, and did a bunch of cleaning- writing wasn’t on the table today. Oh well.

1 Social Media: Check! I made two terrible tiktoks and wrote these two blog posts. ( am not sure if I am counting a point per social media post, or just a point for doing one. If it’s the former, I’ve gotten 4 points today for this line, if it’s the latter, one.)

Level one total: 2 or 4, depending on the count.

Level Two

1 Self Care: Check! I did my LED mask thingie for ten minutes after my shower and drank two enormous bottles of water!

1 Conquering Avoidance Mountain: Check! I took my email from 2300+ unread emails to under 1800, by archiving, deleting, and labeling a bunch of crap I don’t need. WIN!

1 Bedtime/Wakeup: Definitely didn’t get points for a screen-free morning, so I guess we’ll check back in on this one tomorrow!

Level two total: 2!

Total points for day: 4 or 6 depending (LOL)

July challenge

I’ve been having lots of Thoughts lately. Big Thoughts about life, work, vocation, etc. And while I’m not making any big moves right now, I am thinking about next steps. I realized the other day that even if I did make big moves right now, I’m still carrying a lot of stuff from the past that I don’t want to keep carrying, regardless of the destination. (Sorry if this is cryptic. I’m not secretly sitting on a huge job offer or book deal or anything. Just lots of Thinky Thoughts that I’m not ready to share on the internet.)

Last Friday, in an effort to hone in on these feelings, I hosted a little gathering of friends at my apartment, where we ate charcuterie and wasabi rice snacks and drank Laura Palmers (and, later, wine) and tore through the magazines we’d brought, turning the clippings into vision boards for ourselves. I read some tarot cards. A great time was had by all.

In addition to this kind of slightly woo-woo brainstorming about the future, I decided to make concrete steps to deal with some of the backlog/buildup that I definitely don’t want to be carrying forward. So I made myself a little challenge!

Don’t worry- I definitely haven’t decided to do 75 Hard or anything deranged like that. My criteria for “challenge” is something I can do, every day, with the tools I already have. Challenges like 75 Hard, where you have to follow a diet, work out twice (twice!!! a day!!!!) and read ten pages of nonfiction only are great for some people–I don’t know who, but surely there are some people who benefit from this kind of structure. So: doable daily, with the tools I already have. Simple!

I call it 1-1-1. There are two categories in which I can earn points, and I think of one as baseline habits or actions I want to make sure I’m prioritizing, and the other are more … propulsive. IDK if that makes sense. OK. Category one:

1 – creative session, up to one hour

1 – movement session, up to one hour

1 – social media or blog post

Nice and vague, right? For creative, that’s ideally writing, but any of the crafts I’ve picked up or want to pick up would also count for this. For movement, I mean any movement. Walking, stretching, yoga, pilates, a Peloton ride, weight lifting. If I spend twenty minutes rolling out my muscles, that counts. The last one, on social media? Easy: I’ve got a book to promote, and a weird block about talking about it, so if the idea is to make as many posts as possible it doesn’t matter that each one isn’t perfect.

I’m not trying to punish myself here. If I don’t get any points, that’s fine! The idea is to have something quantifiable, to encourage me to do the good things I’m already doing more often.

For the “bonus” or propulsive category, these are actions I think of as “next level” stuff. And it might sound really stupid that I’m 37 and haven’t figured some of this shit out, but give me a break. It’s been a weird few years. Decades. Whatever.

So:

1 – self-care

1 – conquering avoidance mountain

1 – screen-free bedtime/wakeup

Again, fairly straightforward. Self care can include things like drining enough water, doing a face mask, or using one of my weird face gadgets. Conquering avoidance mountain can be anything from responding to an email I’ve been putting off or cleaning up a folder on my hard drive. And screen-free bedtime/wakeup speaks for itself.

I don’t expect huge outcomes from this. I don’t expect to roll in to August a completely new person, with perfect skin and abs and a pristine inbox. I want to get caught up; I want to get better sleep; I want to move more in ways that make me happy.

So… what am I going to do with all the points? I have some rewards planned out depending on how many points I get, and I’ll share those later. For now, I’m just going to focus on consistency and we’ll see where it takes me.

