Today: "Remnants still visible" by Marge Piercy | |
Remnants still visible by Marge Piercy Listen Online
Robins migrate, all schoolchildren learn but here on the Cape, every winter a flock forms and stays, long frigid months after their compatriots have flown south. They live deep in the woods on hips and berries wizened by cold. Sometimes they appear here among the feeder birds, one or two almost outcasts. Off Alaska when humpback whales leave in fall as the waters freeze and the world turns white, heading for mating grounds off Hawaii and Mexico, certain whales remain. What makes a creature stay when almost all of its kind have moved on? In burned-out areas of Detroit, you’ll notice one house still wears curtains, a bike locked to the porch. Sometimes in the suburbs among tract houses with carpets of grass one farmhouse lurks, maybe even with a barn. I imagine its owner grey and stubborn, still growing the best tomatoes for miles, refusing to plant inedible grass, fighting neighbors about her chickens, a rooster who crows at four, her clothesline a flag of defiance. "Remnants still visible" by Marge Piercy from Made in Detroit. Knopf, 2015. Reprinted with permission. (buy now) |
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| It's the birthdayof children's novelistAstrid Lindgren(books by this author), born in Vimmerby, Sweden (1907). She grew up on a farm in southern Sweden, playing with her brothers and sisters and listening to her family tell stories. Eventually, she got married, had a daughter, and gave up working at age 24 in order to stay home and take care of her kids. One day, her daughter, Karin, was sick in bed, so Astrid started telling her stories of a spunky, strong, independent girl who mocks adults and manages to get by just fine without a family, caution, education, or the opposite sex. And that girl was Pippi Longstocking, with magical powers, a pet monkey, freckles, and bright red pigtails that stuck out on either side of her head. The book was published asPippi Lngstrump (1945) in Sweden,Pippi Longstockingin English, and it became one of the most beloved children's books of all time. | | It's the birthdayof cartoonist and author andWilliam Steig(books by this author), born in New York City (1907). When he was 23,TheNew Yorkerbought his first cartoon for $40. He collected his cartoons in books such asSmall Fry(1944),Spinky Sulks(1988), andOur Miserable Life(1990). It was only late in his life that he began writing books for children. In 1990, he wroteShrek!, about a green ogre whose name means "fear" in Yiddish and who has nightmares about fields of flowers and happy children who won't stop hugging and kissing him. He eventually meets an ugly princess and they fall instantly in love.Shrek!ends with the line: "And they lived horribly ever after, scaring the socks off all who fell afoul of them." | | It's the birthdayofClaude Monet, born in Paris (1840). He and his friend Auguste Renoir were among the first European painters to take their canvases outside to paint directly from nature. They would often work as quickly as they could, so that their paintings looked like sketches, and that sketchy style became known as Impressionism. Monet spent the rest of his career exploring the idea that you can never really see the same thing twice. In a single day, he would often paint the same subject half a dozen times, from slightly different angles and in slightly different light, spending no more than about an hour on each canvas. In the last 30 years of his life, he painted almost nothing but the water lilies in his garden at Giverny. Monet bought the four-acre property in 1883, built the bridges, dug the lake, and selected all the flowers and plants himself. His gardens are now the property of the French Academy of Fine Arts, which hosts visitors from all over the world. Claude Monet, who said: "I am following Nature without being able to grasp her. I perhaps owe having become a painter to flowers." | | Be well, do good work, and keep in touch.® | | | National broadcasts of The Writer's Almanac are supported by The Poetry Foundation. |
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| Although he has edited several anthologies of his favorite poems, O, What a Luxury: Verses Lyrical, Vulgar, Pathetic & Profound forges a new path for Garrison Keillor, as a poet of light verse. Purchase O, What a Luxury | |
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