18 October

This One’s For You, Esther, And Thanks. Our Bossy And Photogenic Cat Says Hello. The Black Dog Inside Is Getting Bored…

by Jon Katz

I’ve bitched and squawked an excellent deal about the nasty trolls and broken humans who stalk people online, but I must be honest. Some of the nicest people in the world have been following Maria and me and our blogs for a long time now, and they support us regularly and send us the most beautiful and thoughtful messages and sometimes, donations.

One this morning that came to our P.O. Box 205 was from Esther Dow of New Hampshire. It was a beautiful card with a gorgeous painting of a Raven,  a timely gift for us.  She is one of our favorite people.

And she sent a sweet note: “I am enclosing donations for your blogs. I very much enjoy reading them every day. The photos of the animals are my favorites,  especially Zip. He is becoming a pretty photographic cat. I hope you both stay well and that the remainder of the year stays peaceful.”

Best wishes, Esther…” You are a warrior for hope and kindness. Zip has become a Bedlam Farm Rock Star.

Thanks, Esther; people like you remind us repeatedly what it means to be human. The Zip photo is for you.

My Black Dog is getting bored, I think. I’ve invited him to leave and sit with another poor soul. Yesterday struck me for several reasons, but I have learned to accept adversity and see it as a gift that challenges me to be stronger and better. Fear and depression are not material things; they are geographic spaces to cross.

I accept them but don’t allow them to get too comfortable. They just look for another victim if I don’t suffer too much. There are many.

Today, I think the Black Dog is tired of hanging around here.

We are, in truth, a happy, dynamic place of good work, good people, and our own Peaceable Kingdom. It is a good place, but not suitable for an extended stay from the Black Dog. I suggested he return to his Hellmouth. It will take a day or two, but I can see the light. This is not the right place for a Black Dog.

I once had the most savage panic attacks, and yesterday reminded me of them, although it was as bad as before. This morning, I got this lovely note from Esther Dow. That was a light. Maria urged me to take it easy this morning, so I did. I meditated, rested, and read.

I have to thank Congress for a rare bit of sunshine. Even the lost souls of the Republican Congress couldn’t stomach making Mr. Jordan the Speaker Of The House and second in line to the Presidency.

Good things are about to happen; you heard it here first. Stay tuned.

15 October

Breakfast at Jean’s Place, A Very Special Place. The Egg Sandwich Is Sacred…

by Jon Katz

Maria and I get up every Sunday morning, and we ask ourselves what we should do – make breakfast at home or see Ninah, our friend and waitress at Jean’s. We just love her, and she seems to return the favor. Like the other wait staff at Jean’s, Nina is a social worker and a waitress – she babysits for the staff if they get too busy; she knows every single customer by heart and name and has their coffee waiting for them before they sit down.

She is a Nuclear Grandma, soothing people when they are in pain or have lost someone they love. She greets everyone (she knows about my brain injury and tells me every week to take it easy; she loves Maria and hugs her repeatedly, asking me if I know how lucky I am.

And I hear her talking to every person in booths out on the tables; she hugs everyone and asks about their grandmothers and fathers and their health. and happiness. And she cares. Every week, I’m scolded for not resting more to get over my concussion. No amount of denials seems to work. She only accepts answers from Maria.

(Painting on the wall, Jean’s Place. Painter unknown.)

Ninah is a pleasure. I loved my grandmother; Nina reminds me of her. Sometimes, I think she is everyone’s grandmother.

It feels more like a family dinner than a diner. I photographed the diner this morning, capturing itsextraordinaryl atmosphere. The egg sandwiches are pretty amazing as well. The big men of Hoosick Falls are always at the counter. Jean’s is much more than a restaurant in Hoosick Falls; it’s a community all of its own.

The counter, Jean’s Place (and Ninah). She knows everyone.

24 September

Two Flowers From July, Shared Today, Sunday, September 24, 2023. My Gift To You…

by Jon Katz

I still have a lot of beautiful flowers in my garden bed, but it’s time to start sharing beautiful flower photos that I haven’t yet posted. I will be doing that all through the Fall and then through winter. I need to see these photos go out into the world, and readers tell me they need to see them, too. So I’ll make sure to do that.

As always, my photos are a gift to my readers; a thank you for the support you have given me. I don’t copyright or watermark them; you can use them.

