Monday, December 8, 2025

Usually I am the primary Christmas shopper, mostly because my schedule is more flexible than Tom's. This is a de fault situation, not a preferred one: I am not a shopping enthusiast. But by some magic, the two of us managed to get much of our shopping done this weekend--together, in person, in town, from local stores and artists we like. Plus, Tom made a fantastic shopping coup for himself: in a vintage clothing shop he found a pair of pale blue suede Italian dress shoes, with red laces and soles, that fit him perfectly. Blue suede shoes for our son's wedding! What a magnificent find.

So despite my dislike of shopping, we had a pretty good weekend. And now I must gird myself for an intense week, starting tomorrow night, at 6 p.m., when I'll be reading at the Table Bar in Gardiner, Maine, with some of my favorite people: Gretchen Berg, Marita O'Neill, Betsy Sholl, and Meghan Sterling. In the interstices, I'll be dealing with stacks of editing and class planning, plus various appointments and obligations, plus cold and ice and holiday chores. Ugh, December is a ridiculous month.

Sunday, December 7, 2025

Seagulls swirl up from the bay, circle over the sugared roofs.

A man trudges past, pushing a grocery cart filled with cans.

A clock ticks.

A person wakes suddenly, overwhelmed by dread.

Yet after two days of bitter cold, the temperature has risen to a balmy 20 degrees. I put out a few Christmas ornaments yesterday--scattered, out of Chuck's enthusiastic reach, on window ledge and mantle and doorjamb: a cheerful hodgepodge of nostalgia . . . the paper houses Tom made with the little boys one year; the ancient styrofoam gingerbread men that hung from my parents first Christmas tree, in 1962; the battered felt chicken, a gift from our neighbor, which Ruckus would steal off the tree every single day during the season; the rubber King Kong that T bought me at the top of the Empire State Building when we were very young . . . 

Yet the furnace remains magnificent, and that smart guy who lives here has solved our lingering soot problem.

Yet I worked on a poem. I made braised lemon chicken with olives and pesto over fresh polenta, with a side of buttered spinach and slices of pumpkin bread for dessert.

Snow fell gently as I walked to the library.


Saturday, December 6, 2025

We drove to Brunswick last night with a passel of poets to watch the student dance concert at Bowdoin. This is the second year we've gone, and it was again an excellent time. Our friend Gwynnie is a stellar teacher (as anyone who attended the conference last year can attest), and her students are a joy to behold. Then afterward we hung out for a while at the hotel bar across the street, a pack of cheerful chatterers out on a frigid Friday night.

It was sweet to glance across the room and see T in busy conversation--my friends morphing into our friends, his shyness slipping away. Underneath his reserve he is funny and sociable and observant, and very interested in other people. But shyness is a suffocating blanket, and all those years in Harmony were no help to him in that regard.

The older I get, the more grateful I feel for this widening circle of engagement. It doesn't make up for loss--nothing will fill the hole that Ray left in us--but it somehow deepens my sense of the necessary patience of love. I think of my dear ones in Wellington and Harmony and Bangor, in New York and Vermont, in Amherst and Chicago and West Tremont and Sarasota, and upstairs asleep in my bed . . . close by, or far-flung  . . . the web of history that binds, the small everyday comforts, the sudden epiphanies, the nothing-special that is everything.

Friday, December 5, 2025

This morning the temperature in Portland is 5 degrees above zero, but the Alcott House is a balmy 66. Praise to the furnace guys, who rescued us in the nick of time. We're still dealing with a bit of soot from the kitchen duct, but otherwise it's all mod cons around here.

Young Charles is somewhat disappointed with this high life, as he loves the wood stove. Yesterday he kept suggesting that I should light it so he could toast himself on the hearthrug. But Chuck has always preferred the old fashioned ways: pencils and pinecones and sitting on books instead of computers.

Shortly I need to venture out into the Arctic to get the trash to the curb, but for the moment I am basking in this pleasant heat that I have done nothing to produce. It will be another busy day--a morning zoom meeting, then editing and class plans and assorted paperwork and, I hope, a walk once the temperature rises. We may be going out tonight to watch the student dance extravaganza at Bowdoin. I need to start reading my Tennyson homework. Probably I should go to the grocery store. There's always a pile of laundry waiting.

But at least I went out to write last night. I think the drafts I made aren't worth much, but maybe I'm wrong. And I did come across a copy of Paul Fussell's The Great War and Modern Memory in a little free library--a golden acquisition, that one. I've been meaning to read it for years. 

Funny how books find us.

