Dave Schaafsma's Blog
November 10, 2024
Post Election 2024 and Patti Smith
Self-care comes in many ways, and you generally learn, as you get older, or most of us do, how to psychically survive. Grief is part of life, and it's hard, but part of life, and you go through it. Reading and writing are for many of us a kind of balm, but maybe also forms of inspiration, a way to sort of right the ship in a storm. Important work, and not just escape. And we are in a storm now in the US, post-election; or maybe it is more accurate to think of it in terms of the new normal hurricane season, with the dangerous winds are just beginning to blow.
And blow they indeed will. In my lowest moments I fear the big bad wolf will blow all of the houses down. The aftermath of the 2016 election was a kind of chaos we had not heretofore seen, but it was for a time seen as a fluke. Surely this madness will be regretted! But this recent election--a landslide?!--is a deliberate embrace of chaos, and we now expect a dismantling of the government like we have never seen before. The end of any pretense to acknowledging climate change, the end to the Department of Education (I'm a teacher), the release of all the January 6 "heroes," the disappearance of any and all criminal charges, and the revenge tour.
I know what to do, though; I read, write, listen to music, run/walk, teach my heart out, help prepare a new generation of English teachers, huddle close to family an friends. I join others in coalitions to spread kindness and love in the world especially as greater hate is unleashed. I try to do good. And fight the powers of greed and lies and corruption and hate as I have always done. I do not give up, we do not give up, even if the light appears at times to be going out.
So last night in an effort to "right my ship" in these rocky seas, I went with my super-fan friend Jenn to see Patti Smith at the Chicago Humanities Festival upon the occasion of the release of her new book with photographer Lynn Goldsmith, Before Easter After, a book set up to reflect the present moment.
Okay, it's mostly photographs of Patti over the years by Lynn (the Smiths, Patti said last night), but the foundation of the book is survival, the early Patti, then her disastrous fall--her back and neck damaged, though not broken, not paralyzed--for many years, and recovery, reflected in her Easter work.
As art is supposed to work, I was inspired, somewhat rejuvenated, and came home and read it all through, the book including Patti lyrics, poetry, reflections. I was a folkie, not a punk fan, but I appreciated her poetry and early work on Horses. But I am in a later crowd who has become a huge fan of her memoir work in such books as Just Kids. And this is mainly a fan's book of photographs.
I might have included the captions on the pages rather than in the back pages, but I know, this way you get the full photos, uninterrupted. I get that, I'm a comics guy, preferring wordless stories, and these pics tell a number of stories. I might have asked for more Patti writing, but this is essentially Lynn's book about Patti.
The book opens with a poem written to Patti by Sam Shepherd, and ends with a poem/song Patti and the love of her life Fred Sonic Smith, which opens this way:
Where there were deserts
I saw fountains
and ends
I commit my dream to you.
That the people have the power
To redeem the work of fools
Upon the meek the graces shower
It'sdecreed the people rule.
I know, this all may seem naive at the moment, and may seem almost cruel in the face of the slaughter of the innocents in Ukraine and the middle east, but this experience helped me to reorient myself to the future, to hope, to the important work we must continue to do.
And blow they indeed will. In my lowest moments I fear the big bad wolf will blow all of the houses down. The aftermath of the 2016 election was a kind of chaos we had not heretofore seen, but it was for a time seen as a fluke. Surely this madness will be regretted! But this recent election--a landslide?!--is a deliberate embrace of chaos, and we now expect a dismantling of the government like we have never seen before. The end of any pretense to acknowledging climate change, the end to the Department of Education (I'm a teacher), the release of all the January 6 "heroes," the disappearance of any and all criminal charges, and the revenge tour.
I know what to do, though; I read, write, listen to music, run/walk, teach my heart out, help prepare a new generation of English teachers, huddle close to family an friends. I join others in coalitions to spread kindness and love in the world especially as greater hate is unleashed. I try to do good. And fight the powers of greed and lies and corruption and hate as I have always done. I do not give up, we do not give up, even if the light appears at times to be going out.
So last night in an effort to "right my ship" in these rocky seas, I went with my super-fan friend Jenn to see Patti Smith at the Chicago Humanities Festival upon the occasion of the release of her new book with photographer Lynn Goldsmith, Before Easter After, a book set up to reflect the present moment.
Okay, it's mostly photographs of Patti over the years by Lynn (the Smiths, Patti said last night), but the foundation of the book is survival, the early Patti, then her disastrous fall--her back and neck damaged, though not broken, not paralyzed--for many years, and recovery, reflected in her Easter work.
As art is supposed to work, I was inspired, somewhat rejuvenated, and came home and read it all through, the book including Patti lyrics, poetry, reflections. I was a folkie, not a punk fan, but I appreciated her poetry and early work on Horses. But I am in a later crowd who has become a huge fan of her memoir work in such books as Just Kids. And this is mainly a fan's book of photographs.
