My cactus
My cactus
A reunion is a coming together, a reuniting of like minds that have shared like experiences. At the core of REUNION (2003, Pantheon Books) by Memphis’s own Alan Lightman, however, is detachment. In the opening scene, Charles, a small-college professor, is lying post-coitus with a woman and wishing he was someplace else. “I fly above mountains, dizzy, frightened,” Lightman writes. Charles is there, but he isn’t, in this house that once belonged to an ex-wife who left it to him. It is his, but it isn’t. On televsion, Charles and Sheila watch news footage of a devastating Honduran earthquake and, even as Sheila says she will donate money and urges him to, as well, he has trouble mustering sympathy for something so far away. “The truth is, I feel no connection to the faces on the screen. The Hondurans are just so many electronic pixels.”
Yesterday’s treasure on today’s turntable.
Mid-day bicycle break. Shelby Farms Park. Memphis.
My roses
Cooper-Young. Memphis.
(via newyorker)
Backyard
In my yard.
Boats. Memphis.
Spring
“We Sail from Memphis”
Oxford American, spring 2013
Rainy day music
Michelada