Sunday in Paradise

The same storm that burst into the baggage car in front of me on the Amtrak Southern Chieftain and soaked half of my stuff (add your own version of gnashing and wailing here) washed the sky clean in the city of Angels and reminded me and everyone else who lives here why people moved here in the first place. On the train, the morning dawned wet and cloud-masked. But like the smoke of Mordor it all shortly blew away, leaving behind billowy puffs of cotton on a field of damask blue, and a confectioner’s dusting of snow on the deep green mountaintops. The wintry trees of Arizona were gone, replaced by an endless variety of greenery, from palms to plane trees to madrone and coast live oaks. The charming harlot that is the goddess Califia, dressed in her sunday best, is and endless feast for the senses.
One last jot of railroad coffee (not the best but way above average) and I was off to baggage, where the soggy clothing and books were discovered. I filed a claim while Robin waited patiently, and we sailed off on the Sunday-empty streets and out Hwy. 101 to Thousand Oaks.
After assessing the state of the luggage, the good news is, nothing in the clothing line appears to be hurt, and the books that were damaged didn’t include any textbooks, thank heavens. However, among the small casualties, there may have been one large one — my digital recorder was surrounded by wet stuff for an extended period and while it wasn’t actually submerged, it took on a good deal of damp. It’s still on the balcony in the sun, and I’m typing with my fingers crossed.
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Winter’s Bone on Wikipedia

If you haven’t taken a look at what Wikipedia has to say about Winter’s Bone you might think about it. It contains a comprehensive listing of awards that Winter’s Bone has taken. Scroll down a bit to get to it.

What the critics are saying, “Winter’s Bone received widespread critical acclaim. Review aggregate Rotten Tomatoes reports that 95% of critics have given the film a positive review based on 148 reviews, for an average score of 8.3/10.[3] Among Rotten Tomatoes’ “Top Critics”, which consists of notable critics from the top newspapers and websites,[4] the film also holds an overall approval rating of 94%, based on a sample of 31 reviews.[5] The site’s consensus is that “Bleak, haunting, and yet still somehow hopeful, Winter’s Bone is writer-director Debra Granik’s best work yet—and it boasts an incredible, starmaking performance from Jennifer Lawrence.”[5] Metacritic, which assigns aweighted average score out of 1–100 reviews from film critics, reports a rating score of 90 based on 35 reviews, with the film in the “universal acclaim” category.[6]Reviewer Peter Travers found the film “unforgettable”, stating “Granik handles this volatile, borderline horrific material with unblinking ferocity and feeling” and “In Lawrence, Granik has found just the right young actress to inhabit Ree. Her performance is more than acting, it’s a gathering storm.”[7] Web based critic James Berardinelli said that “Winter’s Bone is a welcome reminder that thrillers don’t have to be loud and boisterous to grab the attention and keep it captive.”[8] David Edelstein stated “For all the horror, it’s the drive toward life, not the decay, that lingers in the mind. As a modern heroine, Ree Dolly has no peer, and Winter’s Bone is the year’s most stirring film.”[9] New Yorker critic David Denby called Winter’s Bone “one of the great feminist works in film.” [10]

View the entire article at Wikipedia.

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Later on Saturday

Saturday again, this time going through the mountains of New Mexico from god-knows-where to god knows where else. I expect god is pretty proud of this particular canyon, with its multi-colored bluffs and its spare bushy flats. The cedars are back to join the pines, shorter again as we range this high pass where few live and all dwellings look embattled. But who wouldn’t live here if they could stay warm and out of the wind. As a matter of fact, we just passed two women out walking three large dogs, and they stopped to wave at us as we sauntered by. Well, I know we’re not actually sauntering, but the train is.  Just discovered the where-else, but waiting for the sign so I’ll know how to spell it. Ah a small sprawl of a town that thought to lay a brick sidewalk next to the tracks. As we pause to take on a traveler, my first tumbleweed sighting occurs. It’s headed east, down the center of the tracks. The town is Lamy. Never heard of it.
I have to take a moment here to extend apologies to the dining car staff. Service at lunch was only bested by the fare served. Generous salad with blue cheese, walnuts, apples and chicken strips, followed by an excellent tiramisu and coffee. Applause.
Underway again through the rock walls of another range, slim, willow-looking scrubs make an elegant counter to the ubiquitous pale gold of what must be sagebrush. The layered rock of southern Colorado has given way to roughly carved and fractured basalt. The southern detour to cross the Rockies at Raton is past. We continue relentlessly west into the long afternoon.
Numex more.
In the high desert now, and everything struggles, the land, the vegetation, the people. More houses now made of adobe, more little sections of incredibly scrubby land fenced off. And more of strange beehive structures, about head high, that I think must be bread ovens, in the back yards. Or else something I can’t imagine. If you can, then help me out.
Then suddenly, another sparse settlement, this one with a soccer field, the bright green of artificial turf. Too bright the green, too sharp the edges, to be anything else. Somewhere outside Albuquerque we pause for another red signal as the wind hoists a dust plume all on its own from the red dirt of the nearby roadside. And another. Another tumbleweed passes on the next track, chased shortly by a fast commuter train going somewhere east. It’s an engine and five cars.
Now I’m noticing another odd thing. Peculiarly large square chimneys on all the houses. And then one appears with a side missing and I see the blocks of wood excelsior inside. It’s not a chimney, but a swamp cooler, drip-fed by a hose and with a fan inside sucking cooled and humidified air down into the room. Great inventions, these, in dry place. In the Ozarks we have plenty of humidity already.
We get an hour’s rest at Albuquerque while the train is serviced and they trade our quiet conductor for one who says “Ladies and Gentlemen” too much, often several times within a sentence. He reminds me of Goldie Henley, bless her soul, who would get so caught up in the fervency of prayer that Jesus outnumbered all the other words put together.
I wondered if the wind at Albuquerque, rumored to be clocking at 30 mph, might blow up some weather, and it has. We’re headed northwest, toward Gallup, and the gathering clouds look serious, although they promise a splendid sunset. The terrain here is dry again and looks terribly overgrazed. Nothing growing much even beside the tracks.
Nothing much happening here, either. But it’s accompanied by a wonderful steak, mashed potatoes and green beans for supper. More tomorrow.
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A blurb taken from an Etsy Seller