I might have included the captions on the pages rather than in the back pages, but I know, this way you get the full photos, uninterrupted. I get that, I'm a comics guy, preferring wordless stories, and these pics tell a number of stories. I might have asked for more Patti writing, but this is essentially Lynn's book about Patti.
The book opens with a poem written to Patti by Sam Shepherd, and ends with a poem/song Patti and the love of her life Fred Sonic Smith, which opens this way:
Where there were deserts
I saw fountains
and ends
I commit my dream to you.
That the people have the power
To redeem the work of fools
Upon the meek the graces shower
It'sdecreed the people rule.
I know, this all may seem naive at the moment, and may seem almost cruel in the face of the slaughter of the innocents in Ukraine and the middle east, but this experience helped me to reorient myself to the future, to hope, to the important work we must continue to do.
Published on November 10, 2024 05:01
September 1, 2024
Detective Fiction, Fall 2024
Dashiell Hammett, The Maltese Falcon (1930)
The Big Sleep, Raymond Chandler (1939)
Films: Maltese Falcon (1941), John Huston (director), Humphrey Bogart, Mary Astor
The Big Sleep (1946), Howard Hawks (director), Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall
4 short stories: Edgar Allen Poe, “”Murders at the Rue Morgue” (1841)
Arthur Conan Doyle, “Silver Blaze” (1892)
Agatha Christie,”Witness for the Prosecution” (1933; play version, 1954)
Georges Simenon, “Inspector Maigret Deduces” (1959 in English)
Chester Himes The Heat’s On (1957)
Walter Mosley, Devil in a Blue Dress (1990)
Sarah Paretsky, Indemnity Only (1982)
Angeline Boulley, The Firekeeper’s Daughter (2021) (YA/ indigenous Sioux)
Henning Mankell Faceless Killers (1991) nordic noir
Comics, Required: Criminal, Volume one, Coward, Ed Brubaker and Sean Phillips (2007)
Also choose one of these:
Batman: Year One, Frank Miller and David Mazzuchelli (best comics tec ever, Detective Comics) (1988)
Stumptown Greg Rucka, Matthew Southwork, bisexual female detective (2011)
Black Magick, Greg Rucka, Nicola Scott, paranormal female detective (2016)
Blacksad, Juan Diaz Canales, anthropomorphic animals, cat as tec (2006)
Richard Stark’s The Hunter, Darwyn Cooke, Parker as criminal, no tec (2009)
The Big Sleep, Raymond Chandler (1939)
Films: Maltese Falcon (1941), John Huston (director), Humphrey Bogart, Mary Astor
The Big Sleep (1946), Howard Hawks (director), Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall
4 short stories: Edgar Allen Poe, “”Murders at the Rue Morgue” (1841)
Arthur Conan Doyle, “Silver Blaze” (1892)
Agatha Christie,”Witness for the Prosecution” (1933; play version, 1954)
Georges Simenon, “Inspector Maigret Deduces” (1959 in English)
Chester Himes The Heat’s On (1957)
Walter Mosley, Devil in a Blue Dress (1990)
Sarah Paretsky, Indemnity Only (1982)
Angeline Boulley, The Firekeeper’s Daughter (2021) (YA/ indigenous Sioux)
Henning Mankell Faceless Killers (1991) nordic noir
Comics, Required: Criminal, Volume one, Coward, Ed Brubaker and Sean Phillips (2007)
Also choose one of these:
Batman: Year One, Frank Miller and David Mazzuchelli (best comics tec ever, Detective Comics) (1988)
Stumptown Greg Rucka, Matthew Southwork, bisexual female detective (2011)
Black Magick, Greg Rucka, Nicola Scott, paranormal female detective (2016)
Blacksad, Juan Diaz Canales, anthropomorphic animals, cat as tec (2006)
Richard Stark’s The Hunter, Darwyn Cooke, Parker as criminal, no tec (2009)
Published on September 01, 2024 15:51
August 3, 2024
CAKE 2024
Published on August 03, 2024 12:47
January 6, 2024
YA class Spring 2024
Book list, fyi:
Whole class books
Cemetery Boys, Aidan Thomas
Dry, Neil Schusterman cli fi, dystopian
Heartstoppers, Volume One, Alice Oseman
We Have Always Lived in the Castle, Shirley Jackson
The Carnival at Bray, Jessie Ann Foley (graduate of the UIC EE program)
The Firekeeper’s Daughter, Angeline Boulley
I’ll Give You the Sun, Jandy Nelson
This One Summer by Mariko and Jillian Tamaki
Growing Up Chicago, David Schaafsma Ed. (pdf, Schaafsma provides)
Theth (pdf, Dave)
Choices: Dystopian
The Lonely Dead, April Henry, paranormal
This is Not a Test, Courtney Summers, ya zombie apocalypse
Orleans, Sherrie Smith, dystopian, cl fi