 

20 September

Discovering A New Generation Of Gifted Women Authors: I’ve Gathered Four That Seem Terrific. I’m Going To Have A Women’s Author Festival This Week As I Recover

by Jon Katz

When I used to visit bookstores in New York City when I worked there, I was struck by how few women writers of mysteries and spy stories were on sale. Publishing was yet another male-dominated business.

Just a decade or two later, it’s just the reverse.  Women are running most big publishing houses, and female writers of great skill are popping up everywhere. They have already enriched my reading life, and I’m building a personal festival around them this week.

The four books are The Traitor by Ava Glass, A World Of Curiosities by Louise Penny, The Breakaway by Jennifer Weiner, and Three Hours by Rosamund Lupton.

I’ve read that 80 percent of contemporary fiction is written by women and purchased by women. Wow.

Agatha Christie was an anomaly; men dominated spy and mystery writing for years. I’m an avid reader of good British mysteries and everything John LeCarre ever wrote. I struggled to find successors for him after he died, but women spy writers are beginning to fill that void for me, and it seems, for others.

In spy fiction especially, there has been a lot of angst and anger about the genre, which has typically favored male writers and protagonists ( Le Carre dominating the field), ignoring women, or marginalizing them in spy stories.

That has been changing.

Female writers like Ava Glass, Alma Katsu, I.S. Berry, and a half dozen others use their real-life experiences and literary skills to shake up the spy genre and have female spies and heroes narrating their books. I just ordered Glass’s second spy novel, The Traitor,  featuring her brave and savvy secret agent, Emma. I also ordered her first best-seller, Always Emma.

Critics love the heroine, Emma. Few of LeCarre’s heroes were likable.

From the uniform rave reviews of both, I can’t wait to read about Emma Makepeace, the protagonist and hero. Few of LeCarre’s spy heroes were likable; most were screwed up and tragedy prone. Makepeace is an appealing character, pleasant, determined, and enthusiastic. Like LeCarre, Glass has had some government experience, she is not as cynical and bitter as he was.

It seems a reach to me to compare any new spy writer to LeCarre, who showed us decades of brilliance before he died recently. It sounds like Glass (not her real name) is off to a good start.

I’m fascinated by this long overdue literary revolution in the spy and mystery genre and literary fiction. The new novels by female first novelists are the best books I’ve read in a long time. I’ve written six first novel books by women and was dazzled by every one of them.

The once-misogynist publishers are gone.

It’s white men’s turn to find it challenging to get published. I’m one of those older white men irrelevant authors, but I love to read and am grateful for the brave and heart-touching books women are writing. I’m devoting my rest time to four of these books this week.

I’ve been instructed to rest at least three or four hours daily while recovering from my brain bleed and my concussion. I’ve been browsing, sniffing, and poring through reviews and interviews to develop four books by ascending or brand-new female writers. Louise Penny is a Canadian  Agatha Christie; I’m hooked on Chief Inspector Armand Gamache. Her latest book, A World Of Curiosities, is coming tomorrow.

It’s about a murder in a remote religious sect far from civilization. Gamache investigates with his deeply troubled son-in-law; the two fight terribly at the monastery.

It’s not a first novel, and Penny isn’t new to mystery or spy fiction, but she is a powerhouse symbol of the rise of women mystery writes, and I have enjoyed all of the books in this series.

I’ve also ordered Jennifer Weiner’s new book, The Breakaway, a story about Abby Stern, a 30-year-old woman who is often weight-shamed by her mother and drawn to strange boyfriends who have no idea what she’s doing with her life.  Stern loves to have sex and eat. The book sounds different, fun, and arresting.

In the late summer of 2023, Abby led a 700-mile bicycle trip 700 miles from her home to Niagara Falls.

Along the way, a bizarre male lover and her fat-shaming mother appear. Reviewers call the book “delicious,” “sly,” funny and touching. Weiner is a famous advocate for bodily independence and women’s rights. The movie is about self-pride, the abortion struggle, the twisted way body weight and appearance afflict women in our culture, and brutal boyfriends and mothers. The book also deals with the abortion controversy.

Abby is no victim; she knows how to stand up for herself, a trait she will need.

It’s coming tomorrow.

