You can walk into any independent bookstore and ask them to order my book, THE WEIGHT OF CLOTH, but I’m nevertheless approaching a few shops with gift copies and correspondence. I couldn’t make the local author spiel with Boulder Bookstore, but I did write this:
Born and (mostly) raised in Massachusetts, I have decades-long ties to Boulder. Currently, my younger son is attending CU. He’s lived in and around Boulder for over 10 years. My father-in-law attended CU on the G.I. bill and his sister got a degree from CU as well. My brother-in-law earned his PhD there and it was during his tenure that I began visiting Boulder Bookstore in the late 80’s with my husband. It’s a must-stop when we’re in town and one of my favorite bookstores, period.
If you haven’t see this photo from my local bookstore yet, then all three of you take note. These are two Newtonville Books employees revealing their top picks for 2024.
Last week, we visited Boulder Bookstore twice. The first time I asked for the name of the person in charge of adult acquisitions and before leaving I couldn’t help but notice a big empty space next to the new Elizabeth Strout novel.
I must’ve eaten my Wheaties the morning I wrote an email to the person in charge of adult acquisitions, because I included the split screen below, saying Just kidding. But not really.
On the second visit, I dropped off a copy of the book with a Promo Sheet. It was nice how much my son D wanted to be a part of this. As it turned out the guy in charge was on vacation, but I talked to a co-worker and watched as he put the book on the right desk.
Boulder is well-known for its pedestrian mall on Pearl Street. On our last visit, it was close to the time of lockdown. They’d extended the traffic-free area by several blocks and all the restaurants offered outdoor seating.
A much different scene this time. For the days on either side of New Year’s Eve, it was pretty deserted. But before we left, people returned and it got a little livelier.
We were very sorry, though, to see that the Artists Cooperative had disappeared.
Ken sits in the warm light of a floor lamp, reading. That’s my husband. Hair mussed. Intent. He brought slippers. I brought flip-flops.
The Airbnb checks the important boxes. Welcome snacks and coffee. A bouquet of red carnations. Extra towels. A drawer full of spices. Reading lights at every seat. Power strips, galore! Did I mention a drawer full of spices? Olive oil.
We wandered around CU campus one day. There are so many new buildings, I struggled to partner what I was seeing with memory.
As for geology, the Flatirons are one of Boulder’s most distinctive features. How they show up between buildings in the near distance, disappear, and then show up again is both surprising and wonderful. They’re an imposing reminder that we are, in fact, at the foothills of the Rockies.
There’s one of them below — woman in long white parka for scale.
Boulder is a dog town. Climbing the path at Chautauqua, were we the only ones without a one? Close. The climb was moderate but I was huffing and puffing. “It’s the altitude,” I asserted.
Ken scoffed, but I turned and waved at the view below us. “It’s at least 400 additional feet.”
The afternoon light at Chautauqua offered visual glory: slabs of shadow, illegible foregrounds, clouds trying to tell us something. I took a lot of pictures.
“I could die here and I wouldn’t mind.“
Husband: “Well, I’d mind. I’d have to carry you down.“
Dinner at The Boulderado. It’s an old place, a hotel. In all our years of visiting Boulder, we’d never set foot inside. From the Airbnb, it’s a 10 minute walk and in the crisp air of late December it feels good. I forgot my gloves.
I also forgot my Daily Pages, so I’m writing in an errand/reminder notebook — in between independent bookstore addresses, random passwords, instructions on how to sign in to cure ballots in Nevada. Sigh. I’m not over it. I’ll never be over it.
December 31 — breakfast at Foolish Craig’s. I ask our cute Gen Z waiter, “How are the grits here?”
“Well, my mother’s from Mississippi, so let’s just say they’re good-for-Colorado grits.”
But it turns out they’re awful with a gross tapioca-like consistency.
I’m honest with him. “I’ve been to Mississippi, Alabama, and South Carolina, and these are something, but they’re not grits.”
So now you know, I’m a grits snob. Honestly, the grits I make at home are better. A lot better.
Lest you think me unpleasant, I refused a swap out for home fries and said the delicious sandwich was gonna be enough (and it was — sausage and egg on brioche with pickled red onions — wow).
When asked what we were doing for New Year’s Eve, I tell him, “Snacks and Beyonce Bowl.”
“Nice!”
I feel seen. Partly because Ken has no idea what Beyonce Bowl is.
I’m wandering a little befuddled at times. I almost don’t recognize Boulder. Is it because we’re staying north of Pearl on 18th St. instead of on Arapahoe somewhere? Or maybe sleep deprivation is getting to me.
Or maybe it’s the overlay of an imagined city. For a couple of years, I wrote many fictional scenes set here. Contemporary scenes, set during lockdown. There’s a band of wild women who appear and disappear, all wearing orange linen tunics. They show up in the fields near Chautauqua or over by the library, and they dance. Wild ecstatic dancing. And then they melt back into the landscape. Nobody knows where they go. Nobody knows who they are, even. Maybe if we tool over to Boulder Creek and campus, the imaginal map and the real one will overlap? (Yes, they did — to my great relief).
Notes written on New Year’s Day 2025: Who goes there? What ghost? What friendly ancestor or malignant spy from the future? We have our work cut out for us. Number one, learn to run alongside the apathy and despair. Number two, stop telling yourself nothing you do matters. Number three, self-care. Number four, write.
For for instance, write about the Irish psychology of sabotage.
(Wait. Haven’t I already?)
