In front of a banana tree on S. Cortez Street in New Orleans |
When
I tell locals that I'm leaving for my home in California, aside from those who
are terribly envious, most think I am escaping the heat and hurricane season. It's
been a wondrously warm and I've made a point of getting out and sweating. The
heaviness in the air means I don't sneeze or have any problems with allergies.
I had assumed that allergies would follow me everywhere for the rest of my
life. At UC Berkeley, I had a professor who called me weepy because my eyes and
nose were always red and even when I was joyous, the corners of my eyes would
cry. La llorona and I had nothing to cry about. I like to think I'm a lot
tougher here in New Orleans where the only thing I have to weep about is the
wimpy hot sauce (sorry Crystal and Tabasco). Mosquitoes love me and I try not
to let them see me cry, sweat or bleed. My theory is that mosquitoes hide in my
hair, enter the house, wait until I am fast asleep, and then bite me all night
long. That was two weeks ago, before I discovered that I could sleep with
citronella lotion on.
Last
week, I was a local celebrity with my picture in the Times-Picayune. Ana
Gershanik wrote about the reading I had with Nancy Harris at Octavia Books in
her Nuestro Pueblo Column.
Gershanik's column features Latinos and Latino events in Nueva Orleans. We No Longer Carry Poetry Books,"
Octavia is one of the few bookstores that values poetry and always carries
copies of my books.
Octavia Books |
A
few days later, I had the pleasure of seeing Sylvia Santamaria's sculpture, "El Buitre," in
the Ogden Museum. Santamaria is an up and coming artist, watch for a future
interview with her on La Bloga.
With El Buitre at the Ogden Museum |
Last Thursday, Little Freddie King played at the Ogden Museum. |
However,
the biggest news in New Orleans, from two days ago, comes from the New YorkTimes by Campbell Robertson. Robertson reports that Orleans Parish will no
longer honor the Feds or any request by ICE to detain suspected undocumented
workers.
New Orleans is the first city in the deep South to defy requests by the Feds.
Until next time, New Orleans. Hasta
la vista. I'm sure when I return, the weather will still be warmer than Santa
Barbara (and maybe those pesky mosquitoes will be all gone).
Upcoming events in California include:
August 23-25 California Poets in Schools' Poetry Writing
& Teaching Symposium with honoree Juan Felipe Herrera at La Casa de Maria
in Santa Barbara. To Register for the CPITS 2013 Symposium:
September:
September 8, Bluebird Reading
Series. I'm very excited to join this reading series, Sunday, September 8 at
2pm, I will join Cara Van Le and the Blue Bird readers at Avenue 50 Studios,
Highland Park, CA. Open mike to follow.
September 14, over at Granada
Books, the new bookstore in Santa Barbara, downtown, on State Street, I have
the pleasure of being the featured reader at the Poetry Zone, 4pm. Open mike to
follow.
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