Titolo; blogging in Italian
Whew.
Hello.

Things to see in the mountains of Liguria:
1. Goats. Baby goats, which are called kids but that's confusing to write.
2. Stone terraces deep in the middle of chesnut forests. Mossy and tumbling, they are remnants from when every square inch of mountain was sculpted to grow grapes. Very poetic. I want to find a tiny door between the stones which holds a dusty bell jar filled with...i don't know...magical stuff. Gnome hats. Old iron keys...whatever.
3. Arthur Rackham trees. Since it is barely spring there are no leaves on the braches and all the twisted sculptural beauty of the trees is revealed. SWOON!
4. Honest-to-goodness wild violets!
5. Falling apart houses. Also made of stone. Sometimes there are horses and mules hanging out around them. SOmetimes cherry trees in blossom fall dramatically into the former living room, since the roof has tumbled or rotted away.
6. Churches with Skeletons in the eves, a la The Last Unicorn

Books I have read, since getting here on the 27th of March:
1. Fragile Things by Neil Gaiman. His new short story collection. Worth reading for the story "Keepsakes and Treasures" and the American Gods novella at the end.
2. King Rat by China Mieville. Steam punk? Sort of ike Neverwhere? Unfortunatey has a lot to do with jungle music, but still good for this amazing author's first try. He probably wrote it when he was 24 or something.
3. Wild Swans by Chang Jung. Amazing and unputdownable. A true story of three generations of Chinese women spanning from warlord governments right on through early Communism and then through the Cultural Revolution. I missed a lot of sleep with this one.
4. I Loved You for Your Voice by Selim Nassib. An imagined history of the real life of Egyptian singer Om Kalthoum. Beautifuly written and, I think, beautifully translated. The descriptions of her concerts are really amazing, and now I want to hear her. It is also about an unconsumated life-long love affair. Bummer.
5. Stiff by Mary Roach. The funniest most laugh out loud (and I am a pro at laughing out loud while reading) books about dead bodies you will ever read. Filled with interesting and disgusting facts and speculations and history. ALSO: Kai read a non-fiction book! Holy Shit!
6. While I was Gone by Sue Miller. Also engrossing and well written. Sometimes I despise books about aging baby boomers in New England (haha) but this was good. Also embarass your friends in public because it's an Oprah book! Yay!
7.Fugitive Peices by Anne Michaels. This was reccomended by Evelyn, Mykle's wonderful mom. It is sumptuous, sad, beautiful so far. I love the way it is written...poetry that has plot. Awesome.
( A lot of the books I has been reading are about war, and the effect war has on pesonal lives and the civilian population. I feel that this is a good thing to do HERE, especially...the whole of this land has actually passed through wars and has been shaped and changed by so much death in the last century. As we drive through French and Italian villages I can't help but marvel at the buildings that survive that are SO OLD, and wonder about what would be standinga and who would be living there an area were it not for bombs and humanitys' thirst for power)
We leave here on Saturday, and I will be glad to be going home (again). Before this we will see
Niki de Saint Phalle's Tarot Garden outside of Rome and a Medival Medical museum in Florence (we are both very excited). Hopefully I will get to jump in the Meditteranean again like I did yesterday. It made life suddenly clear and soft and beautiful. I mean, life was pretty good already, but cold salt water scrubbed my eyes and skin clean.



2 Comments:
Although I live there, your descriptions and reactions to them moved me tremendously.
Love,
David
On that theme try...
I Am The Clay by Chaim Potok
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