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Showing posts with label Alaska. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alaska. Show all posts
Wednesday, March 18, 2020
Has it really been 21 years? It has!
The happy day! Part of me wants to say, "I can't believe it's been 21 years," and at the same time, so much has happened, and both of us have changed so much ... of course it's been 21 years. Memory has ways of juxtaposing images, slapping them together like the pages of a book, or flashbacks in a movie; but if you think about getting here, today, "the long way around," well ... it's been a long and eventful time. They haven't all been good years, but they were seldom dull!
A log cabin church in Fairbanks, Alaska ... a frozen river as our backdrop. A small gathering of Dave's friends and family (I was faaaar from home), some Irish lace, and a lot of red hair that I wish I still possessed, LOL! Even the weather cooperated ... it wasn't actually "cold," as one thinks of cold in Alaska. Snowy, but clear, with "good air." The reception took place at a restaurant right on the river; the outdoor photos here were taken on the deck right outside...
Thanks to Anna Walker for taking the wedding pictures; to Ken and Gerry Downes for making me so welcome, and part of their family; and to Doug, Dave's brother, for coming up to Alaska to be there. As I began ... it was a happy day!
Wednesday, July 13, 2016
Inspiration, Tennyson and memories of Alaska
Inspiration is an odd thing: fluid and viscous, and utterly unpredictable. Killing time, I was leafing through an old edition of Palgrave's (the version of about 1920, alas nothing vaguely like the version available today), and happened on a fragment of verse:
It's Tennyson, and it's ... odd, to say the least. Dark and true and tender is the North. A frisson travels the length of your spine; the hair begins to stand up on the back of your neck. You see visions (at least, I do!) ...
Of course, I'm probably biased ... when I think 'north,' I usually think of Alaska, which is where I met the other half of my family, met and married my husband. And oddly enough, 'bright and fierce and fickle' is a pretty darned good description of Australia, especially in our summer months. Naturally, me being me, when I get story visions, it usually means science fiction or fantasy, or a combination of both. Hmm.
The story-generating gears are creaking right now. Something will come of this, I'm sure! I even found myself looking at images on the Internet, trying to find something embodying what I'm halfway seeing.
If there were a "photo of the day," this would be it:
Which is all very well, but at the same time, each day I try to use this computer (a Dell Inspiron laptop, by the name of Pandora ... gotta give it a name on the home network, and when I got it Avatar was red-hot news), I realize how much it needs some work done to it. Nothing I can do locally; it's a workshop job, for sure. Dang.
So here I am with my mind happily meandering through Alaskan memories -- a good enough excuse to paste in a photo of myself! It's an eons-old shot, scanned in recently and uploaded to the travel blog I've been tinkering with for the last few years.
Most of the posts on the Meander to the Max blog feature road trips around South Australia and just a little bit interstate, but one series of posts is entitled Alaska Memories. The snapshot at left (which Dave took just off the side of the road on the Parks Highway, in ... golly, I think it had to be 1999), is from Four Seasons in One Post.
Good memories -- rich memories, too. People have asked more than once why I don't write something set in Alaska; and the most honest answer is, the Alaska I knew is now almost 20 years old. Things change a lot in two decades. If I were to write something set in Alaska, it would have to be set in an almost historical context --
Which sounds incredibly weird. I recently took part in a discussion regarding how fiction might be categorized. Just where does one draw a line, on one side of which is 'contemporary,' and on the other side is 'historical.' Turns out, many (most?) people these days are calling 1960s fiction historical. Whoo. I was eight or ten years old at the time. Ouch.
...bright and fierce and fickle is the South,
And dark and true and tender is the North.
It's Tennyson, and it's ... odd, to say the least. Dark and true and tender is the North. A frisson travels the length of your spine; the hair begins to stand up on the back of your neck. You see visions (at least, I do!) ...
Of course, I'm probably biased ... when I think 'north,' I usually think of Alaska, which is where I met the other half of my family, met and married my husband. And oddly enough, 'bright and fierce and fickle' is a pretty darned good description of Australia, especially in our summer months. Naturally, me being me, when I get story visions, it usually means science fiction or fantasy, or a combination of both. Hmm.
The story-generating gears are creaking right now. Something will come of this, I'm sure! I even found myself looking at images on the Internet, trying to find something embodying what I'm halfway seeing.
If there were a "photo of the day," this would be it:
Which is all very well, but at the same time, each day I try to use this computer (a Dell Inspiron laptop, by the name of Pandora ... gotta give it a name on the home network, and when I got it Avatar was red-hot news), I realize how much it needs some work done to it. Nothing I can do locally; it's a workshop job, for sure. Dang.
So here I am with my mind happily meandering through Alaskan memories -- a good enough excuse to paste in a photo of myself! It's an eons-old shot, scanned in recently and uploaded to the travel blog I've been tinkering with for the last few years.
Most of the posts on the Meander to the Max blog feature road trips around South Australia and just a little bit interstate, but one series of posts is entitled Alaska Memories. The snapshot at left (which Dave took just off the side of the road on the Parks Highway, in ... golly, I think it had to be 1999), is from Four Seasons in One Post.
Good memories -- rich memories, too. People have asked more than once why I don't write something set in Alaska; and the most honest answer is, the Alaska I knew is now almost 20 years old. Things change a lot in two decades. If I were to write something set in Alaska, it would have to be set in an almost historical context --
Which sounds incredibly weird. I recently took part in a discussion regarding how fiction might be categorized. Just where does one draw a line, on one side of which is 'contemporary,' and on the other side is 'historical.' Turns out, many (most?) people these days are calling 1960s fiction historical. Whoo. I was eight or ten years old at the time. Ouch.
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