The Blue Raccoon

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

"Huchy Kuchy At The Fair" -- And Other Stories
Thurs. Dec. 11, New York Deli, 7-8 p.m.



Ladies and gentlemen, gentlemen and ladies, roll up, roll up, to the New York Deli, tomorrow, Thursday night, and for one night only, where Harry Kollatz Jr., author of the action-packed Richmond In Ragtime: Socialists, Suffragists, Sex and Murder, will present diverting, entertaining and instructive selections.

He will be accompanied by the musical stylings of the Happy Lucky Combo and for educational purposes only, those in attendance will learn the origins of the "huchy kuchy" dance, as demonstrated by a special guest. This performance altered for life the perspective of civic muckraker Adon Yoder. All this and a rousing tribute to Eugene V. Debs. What better reasons to come out on this dreary damp evening?

The gloomy weather-or-not crowd is predicting rain for the evening, so pull on your galoshes, carry your umbrella, but come regardless for this evening of morals and mirth. History will never be the same.

P.S. For the members of the billion-eyed audience who've been impatient and wondering where their Blue Raccoon got off to, it's simple. Between selling the above volume, and the annual seasonal crush at the Other Network, the last thing I want to do when I get home is look at a computer screen. This makes me poor blogger material, I reckon.

Yet while nobody was looking, among my current assignments at the Other Network is a blog itself. So far, we've got sidewalk art, hawks eating squirrels and a dead black cat. Gripping stuff.

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Sunday, November 16, 2008




It's Been A While


Image: "Ballad Plays -- 1951" from an on-line album of images, prose and poetry of individuals affiliated with the Beat era in Wichita, Kansas, compiled and maintained by Thornton Lee Streiff, here.

Billion-eyed audience, we've made our way through several strange few weeks here in Richmond, Va. For the first time in my life, Virginia voted Democratic, and I still don't believe I'm seeing President-Elect Barack Obama. This is truly the Best.West Wing. Ever.

Then, despite the air of celebration, the national cascading economic collapse accelerated here, as Circuit City -- that started here as Ward's TV -- filed for bankruptcy and laid off 800 people in Henrico County alone; Richmond-born LandAmerica was bought by its competitor, Fidelity National Financial; even Luck Stone trimmed off 17 percent of its regional workforce.

The downturn isn't just something getting reported on the news, like a weather event, but a real occurrence now affecting friends and acquaintances.

And though I face now a week of customary stresses at my day job, and more to come, at least I have a place to go in the morning.

Even the weather here has exhibited odd tendencies; season cold and drizzly and gusts of wind sending up tempests of leaves; or downwright balmy and short-sleeve weather, and with cool breeze, with a hint of the winter bite, but a pleasure to inhale deep of.

Among other things affecting peole I know, a recent balcony collapse that injured 21 people on West Cary Street near VCU occurred at the where some friends live, and not well-reported was a melee that erupted almost at the same time with the next door neighbors.


In Other News

I've been busy attending signin' and sellin' events for Richmond In Ragtime: Socialists, Suffragists, Sex and Murder (History Press) and planning or participating in discussions about more. I want to thank all of those who've turned out, the Valentine Richmond History Center for including me in the Holiday Shopper's Fair and the James River Writers for inviting me to attend its Meet The Writer happy hour this past week.

The book's lively cover causes remarks and the silky finish is also quite fine. Plus, it has that wonderful new book smell.

But I was listening to "The Book Guys" on WRIR when they discussed a recent New York Observer feature about how, like every other industry, book publishing is feeling the pinch of the times. And if the situation was already bad for prospective first-time novelists, and difficult for small press authors, then now the matters have worsened.

"Only the most established agents will be able to convince publishers to take a chance on an unknown novelist or a historian whose chosen topic does not have the backing of a news peg. The swollen advances that have come to represent all that is reckless and sinful about the way the business is run will grow, not shrink. Authors without “platforms” will have a more difficult time finding agents willing to represent them. The biggest publishing house in the world, meanwhile, will be overhauled by a 40-year-old man who worked in printing until he was appointed to his post as CEO of Random House Inc. last spring.

“Think of it like a supply chain,” said one publishing executive who would not speak for attribution. “If the newspapers have fewer ads, they’re running fewer book reviews, so therefore, for those books that don’t have a pre-established audience, there are fewer opportunities to appeal to the consumer. Therefore, there are fewer of those consumers going into the bookstore. The bookstore recognizes this, and they tell you your mid-list books aren’t doing shit, so they’re not gonna order them, or they’re just gonna order 100 copies. They can cut off those books, and then the publisher is faced with a tough decision—how am I gonna buy those books that I know I can only ship 100 copies of? What am I gonna do? Am I gonna keep doing it? Or am I gonna spend more [money] chasing established authors?

You can read the whole depressing thing here.


An Evening At Dupont Circle



The Partner In Art For Life this weekend had a piece in the Art for Life auction that benefits the Whitman-Walker Clinic that works in prevention AIDS/HIV among minority populations.