The Children’s Bible, Lydia Millett, dystopian, cli fi
Graphic novels (choose two)
Taproot, Keezy Young
Laura Dean Keeps Breaking Up with Me, Mariko Tamaki and Rosemary Valero-O’Connell
The Prince and the Dressmaker, Jen Wang
The Princess and the Grilled Cheese Sandwich, Deya Muniz
Fence, Volume 1, C. S. Pacat
Check, Please, Volume 1, Ngozi Ukazu
Pet, Akwaeke Emezi
Choose one:
I Am Not Okay With This, Charles Forsman or The End of the Fucking World by Charles Forsman
Choose one: (Urban/racial violence): The Hate U Give, Angie Thomas or All American Boys, Jason Reynolds and Brendan Kiely; or Neighborhood Girls, Jessie Ann Foley
Whole class books
Cemetery Boys, Aidan Thomas
Dry, Neil Schusterman cli fi, dystopian
Heartstoppers, Volume One, Alice Oseman
We Have Always Lived in the Castle, Shirley Jackson
The Carnival at Bray, Jessie Ann Foley (graduate of the UIC EE program)
The Firekeeper’s Daughter, Angeline Boulley
I’ll Give You the Sun, Jandy Nelson
This One Summer by Mariko and Jillian Tamaki
Growing Up Chicago, David Schaafsma Ed. (pdf, Schaafsma provides)
Theth (pdf, Dave)
Choices: Dystopian
The Lonely Dead, April Henry, paranormal
This is Not a Test, Courtney Summers, ya zombie apocalypse
Orleans, Sherrie Smith, dystopian, cl fi
The Children’s Bible, Lydia Millett, dystopian, cli fi
Graphic novels (choose two)
Taproot, Keezy Young
Laura Dean Keeps Breaking Up with Me, Mariko Tamaki and Rosemary Valero-O’Connell
The Prince and the Dressmaker, Jen Wang
The Princess and the Grilled Cheese Sandwich, Deya Muniz
Fence, Volume 1, C. S. Pacat
Check, Please, Volume 1, Ngozi Ukazu
Pet, Akwaeke Emezi
Choose one:
I Am Not Okay With This, Charles Forsman or The End of the Fucking World by Charles Forsman
Choose one: (Urban/racial violence): The Hate U Give, Angie Thomas or All American Boys, Jason Reynolds and Brendan Kiely; or Neighborhood Girls, Jessie Ann Foley
Published on January 06, 2024 12:53
December 26, 2023
happy holidays!
Happy holidays and peace to all my Goodreads friends!
Published on December 26, 2023 09:52
December 25, 2022
Holidays!
Happy holidays and peace to all my Goodreads friends!
Published on December 25, 2022 07:50
July 23, 2022
Book Cellar
Published on July 23, 2022 10:25
June 28, 2022
Chicago Public Library Event!
The Chicago Public Library has chosen our book, Growing Up Chicago, for their summer series, Chicago Stories, officially announced at a panel now to be on zoom tomorrow night, 6-7 pm. CST, moderated by co-editor Roxanne Pilat and featuring appearances by author-contributors' Jessie Ann Foley, Samira Ahmed and Emil Ferris!
Here's the link to the vent!
https://chipublib.bibliocommons.com/e...
Come one, come all!
Here's the link to the vent!
https://chipublib.bibliocommons.com/e...
Come one, come all!
Published on June 28, 2022 19:35
May 12, 2022
Chicago area Book Launch Events:Growing up Chicago
Saturday, May 14th, 9:30–2:00 p.m. Preview look! Contributor Tony Romano and editors will offer a first-look of Growing Up Chicago at a "Celebration of Italian American Authors" to be held at the Casa Italia cultural center in Stone Park, Illinois. A complimentary light lunch will be served. https://casaitaliachicago.org/
Sunday, May 15th, 4:30 p.m.-5:20 p.m.: Book release! We’ll have a conversation with Rebecca Makkai and Daiva Markelis at the American Writers Festival (sponsored by The American Writers Museum). This will take place in the Millennium Park Room at the Chicago Cultural Center and will be moderated by editor Lauren DeJulio Bell. Here’s the website for more details: https://americanwritersmuseum.org/ame....
25% off deal still good at Northwestern University Press site (and worth it, hey!)
Sunday, May 15th, 4:30 p.m.-5:20 p.m.: Book release! We’ll have a conversation with Rebecca Makkai and Daiva Markelis at the American Writers Festival (sponsored by The American Writers Museum). This will take place in the Millennium Park Room at the Chicago Cultural Center and will be moderated by editor Lauren DeJulio Bell. Here’s the website for more details: https://americanwritersmuseum.org/ame....
25% off deal still good at Northwestern University Press site (and worth it, hey!)
Published on May 12, 2022 12:30
April 14, 2022
Got my copies in the mail!
I got my copies of Growing Up Chicago today! Yay!
Published on April 14, 2022 15:20