The fourth book I’ve ordered is Rosamund Lupton’s Three Hours, a gripping and best-selling novel about a private school assaulted and held hostage by two mysterious killers who have wounded the school’s headmaster.

The headmaster is saved by his students, who fight to keep him alive, and features a CID who has little time to figure out who the killers are, what they want, and how they can be stopped. It’s a sadly relevant plot for Americans and the British, apparently thoughtfully and intelligently done. Only one shot was fired. The police have three hours to stop more killings and determine who the murderers are.

All during the brutal invasion, some children are safe in the school auditorium, where they hole up and continue rehearsing MacBeth to stay sane. The book is described as a gripping thriller that is immensely satisfying. Despite its fast and powerful face and subject matter, its natural resonance lies in exploring the mysteries of human consciousness, especially under such awful pressure and fear.

I would have considered this subject matter too unsettling to read a novel about, but every critic I researched said they could not put the book down and did not regret reading it for a second. It sounds uplifting and inspiring.

The story has a lot of love and courage and isn’t meant for people who love blood and violence. It focuses on a young student who fights to save his brother, the courageous headmaster, and Detective Inspector Rose Polstein, a pregnant forensic psychologist who has to put together a picture of the monster capable of planning such an attack.

My books will all be here by the end of this week, and I plan to get through them all by the end of next week. I’m calling it my Woman’s  Book Festival. Penny and Lupton are not first-time novelists but part of a new generation of women writers with huge and admiring followers. I’m in.

3 September

Recovery Journal: The Four Neurologists And Me: People Have Long Wondered How My Brain Works. I’m Getting A Peek. Apologies, Mrs. McCarthy

by Jon Katz

Robin’s Joke Of The Day: A guy asks a girl: “Can You Tell Time?” And She Says: “Tell It What?”

I remember Miss McCarthy., my nasty (and very frustrated) 4th-grade English Teacher, demanding to know “just how your brain is working?” when I couldn’t understand her grammar lessons and expectations or spell a word right.

I’m glad she didn’t live to read my blog.

It would have finished her off. On the other hand, that might have been a good thing, sparing other children her notion of writing.

I’ve never thought much about how my brain works; it seemed a risky place to go, even in meditation.  And it has always done what it is supposed to do until now.

This week brought a new experience: the most severe injury of my life and my first brain injury. So, we are getting to know one another differently, like it or not.

My brain is confused right now after I fell on a tile kitchen floor and ended up with bleeding in the brain.

I enjoyed the neurologists I met, they were a distinct set of geeks and serious people. Five of them came to see me over two days; none seemed to know any others had visited me or what they had to say.

The first was a  young woman who was warm and optimistic. You’ll be fine, she said, at least after a while. All of them asked me to tell them what day it was, who was President, to reach my arms as high as they could go, to raise my feet up, wriggle my toes, what my birthday was, say my name, date of birth and the date that day.

They spoke grimly and rapidly, like cops on the British mysteries in the interrogation room, where the most vicious and crafty criminals break down in tears and confess after two or three loud and rapid fire questions from the detective.

In all the years I’ve watched British mysteries, I’ve never seen a murderer decide to shut up and call their lawyer before admitting the murder and then bursting into tears.

I passed each test quickly, except for the date. I’m a writer; I told the neurologists I don’t have to go anywhere or keep track of the day unless I have a doctor’s appointment.

My guess, I said,  was it’s very close to the end of August; I’m a betting man, I’ll say August 28, I said. “One day off,” growled one young and very humorless doctor, looking successful – no smile. “Well,” I tried to joke, “I hope this doesn’t mean you will open up my head.”

I’m proud to say I knew who I was and where I was 100 percent of the time, and I even threw in Maria’s name for good measure to show how with it I am. I gave my birthdate out ten times an hour. How could I forget it?

The doctor looked at me curiously and said almost indignantly, “I don’t foresee any circumstance where we will be opening your head for this wound.” This was said in a kind of Miss McCarthy way. I half-expected him to ask how my brain was working, but he had read the scans, didn’t he know?

Maria and I were both relieved when he turned and walked out of my room, mostly because he told me in his charming way that I would be all right.

He was not particularly impressed by me, just like Miss McCarthy. And I can’t blame the Dyslexia. I was just not interesting to him; another old man falling on his head in the kitchen in his underpants with a bit of blood on his head. Ho-hum.

I was told it happens often.