I’ll keep you updated!

I miss blogging

I’ve been dog sitting for the past week, hanging out in a beautiful apartment in Inwood and spending lots of time on the train going back and forth for various gigs. Amid the death of Reddit being reported everywhere to my Many Thoughts about reading Robert Gottlieb’s memoir, I had an overriding thought today: I miss blogging.

I really miss Livejournal, with its beautiful nested comments and privacy controls for individual posts. I never really took to Dreamwidth, its non-Russian successor-I mostly use it for Get Your Words Out! checkins. More than anything, I miss when I could just write a bunch of crap on the internet and not think of it as a sales tool, as promo, as content. I was reading through my old blog and there is some good writing there, but there is also a lot of junk, which is great. I spend a lot of time worrying about my Substack newsletter, A Faster No, and whether or not the content I’m putting out that week is engaging. I hardly get any comments, and I don’t know if that means I’m doing something wrong.

But with Steady As She Goes and this blog (to a lesser extent) just started out as me typing. My silly little blog, full of my silly little thoughts. And I thought why wait for Friday to post some silly thoughts about Asteroid City (which I saw yesterday) or the enduring beauties of Midsomer Murders. Or some of my favorite quote from Avid Reader. It’s my blog, dammit! And I’ll repopulate it if I want!

Avid Reader

It takes a special kind of dyed-in-the-wool nerd to arrange to receive The New York Times at summer camp, something Bob Gottlieb did in 1945. That’s how he learned about the bombing of Hiroshima. He was a member of three lending libraries (where you had three days to read the book before returning it to the drug store) and was obsessed with bestseller lists, making sure to read everything that hit it. Reading his memoir is like getting a blueprint of how to create the perfect editor: get them started reading early (in his case at four), have them read widely and voraciously, and then make them temperamentally unsuited to do anything else. It’s a brisk read, about 350 pages, and if you’re at all interested in the history of the publishing industry it’s a must-read.

Asteroid City

Wes Anderson is an incredibly memeable director. There’s a whole tiktok trend where people make videos lovingly (and not so lovingly) mimicking his signature style: characters in the center of the frame, small movements or adjustments of aesthetic objects (usually vintage-looking) and stylized, almost flat line delivery. Abby and I saw Asteroid City in theaters, which was a joy. I have really missed going to movies, and after looking over after each preview and saying “I want to see that” I have the feeling I’ll be in a lot of them this summer.

Asteroid City is a weird little pastel nesting box of a movie–a movie that is a play within a tv show about the making of that play. It’s in color and in black and white, in several different aspect ratios, and packed to the gills with every actor Wes Anderson could get on board. Abby and I had one disagreement after–she thinks that Bill Murray, currently embattled, was meant to play the Tom Hanks character, and I argue that Bill Murray couldn’t have played the role well. He’s just too weird. (That’s one thing we did agree on–more than anything else, Bill Murray sounds exhausting to be around, and thus his cancellation is society saying “Too much. Stop.”) Apart from the meta structure, the story is fairly straightforward; a widowed father (so recently widowed that he has not, at the start of the film, figured out how to tell his four children that their mother is dead) arrives in Asteroid City to participate in a science convention for teens. Also come to town are a group of schoolchildren and a Hollywood starlet whose daughter is in town for the same convention. During said convention, an alien appears, and the town is locked down.

Is it bad that I didn’t think of the Covid lockdowns watching Asteroid City? It was too pastel, too bright, too chatty; my memories of lockdown are colored by anxiety and interior lighting in contrast to the airy, flat color of Asteroid City’s fake southwestern vistas. (Shot in Spain, apparently. Spain via a different dimension.)

Twenty-four hours later and I’m not sure how I feel about Asteroid City. It was fun, it was funny in parts, it was very (unexpectedly) moving in others. It made me want to wear more long skirts. It didn’t have the elegant melancholy of The Grand Budapest Hotel, or the moving and complicated family dynamic of The Royal Tenenbaums. But there was something about it that has stayed with me, and I think I may be going to see it again.