The event was held in the marble halls at the Carnegie Institution of Washington.

We were delayed in getting out of Richmond, then, by chance, having noted our intentions on my Facebook page, our friend Kathryn called offering to ride up together because she was going up to meet a friend at a separate event.

I thought heading into D.C. so close to rush hour on a weekend was probably going to be fraught with some challenges; but if she was willing to take on the challenge, we were willing to travel.

The usual Washington craziness was made even more frustrating due to the convening of the G-20 summit which seems to me a rather hopeless cause, anyway. What are we going to do? Throw around billions and print more money. Which is exactly what's happening. And tying up traffic.

We ended up leaving Kathryn to find a parking place and we ran out and dashed into Metro Center to get a train. As usual, "native intelligence" gave us wrong directions. (As I explained to Amie, from my pizza delivery days when looking for an unfamiliar street, most people don't seem to know anything about directions: they are always here from another part of town for some special reason, or visitors themselves. But, as an inveterate walker, I've given plenty of directions - and also found myself far more ignorant than I would've thought). 

We clambered out of the Farragut North station when we could've gone all the way to Dupont Circle. I was just pleased to ride the train and be around the different languages, the sharp clothes, and excited students. I liked seeing how the women here wrap their scarves. Not New York, to be sure, but a different rhythm which is exactly what I wanted.

The weather was warm, but damp, and we were dressed formal. Walking through Dupont to the Carnegie I was reminded of Washington can resemble Richmond, or the Richmond I have wished for, the Mahone-altered "New Dominion" wherein cities could extend into counties, and be embraced and girded by parks and green spaces, and the far points linked by trams and commuter rail. And that we had to risk life and limb on I-95 at all, and that there isn't a flexible and inexpensive commuter express running evening back and forths between Balto/Wash/Richmond is just bad planning. And damned inconvenient. 

At the Carnegie, we drank very sweet mojitos and grabbed some finger food from passing trays, but there was no central place for eating, which was probably far less expensive, but we got there a little late probably missed much of what was floating around. 

The auction of pieces convened to the auditorium, dedicated to Elihu Root, and his "Vision Wisdom And Devotion To The Advancement Of Knowledge," and the walls resembled the frontispiece pages for a geography or history text of about a century ago, depicting the west and east of the United States in a stylized fashion, and figures of explorers and cartographers. 

Auctioneer B.J. Jennings gave an energetic performance to gin up bids but, as evidence that times are tough, the numbers of people in the auction dwindled from those who'd been wandering around drinking. She would rap, "Doitnow, doitnow, doitnow," and "Feels beter if you do it twice," and urge, "Your turn!" when she'd in rapid fashion get the price up. Amie's was Lot #5, so we didn't have to wait long -- by now we were quite hungry. She was happy with the result, and though we got our coats, Amie intended to return and try to meet the person who bought her work. 

We hiked back to Dupont, seeking a place not over-croweded or overrun with televisions, and found Levante's at 1320 19th St. NW. We didn't even know what it was but the name seemed appropriate as its cuisine comes from the Levant. And we were ready. Our food came quick and was good; the pida, a boat-shaped pizza made in a wood-burning oven, an eggplant salad. 

Amie returned to the Carnegie, and I sat, sipping bourbon and gingers and watching Dupont Circle's Friday  night date night hustle and bustle, and felt wistful and wishing for such a scene in Richmond, and how in my alternative version, there is. Don't get me wrong. We have concentrations of activity: Robinson and Main streets; Cary between Colonial and Dooley; Shockoe Slip; 18th Street in the Bottom, and on a good night, the music room of Capital Ale when the weather allows the front window to be open. But nothing quite like sitting at a big window in the middle of downtown that is a window on the world. There is a Metro stop nearby, too. 

About a half hour later, Kathryn, her friend Terry and Amie arrived and we had wonderful conversation and more nosh. Terry is in television news; he's been to Afghanistan three times and concludes that these days, there's not much left to pull together to form an independent nation. Back in the 1970s, they were building roads, they had a university, there was a sense of progress. Then came the Russians. Then we turned our backs on them. Now they are the major front on the anti-terrorism war, this tribal and clannish culture. 

The ride home was in sometimes heavy rain. I nodded off, and fought to stay awake as I was sitting next to Kathryn and she was giving us the lift, but the auction festivities, food, drink and conversation had left both Amie and me fatigued. 



































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Saturday, November 01, 2008

The Ragtime book arrived! The Ragtime book arrived!
Richmond In Ragtime has arrived at the Valentine Richmond History Center, soon in finer book shops everywhere (around here) and Amazon and Barnes & Noble.com


Yes, billion-eyed audience, this handsome, 221-page, fully-illustrated narrative chronicle of three rambunctious years, 1909-1911, in Richmond has arrived and will various shipments will be appearing at assorted stores and shops as the days go forward.

The first place RIR meets the general public, though, is at the 14th Annual Holiday Shoppers Fair that all the city's regional museums band together to display their offerings for the discerning Richmond gift-giving season buyer. I'm there representing for the Valentine Richmond History Center and The History Press.