Why, I wondered, then, all the testing? Maybe he was hoping for a few stumbles. I feared if I stumbled, I’d be rushed into surgery.

It’s strange, the brain thing now. In case you are new here, it was injured in my fall last Wednesday; there was some bleeding. Finally, I am officially a sore head.

“The brain gets annoyed when there is bleeding,” neurologist three told me, “it doesn’t like it at all and can get nasty.” I am used to having a sometimes dysfunctional brain, but I would hate to have a nasty or annoyed one.

Think of the blog; I could get even worse.

My brain is more confused than angry right now. It doesn’t quite know the familiar commands, which I took for granted, like when I wish to stand up, lie down, or go to the bathroom. It pauses or ignores me altogether.

At odd and unpredictable times, it seems to turn the world upside down or sideways on me for no apparent reason, and I have to be ready to grab something to avoid falling. Neurologist four, a young international student in training, suggested sternly that I not fail again.

He said it wouldn’t be good for my healing brain, which might get angry again. This neurologist was talking to me like I was back in the 4th grade, assuring me falling and hitting my head again wasn’t a good idea, as if I did it regularly or for fun.

It is no fun, I should say,  not as much as outing some obnoxious troll on my website. I am eager to get back to my Mansion Meditation Class on Tuesday. Do I have a meditation idea for them?

Even I got the warning and was listening. So I haven’t fallen again.

But that’s only been two days.

When I stand up, I have to put my hands on Maria’s shoulders to steady myself for a minute or two, and then I can walk on my own. Unless I get dizzy, which can happen at any moment. I am told this will go on for a few weeks at least.

My smartass daughter (no surprise) tells me I’m going to have to learn to sit down and be quiet every time I blog or have something to say.

Maria will not always be in front of me with her strong shoulders. When I get wobbly in the head, I just repeat my name and birthdate address and wiggle my toes (one is missing).

Then I know I’m OK. Maria and my daughter have suggested that I don’t have the longest attention span in the world and must stay focused and pay attention.

And take it easy, they say. I have no idea what means.

The brain, Emma says, will need a rest.

I can dress myself with help.

But my dependable brain seems to have forgotten who he works for, and is confused about many of life’s ordinary commands and tasks. I’ll skip the details. I fell on my back and head, which is very sore and painful when I stand or sit down. I have to sleep downstairs in a soft reading chair, and after a few hours, getting up is agony.

(Maria was kind enough to water my flowers.)

Maria hasn’t reached the tipping point yet where she freaks about her art and rushes to her studio. That will come sometime this coming week. For now, she is sweet as a freshly baked apple pie; we love one another a lot.  Nearly dying can do that for a relationship, I suspect. But I really wouldn’t know; I’ve never nearly died before that I know of.

I don’t recall going anywhere or seeing anything during my blackout. Perhaps something will come back to me.

I think my brain is a little miffed at me, though. Perhaps an apology is in order.

I fall asleep at odd times and throughout the day.

Before writing this, I slept for four hours. It took me ten minutes to stand up. I’ve got one of those pain patches on my back, but my rebellious brain (perhaps it is still also annoyed that I fell on him), is not impressed.

I also had visits from four cardiologists in the hospital, each with a different idea about what happened to me. My cardiologist checked in this morning on the phone and explained that the problem was a new medication that rejected some of the carbs I was eating.

Finally, we knew. And she wasn’t even there to make me wiggle my toes.

I’m brighter than in the 4th grade, but not by that much. I know this is a severe injury, and I take it seriously. The odd thing is that when I sit down to write, my brain is very much his old self, my fingers rushing, the words coming faster than I can write them, or my Dyslexic self can progress them. In this chair, writing, I feel no pain or confusion, I’m 25 years old.

It’s as if a Dybuk was awakened by the fall and stepped up and into my brain to handle my writing. Sorry, it is not impaired in any way beyond what it sometimes is naturally.

I’m suddenly exhausted, though, as in right now and the Dybuk is ordering me to get back in my chair and try to watch a mystery with Maria without falling asleep. So far, in the past few days, that hasn’t happened. Good night, thanks for listening, and I wish you a meaningful Labor Day.

I’ll be here in the morning, I promise. At least three people I know have asked Jesus to care for me. I am grateful for that. I trust him to do the right thing.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bedlam Farm