Thursday, December 4, 2025

What a day we had yesterday . . . First, T and I rushed through before-dawn snow shoveling. Then, promptly at 8, the furnace guys showed up and started demo-ing the busted furnace. T left for work and at 9 I began zoom-teaching upstairs, behind a barrier that T had constructed to keep the cat away from the furnace hoo-hah, which the cat figured out how to circumvent almost immediately. So I was teaching while leaping up from my chair to pluck the cat out of mischief; guys were banging and crashing in the cellar . . . Eventually, while the kids were writing, I reconfigured cat jail and shut Chuck up in our bedroom. By this point a full-sized semi was idling in front of my driveway, and the guys were unloading the new furnace from the trailer and starting to try to get it into the house. From upstairs I could hear their loud panting despair about tight corners and narrow stairs. The cat wailed in the bedroom and scratched at the door. My zoom children sweetly shared the drafts they'd been writing . . .  Ah, bedlam.

This went on till 1, when class ended and I could finally go into the bedroom and settle Chuck down into sleepiness. Midafternoon I heard a rumble, and heat began to seep through the registers. Then the Dump Guys showed up, parking their giant trailer the wrong way down my narrow street (yes, that is actually the name of the business). They'd been hired by the furnace guys to take away the old furnace . . . which they accomplished by Sawzalling it apart in the basement and shoving the pieces through the old coal hatch at the back of the house. My neighbor texted me: "Your house is vomiting."

And by 4:30 p.m., the drama was over.

Well, not actually entirely over because now I am dealing with the unpleasant aftereffects of furnace swapping: nasty greasy particulates from the old appliance, previously caught in the ductwork, are now blowing into the house. The furnace guy assures me that the problem is temporary, and I can see that it's manageable and definitely on the wane. But ick.

Anyway, despite this annoyance, we now have central heating, and just in time, because temperatures are supposed to drop precipitously tonight--into single digits or lower--and our little wood stove would not have been able to fight that battle.

Today will be much quieter without a pack of guys in the building . . . just me alone for most of the day, fidgeting through housework and desk work, getting onto my mat, fetching our CSA order, going out to write tonight. Phew.

Wednesday, December 3, 2025

Just a quick note this morning as I am toppling under a mountain of obligation: snow shoveling, furnace guys, zoom teaching, cat wrangling, and probably a lot of other things I am forgetting along the way. Wish me luck--

Tuesday, December 2, 2025

I'm supposed to be driving to Monson this afternoon, but likely I won't be because we've got a winter storm warning and up to eight inches of snow forecast. So that means I'll be zooming with the kids tomorrow while also kitten wrangling and dealing with noise and disruption because . . . [drum roll] . . . THE GUY IS COMING TO INSTALL A NEW FURNACE.

We've been without central heating for three weeks, and we've done okay. When the kitchen oven died, I do admit to feeling disheartened, but on the whole we've stayed cheerful, fed, and mostly warm. However, temperatures are supposed to drop into single digits by the end of this week, so thank goodness we're getting our heating troubles solved before life turns dire.

Because I'm probably not traveling north today, I'll have a few more hours to get other stuff done: planning for January's Monson Arts reunion class; a chance to catch up on editing, and maybe also to mess around with materials for Poetry Lab's incipient Substack journal. Yesterday I made a big pot of turkey stock and used some of it for butternut-squash risotto, so velvety and full of flavor. Today I'll reserve another couple of quarts for that classic post-Thanksgiving comfort, turkey noodle soup, and stow the rest in the freezer. I'd like to go for a walk before the snow settles in. I need to get cracking on Tennyson's Idyls of the King.

In the midst of all this I'm also working on scholarship stuff for the Conference on Poetry and Learning. If you are able, I would be so grateful for any donation you can make to our fund. Every dime will go to supporting participants who would otherwise not be able to attend.

And if you are considering applying to the conference and have questions about whether or not you'll be a good fit (short answer: you will), please reach out. I would love to see you in beautiful Monson this summer.

Monday, December 1, 2025

And now we are back to our regular days.

The kids left yesterday afternoon, and Chuck immediately collapsed into exhaustion. Nonstop kitten fun is so tiring, but he sure did enjoy himself. He dozed much of the afternoon, slept hard all night, and now he is groggily eating his breakfast and wondering where his friends went.

It was an excellent visit for all of us, though like Chuck I am a little groggy from it. Unfortunately, I need to snap out of my grog because I've got a lot of things to do: prep for Monson, prep for January's online class, work on my editing project, deal with groceries and housework.