It’s funny–I’ve turned away from writing this blog post several times because my attention span is shot. I got one of those screentime alerts on my phone earlier today–the number of hours I spend looking at it is shameful. I want to read more, write more, and do more, and the hours I spend on instagram and tiktok definitely aren’t worth it!

Reading: Witch King by Martha Wells (page 94/414)
Writing: working on the sequel to Marrying In (Marrying In 2: Electric Boogaloo)
Listening: “Don’t Recall” by KARD
Watching: Midsomer Murders S12E04 “The Glitch”

It’s been 84 years…

Yeah I haven’t been doing too much blogging here, have I?

I guess the Death Of The Blog is a thing that people have talked about recently. I’ve exchanged blog reading (and writing, lol) almost entirely for twitter and an ever-growing succession of TinyLetters. Maybe someday I’ll do a roundup of my favorites.

In the meantime, I wanted to write a bit about some books I’ve read lately.

Earlier in the year I set my Goodreads challenge to 200 books (I’m back on Goodreads now that they allow you to track re-reads, a feature they’ve needed forever) but between personal grief and the slow decay of our national psyche, it became abundantly clear that 200 wasn’t happening. And it was a silly goal in the first place – I’ve never gone that far over 100, and why would I think that the first year of The Circumstances would be any different? So I’ve set it back down to a reasonable 100 and am over halfway there, with 59 books read. I don’t want to write about every book I’ve read since the  last time I wrote about books (*checks date* *screams*) so working backwards, here are some Recent Reads.

Mr. Penumbra’s 24-Hour Bookstore by Robin Sloan 

I got this for Christmas the year it came out, I believe, and I can’t believe I waited until now to read it. It’s completely charming – Clay, the protagonist, is a refugee from the tech industry who gets a job working the night shift of the titular bookstore. There’s a secret society, code-breaking, a few terrifyingly plausible startups (including one devoted exclusively to the anatomically accurate rendering of breasts in video games) and a definite adventure vibe. Despite one or two quirks of writing that began to drive me bonkers every time they appeared, I found myself racing through the book with a smile on my face, happy to be in this world of books and bookstores and the weirdos that love them.

HHhH by Laurent Binet

IMG_2922This I picked up in Prague, in the train station before I left for the medieval town of Česky Krumlov. I’d seen it on a bunch of lists when it first came out, so it had been in the back of my mind, but I decided to pick it up and ended up reading nearly the whole thing on a train. I read the rest in a restaurant by a river, in view of a four-hundred year old castle. Around this castle is a moat, and inside the moat there are bears, one of whom is named Katerina.  HHhH is a book partially about the difficulties of writing books, a schtick I worried would get really, really old, but didn’t. The other part is about the assassination of Reinhard Heydrich (the main architect of the Nazi Final Solution) by two Czech resistance fighters, Jan Kubiš and Josef Gabčik, in a military operation called Operation Anthropoid. These two subjects – writing and Nazi assassinations – don’t have too much to do with one another on the surface of things, but Binet (writing in French, with translation by Sam Taylor) asks a valid question which ties the two together: how does a writer tell a true story? How do they tell it in a way that is believable but compelling, interesting but true to the facts? How do you honor someone you know little about, especially when you know so much about the man he killed? I took quite a few photos of favorite passages in this book; here’s one of my favorites:

To begin with, this seemed a simple-enough story to tell. Two men have to kill a third man. They succeed, or not, and that’s the end, or nearly. I thought of all the other people as mere ghosts who would glide elegantly across the tapestry of history. Ghosts have to be looked after, and that requires great care- I knew that. On the other hand, what I didn’t know (but should have guessed) is that a ghost desires only one thing: to live again.

It was heartening to read a story of resistance, even if it didn’t end well for Kubiš and Gabčik, who committed suicide in the basement of a church, surrounded by five feet of water pumped in by the eight hundred Nazis outside, trying to get in. You can still see the bullet holes on the outside wall of the church.

