It's been a windy, chilly week, but this morning the birds are singing lustily, and temperatures are already in the 40s, and I'm hoping it'll be an appealing day for gardening. I've had trouble dredging up enthusiasm for crawling around in cold wet dirt. I've done it, but it's felt like penance.
In other acts of penance: I finished rereading Byatt's The Children's Book yesterday and, as usual, have been cast into gloom by her evocation of the wretched waste of World War I. If I were smart I'd read a cheerful book next, but I just got W. G. Sebald's The Rings of Saturn out of the library, so that will be my fate for the next few days. Still, I'm looking forward to it. Somehow I've never read Sebald before, though I've known about him forever.
And Tom's home, so that's a bright spot, even though he'll be trudging off to work shortly. With luck I'll finish an editing project this morning and then be able to idle with my own stuff for a few hours. I have to steal time when I can because another burst of obligation lies on the horizon. On Saturday I need to make an appearance at the Plunkett Poetry Festival in Augusta. On Tuesday I head north so I can teach my high schoolers on Wednesday. On Thursday I'll take part in a big poet laureate extravaganza in Freeport. On Friday I have a phone interview with a writer for the Haverford alumni magazine. I'm not sure how Haverford found out about the PL thing, but such mysteries are the story of my life lately.
Probably there's other stuff on the calendar, too, but for now it's a blur. Though, by the way, I forget if I mentioned that there's just one spot left in the next Poetry Kitchen class. Grab it fast if you've been thinking about it because I probably won't be offering another PK session until the fall.