This week will be screwy. The furnace is supposed to be installed, but we don't know on which days yet. There's a big snowstorm coming in tomorrow, meaning that I most likely won't be driving north but will instead have to zoom with the kids on Wednesday. If I'm teaching at home or up north and those are furnace installation days, T will have to take a day off from work to manage the cat situation. . . . In short, the week ahead is a busy unformed mess.

However, we do have an oven, and it has been a big help in keeping the house warmer. Last night for dinner I roasted a squash and mashed it with garlic and olive oil; I baked bluefish en papillote (with shaved red onion and a bit of leftover stuffing) and made a kale salad--classic winter fare, and so delightfully oveny. Today, amid my myriad other obligations, I'll simmer turkey stock and probably bake bread. I've got so much reading to do and, ugh, so much Christmas shopping. 

No tree for us this year, and probably very few ornaments, as young Charles is a Menace. Christmas with a kitten is always an adventure in disaster.

Sunday, November 30, 2025

Yesterday was jam-packed with activity. We were on the road by 6:30, on our stools at Biddeford's Palace Diner by 7, and at the bird sanctuary before 8. It was a cold and quiet morning on the beach and along the salt marshes, the tide at its lowest ebb and the sand stretched before us like a plain. We were all deeply happy to be there. Then mid-morning we headed back to busy Portland--stopped at the grocery store, stopped at the cheese shop--then home again, to immerse ourselves in our ongoing massive Wingspan board game contest. By early afternoon P's college friend had stopped by, Tom was lighting the firepit, and I was prepping a midday grill feast of venison backstrap, halloumi, and hot cider; our neighbor had stopped in to say hello to the kids, and the six of us hung out for a few hours in our coats and hats, nibbling on grilled meat and cheese, warming up with cider, until our visitors dispersed and we four returned to our giant Wingspan game. And then a movie was proposed, so all plus Chuck piled onto the guest bed and were teary over Train Dreams. And then we closed the evening with pizza delivery and Yahtzee, and I, for one, slept like a bear.

This morning the young people will head out for breakfast with their friends, then probably propose yet more Wingspan until bus time. And by early afternoon they will be gone, and T and Chuck and I will feel a little dull for a few hours until we relapse into our regular patterns. It's been such a sweet visit. It could not have been sweeter.

Saturday, November 29, 2025

Just a quick note this morning as we are on our way out for an early breakfast and a frosty bird-sanctuary hike. Here's hoping the diner coffee keeps us warm. . . .

Friday, November 28, 2025

7:15, full daylight, and I am only now sitting down to write to you. A Thanksgiving miracle: yes, I actually slept late and had dreams about the skulduggery of Shakespeare professors. But then I also had to scrape ashes and carry wood and light the fire and feed the cat and empty the holiday dishwasher and make coffee, so it took a while before I was at leisure to visit with you.

Still, other than Chuck, I am the only awake-one around here. I'm glad the others are having the pleasure of lolling. They all work so hard and L is still recovering from their illness, and I love knowing they're all dozily gathered under my roof.

Yesterday the kids gave everyone a bird name, and mine was the Dawn Warbler, who wakes before daylight and whose song is an exact replica of the coffee grinder.

Today will be far more aimless than yesterday. The only cooking will involve warming up plates of leftovers, the kids will head into town to hang out with one of P's college friends, and T and I will idle around in a pleasant Sunday-afternoon state of mind. I probably ought to do some planning for my high school class, but maybe not today. After the hard work of holidaying, it feels correct to loll.

Dishes that especially pleased me: The gorgeous jammy texture of the cranberry sauce. Pan gravy with foraged mushrooms--the king of foods. Simmered-all-day Granny-style collard greens, sweet and melting, even without bacon.

Thank you, oven, for your fine and dependable heat. And thank you, bathroom fan, who for some reason decided not to be on the blink. All praise to our plethora of incredible running water, hot and cold, and to working lights and toilets that flush. Thank you, colorful plates and glasses; thank you, loud striped cloth napkins and faded but cheerful tablecloth, everything mismatched but somehow exactly how I like to imagine an ideal world. Thank you, flickering candles and smiling faces; thank you, epic board game competitions punctuated by texts and phone calls from beloveds. Thank you, long walks through the cemetery, long walks by the sea. Thank you, little happy cat.

And so I sit here beside the crackling wood fire, with a Le Carre novel to read and a cup of black coffee to sip, as pale November sunlight slides through the windows, as a clock ticks and a seagull wails. The day awaits.

Thursday, November 27, 2025

Our bustle of young people arrived around 9 last night: young Chuck was ecstatic, the kids were charmed, and Kitten World was a sparkly, happy land.