I'll be there the second day, at the Library of Virginia, Saturday, Nov. 8 1:00 to 3:30. Not my only appearance, to be certain, and I'll post other places I'll be.

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Thursday, October 30, 2008

I'm Not Dead, Just Dozing
The challenge of blogging when you're just too damn busy and tired and there's all this yammering election coverage

Image of yours truly, by Jay Paul, taken at Old City Hall, Richmond, Va. One of a series he made to get an "Author's Photo" for Richmond In Ragtime: Socialists, Suffragists, Sex and Murder. Jay came out on a wretched rainy afternoon about a month ago, almost on a moment's notice, and we got the image-making accomplished almost at the 11th minute. Praise Jay -- and technology.

Where I've Been

My intuition has alerted me that some members of the billion-eyed audience are restive and wonder what the hell I'm doing; the nerve of me to have a life and a job and stuff. Well, I know. Some Richmond bloggers have figured out a way to have something up every day, or at least refresh each week.

But I'm a laggard. A distracted laggard.

Occurred to me just today, that if I'd stopped watching cable news six months ago, I'd not be ignorant of much about the current political contest than I am now. That is to say, so much that passes for news is just idle speculation and chatter for chatter's sake. We didn't know who was going to win six months ago, and we still don't.

I would like to report that my cynicism pertaining to the U.S. electorate and that my distrust of the process and general disdain for the two-party system have been overswept by a tide of good feeling. But it's not the case.

Oh, I'm going to get up early on Tuesday and amble over to my p0lling place, because it is three blocks away, and I like to experience the majesty of democracy in action. But I'm not making any predictions, and feel as though something could go quite awry. That's just my own internal pessimist.

Meanwhile, I've Been Reading

I finished William Gibson's All Tomorrow's Parties and picked up Robet K. Massie's hulking but engrossing and detailed Dreadnought: Britain, Germany, And The Coming of the Great War. I'm working up to a kick-ass Nov. 11 posting, which, if you're a long-time listener, I reserve for ranting about the injustice and illogic of the First World War, and urge that it be stopped.

Today I learned, for example, that Bismarck had tiny hands and feet and a reedy voice.

And that's all I'm saying for now. I'll be back, don't panic. Well. Panic only slightly.

Happy Halloween. We're going to see the No BS Brass lead a crazy second line from Monroe Park to Hollywood Cemetery. May not do costume. Who's got the time?

Oh, finally. On this very eve of Hallowe'en, some 16 years ago, the Firehouse Theatre Project formed. No trick, but a treat.




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Friday, September 26, 2008

Richmond In Ragtime: Cover art




Here, billion-eyed audience, is the cover design for the forthcoming volume, due in finer bookstores (and Amazon and Barnes & Noble) in November. I'll post appearances and events here.


On the front cover is (left) musician Polk Miller, a groups of suffragists (women seeking the right to vote) including artists and life-partners Adéle Clark (lower center) and Nora Houston; behind them is Main Street at around 10th looking west; lower right, crusading black publisher of the fierce and independent Richmond Planet, John Mitchell Jr.

Back cover, top: Richmond Mayor David Crockett Richardson (left) looks uneasy sharing the ride with pilot Ralph Johnstone at the 1910 Virginia State Fair. Crockett was the first city official ever to fly -- and the first to crash.

Below: A one-man dirigible, exhibited and flown at the 1911 Virginia State Fair.

All images via the Valentine Richmond History Center, except for the ladies, from the Virginia Commonwealth University James Branch Cabell Library Archives and Special Collections.

The publisher is the History Press of Charleston, S.C., who also put out True Richmond Stories, around this time in 2007.

This is a narrative, bricolage style, covering just three rambunctious years, 1909-1911. The coil of the story is provided by Adon Allen Yoder, a grassroots Socialist reformer who published a muckraking pamphlet called The Idea.

He wanted to clean up city government, an "awkward cumbersome machine" of 56 white men divided up into a Board of Aldermen and a Common Council who administrated 24 standing committees. He named names -- even printed the gambling winnings of some Councilmen.

Yoder championed women getting the vote, equal treatment of blacks before the bar of justice (though he did not advocate social integration in that Southern progressive-but-not-too-much way), and even the SPCA. What really annoyed him was the city's redlight district, which constituted most of what we now consider Shockoe Bottom around Main Street Station and a nieghborhood now obliterated by g0vernment office buildings and highway construction, Council Chamber Hill, around present 14th Street.

Also in Richmond, working and living during this time, community organizer and banker Maggie Lena Walker; editor and businessman John Mitchell Jr.; sculptor and decorative plaster-maker Ferruccio Legnaioli; reformer and suffragist Lila Meade Valentine, and novelists Ellen Glasgow, Mary Johnston and James Branch Cabell.

This is a world of flying machines and automobile endurance races and summer time excursions in streetcars.

Hope you'll like it.

The foreword is by my fellow scribe, Anne Thomas Soffee, a Richmonder, with a memory and a deft manner with words.

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