I enter the New Year with some of the usual questions. What do we share online and why (like this endless post)? Do we spill? How much is revelation and how much curation? I’ve often thought over the years that absent social media I’d be more productive or maybe even, happier. More contained, certainly.
Hard to say. I value the visual record. I love my online friends.
Speaking of online friends, this is directed to you. Last night, I dreamt that Jude was highlighting Saskia. She’d figured out how to animate Saskia’s extraordinary inked creatures. I was amazed. “Saskia will be famous now,” I think and also feel a little jealous.
Note: Saskia tells me she has animated her work. So maybe in the dream, that’s what Jude is sharing? In any case, here’s the link:
Exhausting. That’s how it felt to travel during the ongoing pandemic. Oh sure, there was the altitude. There was blinding light without hat or sunglasses. One evening, there was waiting (and waiting) for friends from Denver to arrive in Boulder. But mostly we were stressed by how much time we spent around loads of PEOPLE.
I wonder how other introverts are finding societythese days? Remember: Introverts are people who find being around other people draining. Ever since hearing that definition some years back, I’ve viewed my generalized reluctance to socialize through a more forgiving lens.
How has a sustained period of COVID isolation impacted the innate tendency to renew the self through long periods of being alone?
Luckily, we got out and about: hiking behind NCAR, hiking in two parks in Longmont, a day in Nederland, followed by time on Boulder Creek. And it was so, so nice to spend time with our younger son.
Rental car wipers not great!
The yard surrounding our Airbnb was cluttered. There was no view. The place couldn’t, therefore, provide the renewing rest that a place situated in beauty can.
Nevertheless, and here’s where the contrast between appearances and experience gets highlighted, it was one of the friendliest, best provisioned, and most comfortable Airbnb’s we’ve ever stayed in. Peet’s coffee! Shampoo! Couches comfortable to sit on! Circulating air and an ice maker! These are not little things, trust me.
The trip ended with the longest line for security that I have ever seen. It took TWENTY MINUTES of walking to reach its end (and that was with three large serpentine sections). I could not believe it. No one could. K, who was TSA pre-check, after a long interval texted me, “Have you been arrested?” Ha ha.
Isn’t it nice to arrive home after being away? Picking up a wildly happy Finn was simply the best!
PS. Sorry to have dropped the ball on so many comments to last two posts. I went back this morning to maybe pick up the threads but it just seemed so long ago. Please forgive!
Watching Deadline Whitehouse, making chicken stock and dinner — I must be home. The sky is leaden, rain imminent — I must be home.
Trip to see younger son in Colorado was a little disorienting because we had no room to furnish or apartment to find or supplies to buy. Didn’t drop several hundred dollars at Target, so we went out to eat instead!
Best meal in Denver was not either of the three-dollar-sign dinners, but rather a reasonably priced lunch at Rotary Eats, one of the stalls in a place called Avanti. Avanti : like a food court, only good!
Exterior of Avanti, above, and interior, below.
My selections were roasted chicken thighs, roasted cauliflower with tahini sauce and golden raisins, and the best homemade potato chips I’ve ever had.
Our first special dinner was at The Black Cat in Boulder. The place gets great reviews and takes seriously the farm to table model of dining, but I didn’t like all the pickled vegetables or the flavor of the sauce served with my artisanal pork, so I was a little disappointed. I’m prepared to admit that the fault lay with my palette and not the food preparation. Salad was outstanding — greens picked that morning! — as was the service.
Brunch at “duo” in Denver proved disappointing, too, probably because I’ve had southern biscuits and the biscuits in my breakfast were grainy and muffin-like. K loved his meal, shown next to mine below.
(Biscuits and gravy with two eggs).
Sharing the meal with Denver friends we see about once a year, Marc and Kim, was great though. Marc and I went to law school together.
The other restaurant in the “duo” is located in Vermont.
We had another special dinner in Denver at a place called Vesta. I had braised lamb shank on a hot pepper infused polenta. Delicious! The meat fell off the bone, as it should! Those yellow chips are deep fried garlic slivers — insanely good.
The place is known for its sauces, so we started with a selection. The most popular was the hot pepper, horseradish a strong second.
I’ll leave you with “crack bacon.” I misread the menu at the breakfast joint “Syrup” and thought the dish was “cracked bacon” (as in crispy). Oh no. The strips were sautéed in brown sugar. Caramelized. They meant “crack” as in instantly addictive!
The phone is ringing and it’s not my sister. If you’re tired of her and my relationship, consider this post done!
My sister got very anxious whenever I left town — amped up worry informed mostly by abandonment issues and imagined travel mishaps. She never could keep straight the dates, so for weeks ahead of time, I would have to keep reiterating the plan. It got annoying. It didn’t help to write it on her calendar because usually her calendars went missing.
My sister magnanimously deemed my time away as vacation from her, partly because she knew I needed a little separation and partly because she kept forgetting about cell phones. Even so, to her utter amazement and gratitude, I’d generally check in at least once while away.
Obviously, this trip there was none of that. And no quick call immediately upon arrival home to quell her anxious misery. I missed that a little because her intense relief at my being back was a form of welcome.
On the other hand, there’s the relief: no need to scramble and rush up to the North Shore for a visit during the very same days when I need to settle back into being home. The car engine smelled like burning rubber or oil today while out for groceries. Instead of irritation I felt only gratitude — it wasn’t happening en route to Salem! I wasn’t gonna have to juggle car repair and a trip to Salem! I was headed home, where I would stay for the rest of the day!
It’s been two months and a week since she died — a fact I find amazing.