PIA Z. EHRHARDT                
         

 

         
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May 12, 2006

Roy Kesey Storms America!

Both coasts. This Sunday the 14th at 7 p.m. he'll be reading at KGB Bar in NYC with Peter Carey! and Wesley Stace (aka John Wesley Harding).

In 1998, I stumbled on a life-changing website made possible by Francis Ford Coppola. Roy was there, along with a hundred other writers who've become my daily friends via the web, and, when I'm lucky, also in 3D. On Monday night - the 15th - a group of us dear friends and Zoetrope writers will be reading with Roy at The Back Room. Opium Magazine is sponsoring the event.

Reading (in order of miles traveled): Roy Kesey (Beijing), Kevin Dolgin (Paris), Darlin Neal (Oakland), Pasha Malla (Toronto), Jeff Landon (Virginia), Claudia Smith (Austin), Me (New Orleans), Kim Chinquee (Michigan), Gail Siegel (Chicago), Grant Bailie (Cleveland), Jim Nichols (Maine), Susan Henderson (Long Island), Lindsay Brandon Hunter (NYC), and our darling host, Todd Zuniga (NYC). Our stories need to come in at 3 minutes, so buckle your seatbelts.

Then, Roy travels to the West Coast for readings in:
Los Angeles at Skylight Books, (where he'll read with Zoetrope friend, Jim Ruland)
San Diego at Voz Alta Project with Vermin On The Mount
Pacific Palisades (again with Jim Ruland at Village Books)
and San Francisco (Valencia Street Books).
He'll finish strong at Mendocino Book Company in Ukiah, his hometown.
 

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May 10, 2006

Alphabetically.




Oh, happy day! MacAdam/Cage will publish my short story collection - FAMOUS FATHERS - in Spring 2007, and my novel - SPEEDING IN THE DRIVEWAY - in Spring 2008.

Since I was eight or nine years old, I've kept kept company with other writers in libraries and bookstores. I dreamed that one day the books I needed to write would be on the shelf, wedged in with the Ys and the Zs, and, finally, I soon will have two books. In the nick of time. Between the Ds and Fs. Thank you for reading my work - please don't stop, and to PJ Mark - please don't stop.


This is a section from my novel that's about me finding comfort in the arms of books.

"In my grandmother's cellar there were boxes of books that had belonged to my father and my aunt. I was already a non-stop reader and this was like hitting the jackpot. I counted over 100 titles. Treasure Island, Thumbelina, A Boy's Salute to the Presidents, the burgundy-bound series - Cherry Ames Student Nurse, early editions of Nancy Drew before the covers were illustrated with the caper at hand. I found some old shelves, and cleared them so I could make a library. The heavy jars of tomatoes were moved to the floor, the tin cans of olives and button mushrooms stacked beside the washing machine.

The books needed to be ordered alphabetically, so I ran upstairs to see if my grandmother had index cards. She didn't, so I cut sheets of paper into 4 x 6 and made my own Dewey Decimal System. This way, visitors could find what they wanted to read. I made pink library cards for my sister and aunt, and one for myself. I begged them to come to my library and check out books so I could handle the transaction, so my library had readers. They played along with me for a week or two, but forgot to bring the books back and I'd have to go through the house and return them myself. They both ran up fines. Aunt Carmel read all the romance novels, and Bay lost her picture books under the couch or left them outside in the rain. She'd rather color at the kitchen table. Bay still doesn't like to read.

Nonna told the ladies in the beauty parlor about my project, and they clucked and cooed and called me "precocious." I looked the word up but it didn't describe me. I missed my parents, and what was the word for that?

That summer I would read everything twice. I read what my father and aunt had enjoyed as children. I treated the books carefully and didn't dog ear pages. I re-alphabetized them by title instead of author, dropping the The but not the A if a title began with an article, but this messed up the lovely ribbon of color made by the books-in-a-series. I went back to the Dewey. I hunted in the cellar for more boxes to make my library bigger. There weren't any more books to organize, but I began to understand that I could make a house by filling empty shelves because books, once you read them, never left you.

Bay and I slept in the sewing room on a pullout sofa, and I kept my arm around her like I'd seen my father do with my mother when I walked into their room late at night to see if they were still there."
 

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May 09, 2006

Back-To-Back State Championships



 

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May 03, 2006

Soccer redux.

My son's team made it through the preliminaries in Lafayette last weekend because they beat Shreveport 5-0 and then lost to Lafayette 0-2, and the tournament is based on points, and many teams had head-to-head games.

They played well against Shreveport, not-so-well against Lafayette. And toward the end of the game, one of the Lafayette players who must've been trash talking with Andrew said, "At least I have a house," which stopped everyone on our team who heard it in their tracks. Including Malcolm who went charging down the sideline to let the ref know what'd been said.

Andrew walked over to the Lafayette parents and pointed to the Lakeview name stitched on his jersey and said, "Do you know what this name means? We only have 3 kids on our team who didn't lose their homes. They had eight feet of water." Pretty strong. Then he said, "We live in trailers now, like you." Not good. Then, one of our players supposedly spit at the kid who'd made the house comment and he got a red card. The ref took the comment-kid out of the game but didn't give him a red card. That kid came over to Lakeview's bench at the end of the game to apologize, but the hurt is done. I think that embedded in his hateful comment is what many people feel about New Orleans and St. Bernard parish and the aftermath, which is not much, anymore, which is we're tired of hearing about your trouble, which is, it didn't happen to us.

Andrew's team is the defending state champion, but they've only won a few games this season. Our kids are easy to piss off, mouthy, ready to fight; some don't want to work at practice, or go to practice. The team is coached by a dedicated, young Danish coach who emigrated to the US to play in college, and he doesn't know what to do about the ready-anger, and what seems like a lack of respect for the game. (He lost his house, too.) All season they've been playing with 12-13 players, so he can't use the bench as leverage. I think I, dumbly, thought this would be a "Ru-dee! Ru-dee!" kind of season, with the flooded-out kids walking out of the water, heads high, kicking ass on the field to keep their title. But so far, it's not been like that. We'll see what happens this weekend when Lakeview goes to state cup.
 

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