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August 31, 2006

Hops Harvest

Last week, the Wall Street Journal ran a story about brewers who make seasonal, limited edition beers using fresh (as opposed to dry) hops. I had great intentions of commenting on the story at the time, but let's face it: Right now "blogging" is not at the top of my to-do list.

Anyway, last Monday the fabulous Jay Brooks, of the equally fabulous Brookston Beer Blog, helped out with the hops harvest for two breweries in his neighborhood (Russian River and Moonlight).

He's posted some fantastic pictures and terrific commentary to go with them.

Check it out at his blog. It's the entry for August 29, 2006.

August 19, 2006

A Stranger To Me Now

The other day, I received a copy of the dust jacket for the beer book. It’s gorgeous! Engaging design; rich, lively colors -- far more exciting than what shows up onscreen at my websites. (Only downside is my photo: I look like I just won the Messiest Hair in the Universe award.)

But even as I admired the jacket and the talent that created it, I experienced what has become common in my life as a writer: That sense of distance and disconnect that comes with each new book. That jacket -- the physical object -- has nothing to do with my creation. Just as the book itself, when it finally arrives, will feel to me like someone I once knew, long, long ago but who I now barely remember.

What I remember about my books is this:

Hours and hours and hours spent sitting at a microfilm reader, or going through decades worth of indexes. Leafing through journals and old magazines. Days spent at archives and libraries, days filled, more often than not with frustration and panic. Plastic filing cubes stuffed with photocopies of documents.

Staring for still more hours and then days stretching into years at a computer monitor. Grabbing pages of text from my printer, filling them with penciled corrections and edits, desciphering those scribbles and arrows and circles as I type the changes into the computer.

That’s how my mind’s eye remembers my book.

Those other pages? The ones printed with a fine font and adorned with a page number, the book’s title across the top of every other page in yet another lovely font, all bound in a tidy package between two hard covers and decorated yet again with that eye-popping dust jacket?

That’s someone else’s work. Nothing to do with me. Lovely to look at; delightful to hold -- but, well, not something I would identify as mine in the Lost and Found.

And so it goes with my books: they leave my hands in one form, then reappear in another. Sure, I remember those thousands of hours spent creating the manuscript. But this finished product, the one I sometimes spot in a bookstore, is a stranger to me. A companion of days long past now vanished from my life and living its own.

August 11, 2006

I got the cynicism blues....

First off, let me say that I am not by nature conspiratorially minded. I'm not one of those people who think birth control pills are a plot by pharmeceutical companies to train young women to a life of pill-popping so that as they age, they'll think nothing of taking diet pills or Prozac.

But I must confess that when I head the news about the airplane-bomb plot thwarted by British intelligence, my very first thought was: "Hmmmmm........now was there really a plot, or did Bush and Blair cook this up as a way to bolster sagging support for the war in Iraq?"

After all, the timing was sure odd, coming as it did on the heels of Joe Lieberman's defeat in the Connecticut primary, a loss that news analysts are blaming on voter unrest over the ongoing war.

See? I sound exactly like a consiracy-loving crackpot. (Although let's face it: Karl Rove likely danced a jig when he heard the news. He surely LOVES the idea of a crackpot leftwinger running for office!)

To make matters worse, I've absolutely become a complete pessimist, and that really bothers me.

As a rule, I'm generally optimistic. I assume that people are good and that things will work out. But right now, between this ungodly mess the Bush administration has created and the horrific war in Israel and Lebanon, and the ongoing misery that is Africa, well, for the past few years my optimism has slowly soured into a morass of pessimism bordering on despair.

And now I'm turning into a certifiable crackpot.

But this sad state only indicates, I think, the extent to which conditions on planet earth have deteriorated since September 11, 2001. I can't think of anything more clearly designed to fuel anti-American hatred and terrorism than the Bush administration policies that are supposedly aimed at ending terrorism!

So once again, I gotta ask: Where will this end? Not well, I fear.

August 02, 2006

I agree, I agree, I agree

I completely agree and won't even bother to add my two cents; he said it all. This from Jay Brooks's blog. The August 2 entry titled "Protecting Minors by Separating Families."

http://www.brookston.org/beer/

Hey, finally I can think of something positive to say about blogs: they provide an easy way for voices of common sense like Jay's to be heard.