Now Thanksgiving has dawned, damp and mild, and the house is a palace of quiet breathing, except for a yowly, impatient little cat who is peering under doors and wishing everyone would get up and play with him right now this very second.

Yesterday's baking marathon went swimmingly. The two loaves of white bread baked beautifully. And my gingersnap recipe is so enormous that after stowing a third of the uncooked dough in the freezer I not only had enough cookies for a pie crust and casual eating but was also able to spontaneously snatch up a bagful to share with a pack of 15 or so neighbors who stopped by to see if I wanted to go for a walk with them.

To crown the day, my experimental cranberry mousse pie was a complete success, at least visually. My older son, who will be with his fiancĂ©e's family today, is kind of jealous that he didn't get to make this himself. 


Today the Alcott House kitchen will be devoted to savory, but without hurry or panic. I've never understood why so many people eat Thanksgiving dinner in the middle of the afternoon; I much prefer a regular evening meal, and that timing is also much easier on the cook. Our petite turkey won't take long to roast. I'll start the giblet stock this morning and get the collards simmering early, but otherwise we can putter. 


On the kitchen shelf are the bouquets of herbs I harvested yesterday afternoon: thyme, sage, oregano, parsley, everything washed and ready for use. A bowl of local onions sits on the counter. Local potatoes, leeks, and collards lie close at hand. A loaf of fresh bread has been drying all night, in preparation for stuffing. Little Chuck has finally gone to sleep on the couch. Everything looks so beautiful to me. I am thankful.

Wednesday, November 26, 2025

Dear friends, I OWN A WORKING OVEN. Right on schedule, the repair guy appeared, agreed with my diagnosis, produced the part from his truck ("You're lucky! It's my last one!"), undid some screws, attached some wires, redid the screws, and wished me happy Thanksgiving.

True, the furnace guy who was supposed to give us another estimate never appeared (maybe he's hanging out with the bat guy?), but in the present tense I was indifferent. All my hopes were pinned on the oven guy, and he came through like a champ. May his turkey be tender and his football team emerge victorious.

Thus today, after sacrificing a goat or a grilled-cheese sandwich or whatever to the household gods, I will be baking: two loaves of white bread (one for stuffing, one for turkey sandwiches), a batch of gingersnaps, a gingersnap cookie crust, a diced roasted sweet potato (for tomorrow's apple-sweet potato salad), and baked macaroni and sauce (kept warm to feed our hungry late-arriving young people).

Yesterday morning, after getting the housework done, I slogged through the stores for what I hope is my final holiday shopping. Everywhere parking lots were stuffed to overflow, and the turkey line at Pat's Meat Market stretched out the door. But we were all cheerful, and the turkey I ordered is perfect: a petite 12-pounder that when roasted should be almost as moist as a chicken.

My son is eager to serve as my sous-chef, so I don't want to do too much ahead of time and spoil his fun. But I do plan to get the cranberry mousse pie put together today because it needs to set thoroughly before slicing. I am just so pleased to be cooking . . . in my own kitchen, with my own oven, with our dear ones en route. Stop by for a cup of tea, won't you? I'll be around.

Tuesday, November 25, 2025

I would be happy to be sleeping better than I am, but I seem to be caught in one of my insomniac cycles. Oh, well. At least I can keep the fire alive in the wood stove while I'm uselessly ticking off mental to-do lists at 3 a.m.

Yesterday Teresa and I discussed Herbert's Mr. Cogito and geared up for our next big reading project, Tennyson's Idyls of the King. I finished reading Gay Talese's 1964 history of the building of the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge between Staten Island and Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, which was more interesting than you might think. I read about a third of Lady Mary Wroth's seventeenth-century "A Crown of Sonnets Dedicated to Love." I scribbled notes about the online class Teresa and I will be teaching in January. I worked on an editing project, and I tried to keep the house warm.

Today will be lumpier. This morning I need to clean for company. This afternoon, supposedly, the oven guy will save Thanksgiving, and a furnace guy will offer us yet another gruesome estimate. Or perhaps they will both be like the bat guy and never show up. I spent much time pondering these things while I was making my insomniac checklist. I also, for some reason, cared a lot about remembering to buy milk.