IMG_3084

The Possessed: Adventures with Russian Books and the People who Read Them by Elif Batuman 

Full disclosure: I’ve never read any of the Russian greats. Actually, that’s a lie; when I was 16 I read all the peace parts of War & Peace but I have no memory of it. (I also saw Natasha, Pierre, & the Great Comet of 1812 twice, but that’s different.) Elif Batuman, author of The Idiot, writes about her relationship with Russian, Russian writers, and grad school with humor and insight and even for someone who knows nothing about the canon she’s referencing, there’s a lot of fun to be had here.

 

Anyway, that’s a little recap of some of the things I’ve liked recently. I have a lot on the docket that I’m excited about; N.K. Jemisin’s THE STONE SKY, last in the trilogy; FLAME IN THE MIST by Renee Ahdieh; and THE BEST OF CONNIE WILLIS which I picked up at the Nebula Awards.

Until next time!

Recommendation: J by Howard Jacobson

I just finished reading J by Howard Jacobson. That little strike through on the J should really be two lines, as per the book, where any word beginning with “j” also has the letter stricken through. But I can’t figure out how to do it on WordPress.

J is set in a world where something Has Happened – WHAT HAPPENED, IF IT HAPPENED, is never clear in the book and is always referred to in the hypothetical. But whatever it was has caused society to turn to a great forgetting, a turning away from memory and identity so that whatever happened won’t ever happen again. This great societal effort is failing, though, and strange outbursts of violence are seizing the country anyway – we are aware of this from the beginning as Ailinn Solomons and Kevern Cohen begin their strange, tentative relationship.

It’s a love story, and it’s a dystopian novel, and it’s a novel about anti-semitism, but nothing is ever addressed head on. In J there aren’t any grand revelations or explosions, there is no courageous resistance against an oppressive government. WHAT HAPPENED, IF IT HAPPENED, was a collective act of violence so great that to speak of it is an act of unimaginable illegality – the genius of the way this illegality is structured is that nothing is banned, so much as just not done. This elliptical style might turn some people off but for me, it made for a disorienting and almost elegiac reading experience; a sense of sorrow for things barely remembered, the knowledge that we as a society have done things that we shouldn’t be proud of and for which we should apologize, suffused every page.

So, I highly recommend! Go buy it and read it. And then tell me what you think. 

 

 

Where are you coming from?

Somehow in the last week I’ve received 144 queries. I’ve certainly had three-digit weeks before but that’s a lot. At any rate I’m delighted. In the past few days I’ve read some projects I’m very excited about. But seriously, where are you coming from?

A few links to some exciting things afoot in my client’s worlds –

Mark Tiedemann’s novella “Miller’s Wife” appears as an exclusive ebook reprint in this month’s issue of Lightspeed Magazine! Here’s the link. 

And ARCs of Ren Warom’s debut novel ESCAPOLOGY, out from Titan in July, are out in the world! Linked because I can’t get the tweet to embed. God, I’m so excited for this one.

I have no other news, at least none that I can remember, because my brain doesn’t work. I’ve had family visiting this past week and, as always happens when my mother is in town, theater tickets magically appeared, so in the last week I’ve seen five shows: Her Requiem at LCT3, Eclipsed on Broadway, Women Without Men at The Mint, Nice Fish at St. Ann’s Warehouse, and Steve Martin & Edie Brickell’s bluegrass musical Bright Star on Broadway. They were all fabulous, and I am now exhausted and suffering from brain drain.

Editing the new Shipping & Handling episode while Bridget & I figure out a date to record. Looking forward to being on the airwaves again! Well, the downloads. You know what I mean.

Haven’t been doing too much personal reading – I did finish THE FALL OF THE OTTOMANS and THE LIVING UNKNOWN SOLDIER, for which the phrase “just fuck me up” has never been more applicable. The reviews of the book I’d read said that the translation was somewhat clunky, but either I’m a philistine and didn’t notice or the translation was absolutely fine. Still, if you can get your hands on a copy of this gem and are at all interested in this kind of thing, I highly recommend it. And even though I am supposed to not be buying books right now I still managed to walk out of Barnes & Noble on Sunday with a copy of NUMERO ZERO by Umberto Eco and TO HELL AND BACK by Ian Kershaw. Who knows when I’ll get to them!