sovay: (Silver: against blue)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2020-07-11 11:47 pm

Take your family name for your own great sins

I have known since April that Readercon would not happen this weekend, but more recently we had made plans with my family and those did not come off either, so what [personal profile] spatch and I actually did this afternoon was wander around for two and a half hours in the simmering heat and buffeting winds out of a clear sky. I forgot to take my camera, so of course we passed yards of roses in alebrije-pink and cream-yellow and day lilies in coral-orange and ribbon-candy-violet and a wide range of clematis, including one neon purple specimen starfishing out of the middle of something like a box hedge. I have seen some weird construction jobs in Somerville, but I am awarding a special prize to the house mid-renovation that had been sheared clean off behind its facade right down to the brickwork of the basements. From the back, it looked like the Blitz or Roman ruins. From the front, it looked ready to fall on Buster Keaton. All the windows were propped up with timbers and full of blue sky. We had to negotiate a couple of bottlenecks of semi-masked fellow-walkers (or even sometimes fully masked, but on narrow paths where maintaining a full six feet would have put one of us in the poison ivy), but we actually managed to walk our traditional loop around the Mystic River, starting from the Blessing of the Bay Boathouse, following Route 16 across the Medford Veterans Memorial Bridge, climbing the wooden observation tower in the silflay field of what turns out to be Torbert Macdonald State Park, and eventually returning via the Fellsway to the concrete thunder sheet of I-93. We spent a lot of time by the water—Rob took a panorama on his phone. The wind smelled tidal and full of waterweed; we saw a mother mallard with seven ducklings wriggling industriously among the sargasso-drifts. We saw terns swinging above the late glitter of the water; one dropped as suddenly as a stone only to catch itself back up into the air again, the coin-scrap of a tiny fish in its bill. Hopping in and out of the trees growing down to the water, hovering against the wind over the accessible planks of the dock, we kept seeing the same kind of small bird, buff-headed, with a crest like a jay's or a cardinal's, a thin black stripe of an eye-mask, a lemon-colored undercarriage and tail-tip, and a blood-bead brightness at the edges of its wings: it turns out to have been the cedar waxwing. The even tinier bird whose shoulders flashed a startling, iridescent blue looks like it was a tree swallow. Instead of following the Mystic Valley Parkway, we stuck as much as possible to the trails within the park, which is how we passed the older woman harvesting pokeweed from the side of the path. "You can cook it," she explained, as if we had looked funny at her over our masks, "it's delicious!" so I called back an agreement on poke salad and wished her a good evening. We ourselves had soup dumplings for dinner and I have done nothing of any practical value since.

I am having a difficult time with my physical embodiment at the moment, but I like this picture Rob took of me.

isis: (squid etching)

[personal profile] isis 2020-07-12 04:59 am (UTC)(link)
A house here was razed the same way. It turns out that if you completely tear down a house to build a new, you must abide by currently setback and height and whatever rules on the new, but if you leave the facade it's a renovation and you can build to the same specs as the old, even if they break the rules.
swan_tower: (Default)

[personal profile] swan_tower 2020-07-22 06:01 pm (UTC)(link)
I am perpetually behind on reading posts, but having just caught this one -- I wonder if you and I saw the same house, because I stayed with friends in Somerville when I was out there last October, and while it's possible there are two households that pulled the same janky trick in quick succession, the odds seem low. The one I saw wasn't far from where Oxford Street runs into Somerville Avenue. And yes, it's an absolutely absurd tactic that (I'm told) they basically pulled as a bait-and-switch on the neighborhood: "We're just going to renovate!" followed by tearing down everything but the facade.
asakiyume: created by the ninja girl (Default)

[personal profile] asakiyume 2020-07-12 11:36 am (UTC)(link)
one dropped as suddenly as a stone only to catch itself back up into the air again, the coin-scrap of a tiny fish in its bill. --that's beautiful; I can see the fish--what a great way of putting it.

And aren't cedar waxwings beautiful. So elegant, like dandy highwaymen with their bandit masks. I like the scallops of yellow on their tails when they fly--a bunch of lace at the tail instead of throat.



Rob's panorama and the photo of you are gorgeous.
selkie: (Default)

[personal profile] selkie 2020-07-12 01:16 pm (UTC)(link)
I understand it is a strange time to take pictures of oneself or have them taken, but aesthetically, no photo of you by tidal water is going to be bad.

Love.
sartorias: (Default)

[personal profile] sartorias 2020-07-12 03:31 pm (UTC)(link)
That's a lovely shot.
nineweaving: (Default)

[personal profile] nineweaving 2020-07-12 07:39 pm (UTC)(link)
I miss you at Readercon so much. Glad you could lean into the wind–you look like a figurehead!

Nine
alexxkay: (Default)

[personal profile] alexxkay 2020-07-12 10:06 pm (UTC)(link)
This afternoon, Kestrell organized a small "virtual Readercon" among some friends. She recommended your story in _Mythic Dreams_.

I like that photo.
cynthia1960: cartoon of me with gray hair wearing glasses (Default)

[personal profile] cynthia1960 2020-07-12 10:48 pm (UTC)(link)
Want to share your appreciation of Fontaines DC. Emma and I got to meet them briefly at the KEXP venue at Iceland Airwaves '18; they were also sitting near us on a flight from Dublin to Reykjavik. Several cute young men with guitars on a plane will draw your eye.
gaudior: (Default)

[personal profile] gaudior 2020-07-13 05:22 pm (UTC)(link)
You always look good next to bodies of water.