Trucks, cars, highways, landscape, good writing. "You cannot travel on the path, before you have become the Path itself."
Wednesday, December 31, 2014
Monday, December 29, 2014
Katherine Northrop: The Field the Drive-In Was in
David Branch photo |
—what are we here? The hive mind
answers hive-ily, their suggestions
make for us, make for us: brzoom, as
high-school boys, cunt-struck.
“Oh we were young, oh we banged around the world,
holding our arms out, hoping for what?”
All the while, something, my love, bore down on the boat, a
power
quick and sickly, cut-throat.
But we happened,
we happened, drawing each other out,
reading newspapers, novels until the marina
swooped back into view.
Across the water, shimmering:
powerful, calming, and regular as credits—
-Katherine Northrop
First published in Agni 80
Sunday, December 28, 2014
Thursday, December 25, 2014
Tuesday, December 23, 2014
1964 Dodge D100, Marfa
Today same temperature in Marfa and Portland Me (37F). Snow in the mountains south of Alpine. Clear blue sky by 5pm, sliver of a crescent moon, waxing. It's actually 15 degrees warmer in Maine tonight, but raining.
Chevrolet C10 and the Pinto Canyon Road, Presidio County
All photos Basha Burwell |
Saturday, December 20, 2014
Lobsterboat 'Charlena" Brooklin Maine, and the warm seas of Maine
We head to TX tomorrow for Christmas, and some desert light. This may be our last post of the year from Maine, and what better than a lobsterboat? Charlena is about 65 years old, and going strong, though retired from the lobster biz. There was an intersting piece in the NYT this week on warming waters and the fisheries in the Gulf of Maine.
Thursday, December 18, 2014
Gulf 1937 (Black and white)
Thanks to Larry Nordell for this. I don't know anything about the photograph. Winter 1937 and somewhere down South. Georgia? Birmingham, Ala.? If you can read more clues, let us know. The careful probably instinctive way the men are posing for the camera... I'd say the black guy is precisely twice as far from the white guy as the two whites are from each other. He's standing at attention, the other two 'at ease'.
Morris Minor 1000 Estate
The car is being rehabilitated at Sean McKay's shop, Affordable Performance, on the Naskeag Rd. Becky Smith sent us one from London last summer. And Craig Manning spotted one amongst the Trabis of Berlin. Then there was the Morris Minor van "straight outta Devonshire" that we spotted in Maine this fall,
Wednesday, December 17, 2014
Larry McNeil: "Real Indians"
Real Indians, negative made in 1977, platinum photograph made in 2014. Photo by Larry McNeil |
No Cupholders: 1961 Oldsmobile Ninety Eight & Supersized America
It's funny how the overabundance of food plays out in contemporary American life. Most obviously in the obesity epidemic. It's dispiriting, to arrive back in the US or Canada from a less voluminous country like The Netherlands, say, or Italy, where the population is relatively slender. Another aspect that I've noticed: people seem to expect food and drink to be provided almost everywhere these days, in every setting involving more than a one-on-one meeting. Parent meetings at school, for example: there is always someone deputized to provide "snacks." Like we can't do without food for an hour. At many business meetings there is the tray of gigantic muffins--often studded with chocolate--- and the box of Starbucks coffee.
Cupholders proliferate in cars, and people are feasting or gobbling on their way to work. It's Food, 24/7. The current cultural mania about cooking and baking and restaurants is part of the larger story of overabundance...
I've noticed that when classic cars and trucks--any vehicle made before the 1980s--are being test-driven in the old car magazines the writers, knowing their audience of super-sized guys, will usually make some reference to the difficulty of fitting in behind the steering wheel. The older the car/truck, the narrower and tighter the fit. Trucks from the 1930s? Fuggedaboudit.
And don't get me started on the bottled-water thing. I see this supposed need to constantly "hydrate" as faux-science perpetrated by corporate giants of the bottled water biz.
Anyway, no ungainly cupholders in this Olds. It was a sleek machine. Though maybe not quite so sleek in real life as in the advertisements. GM art of the era really pancaked the cars.
Tuesday, December 16, 2014
Downtowns (Helena, Montana)
At Autoliterate we yearn for the downtown experience. 'Downtown' these days---does that word have any suggestive zing, other than in NYC, where it implies the varied regions below 14th Street? Hell, Burlington VT used to have a lively mixed-up downtown, most of it along Church Street. Montreal had a hell of a downtown along rue Ste-Catherine. Portland, Maine's downtown was Congress Street. Thousands of towns from Nova Scotia to California once had lively downtowns; most are decrepit now. Partly due to changing technology, partly due to some terrible planning decisions-or more often, lack of planning decisions. We need to reinvigorate these districts somehow. Not just turn them into dubious "arts districts" or tourist zones. Helena Montana had a downtown in the Fifties. Thanks to Larry Nordell for passing along the photo.
Monday, December 15, 2014
1937 Ford one-ton
from Alex Emond: "This rusty sculpture is in a yard in Bracken, Saskatchewan. Very nice...a bit of a fixer-upper. The lines, the shape, the beauty of the rust. One fine pile of junk."--AE