On Etsy, where Marideth has a small store selling copies of her hand bound book These Ozark Hills, a person can create what is called a treasury. This treasury is inspired by Winter’s Bone and was created by heidiburton of Etsy.

Heidi says, “Inspired by the film Winter’s Bone (best picture & best screenplay at Sundance). Delighted to find Marideth Sisco, the wonderful singer in the film is an Etsy seller!”

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Saturday on the Train

A strange passage, this. Boarded in KC last night @ 10:45 p. I had intended to stay up a while and watch Kansas roll by in the moonlight. But my bed was already made and proved too tempting once I’d settled in. The result — I almost missed Kansas entirely. Awoke shortly after 6 a.m. as we pulled into Garden City with the dawn a mere hint on the eastern horizon. Stumbled to the dining care as they were just revving up for business and had the chef’s surprise (when will I ever learn?). Twas an egg mixture and too much cheese on sorta sourdough bread. It was edible, the sausage was likewise (and Oh, Wow, I have to digress because we’re going through a tunnel. A long one, judging from the amount of diesel fumes leaking ba … ok, now we’re back) Just passed a sign telling us it’s the Raton tunnel, highest point on the Santa Fe railway. Too cool.
Anyway, I could have made the breakfast story shorter by saying I apparently had a McTrain.
Now descending the western slope and the vegetation, obvious even in winter, has changed dramatically. Cedars have given way to pines and the dry, tufted shrubs of the eastern slope have languished in favor of small trees whose leaves, now a reddish gold, are still attached. The land, even up so high, looks more fertile, but dry, very dry. Some snow in shady spots. The pines grow larger as we descend.
Oh, the snow on distant peaks. I’m in the west. Next stop, Raton, New Mexico. And it’s not even noon, except in New York.
More Saturday.
It’s extraordinary the effect of elevation, even a little, on the vegetation. The pines grow taller, and little coves and breaks in the monolithic mountains are crowded with aspen. It’s like the guy talking about the magical nature of the Thermos bottle, able to keep hot things hot and cold things cold. “But how does it KNOW,” he marveled. More deciduous trees now, all unidentifiable. I’d be telling this in pictures, but the train windows are fogged with dirt. Perhaps I’ll have better luck on the return trip. Even with the haze, it’s beautiful. I never realized how much I missed these mountains, and the rugged, primitive architecture of these old Mountain towns until I returned.
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Off to California

I’m meeting myself coming and going, trying to get ready for the trip to the coast. And I must correct a small miscommunication. As of now, I DO  NOT have a ticket to the Oscars. I have an invitation to join the crew out there as they get ready for the show, and schmooze around some at the various doings, of which I know almost nothing. I’ve never done this before, you see. Anyway, a ticket to the actual red carpet event may materialize, but so far there’s no word of it. I don’t care. I’m taking the train to L.A., hanging out with old friends, joining the crew for a bit, celebrating the continuing good fortune of this little indy flick, and taking the train home. On the way there and back I plan to read, work at the computer and look at America going by. I may break into a Paul Simon song at odd moments. And I’ll be writing to you along the way.

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Coffee Break

Hey, all. Sorry to be so long away. Busy, busy, busy, with schoolwork, travel plans, music biz stuff, about which I know virtually nothing that’s not obsolete in this computer age. I hate that. So I’m grabbing a short break today to holler howdy before getting back on my head. I’d have written yesterday, but I went around all day with my lower lip out, because I managed to run off any potential valentine with my surly attitude and impossible schedule. I hardly have time to be nice to myself, and not fit company for innybuddy.

Ok, so much for the poor me’s. I don’t have time for them, either. I just wanted to duck in and say again how proud I am of this movie and its success, and how proud I am to have been a part of it and the music it generated. And grateful beyond words for your continuing attention and support. I’ll be back more frequently for a while, with reports on travels, and soon, an announcement of the songs that will appear on the new album, due out in late spring. Don’t touch that dial.

Ok, catch you later. I’m going back in my head.

Oh, almost forgot. There’s a tour being generated for this wicked band of senior citizen musicians from the movie, now called Blackberry Winter. I’ll keep you posted as details come up. All I know right now is that when the agent first brought up a four week tour of both coasts, we all had to address cardiac symptoms. So, having realized who he was dealing with (can you say OLD folks?) he relented, and now is looking at two weeks on, two off, and another two on the road. Soon, I’ll be able to say, coming soon to a city near you. Stay tuned.

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