Monday, November 24, 2025

I cooked cranberries yesterday and simmered a big pot of vegetable stock, so that's two holiday tasks crossed off the list. While the turkey roasts, I'll make giblet broth for gravy, but the vegetable stock will go into the stuffing and the collards, and now I have plenty in store. Our dinner will be fairly traditional, as Paul likes it. The one big experiment is a cranberry mousse pie rather than traditional apple or pumpkin. If the oven really does get repaired on Tuesday, I'll bake plain white bread for stuffing and gingersnaps for the cookie crust. If not, store-bought will have to do. It's always my goal to use as few store-bought items as possible, but I'm not doctrinaire and can roll with whatever, as long as it doesn't involve cranberry sauce from a can or marshmallow-topped sweet potatoes, both of which make me shudder.

Despite our household woes, I'm enjoying myself. I do like a feast.

Today I'll work at my desk, do some housework, talk to Teresa about Zbigniew Herbert, go for a walk, maybe go to the grocery store. Tomorrow will feature the big guests-are-coming cleaning event, plus a repair guy cameo. Wednesday ought to be baking all day.

What could go wrong?

Sunday, November 23, 2025

Cold Sunday dawn, late November. Night sky softens above a tangle of bare maple limbs. In the living room the wood stove creaks as new flames lick at logs and kindling. Young Chuck, stuffed with bed and breakfast, purrs like a saw. He is delighted to be awake, delighted to feel the first warmth seep from the stove, delighted to lean against my shoulder and admire my ear.

Yesterday I pulled out the last of my salad greens and dill. I was still able to harvest a few bunches of late cilantro and parsley, but there won't be much more of either this season. The kale persists, as do the Thanksgiving herbs--sage, thyme, oregano. For the most part, though, the garden has faded into sleep.

We still have no oven, so I'm struggling to imagine baked turkey, rolls, stuffing, pie. Last night for dinner I steamed, then browned a skillet of diced potatoes and leeks. I stir-fried Chinese cabbage and tossed it with strips of leftover venison. I sliced a ripe pear. I'm trying to open my thoughts to similar Thanksgiving contingencies: sautéed squash, chocolate pudding, turkey fricassee, apple salad. Probably the oven really will be repaired on Tuesday, but recent history makes me wary. I am planning ahead for the road block.

Well, the only important thing is that our young people will be arriving on Wednesday night. With our dear ones in the house, the holiday will be a holiday, no matter what we eat and how many blankets we spread on the beds.

So today I hope to go for a long walk. I hope to cook down cranberries for sauce. I hope to fidget with drafts and read Herbert poems and finish a Drabble novel. I hope to clip Chuck's nails while he's sweetly asleep and put together a Portuguese-style kale soup for dinner. For some reason this post has taken me forever to write, though all of my comments are pedestrian. I know you're tired of hearing me talk about heat and food, but so go my days right now.

Saturday, November 22, 2025

Today begins my first non-working/non-traveling weekend since October, and I am enormously pleased to be sitting by the fire with a cup of steaming coffee and not one damn thing on my schedule. I've got vague plans to do a final post-frost garden cleanup--pull out the drooping annual herbs and the dingy lettuce and such--and I need to brush brandy on the loaves of Emily Dickinson's black cake that I baked last week. I might walk to the library and the bookstore. I might buy a baguette. I might do some Thanksgiving-dinner planning. I might work on poem drafts or read Zbigniew Herbert's Mr. Cogito or convince Tom to play Wingspan. Or I might not do any of that. 

This year's November has felt particularly beautiful. I like the sudden starkness of sky and branch, the wild clouds, the way daylight tightens into a brief dizzying knot before twilight drops its curtain. And I love November meals. Last night's dinner was one of the best I've made in a long time: Venison round steak marinated with lime, salt, garden garlic, and garden thyme, seared briefly, than rolled in a white-wine reduction. Local spinach melted into butter and nutmeg. Julienned garden carrots with local red onion and garden dill. Mixed grains (quinoa, millet, buckwheat) steamed with olive oil. It was a magnificent feast--the venison a gift from Steve in Wellington, plus my own garden gleanings and those gorgeous local vegetables from our CSA. The only bit of grocery-store produce in this meal was the lime I used in the marinade.

Poems have been another happiness this week. My intense engagement with the long-poem class seems to have exploded me into the zone. In addition to messing around with that big draft, I have written two new shorter poems that have real potential, and I've got another in my notebook that I hope to fidget with this weekend. One of those new drafts appeared during my high school class on Wednesday--always a sign that something big is brewing for me because I can't often let myself drop into the zone when I'm trying to stay attentive to the kids.

I won't say that our household troubles have exactly helped me out. The money terror is real, and so are frets about pipes freezing and no oven for Thanksgiving. But there is something tonic about figuring out how to deal with adversity, and I happen to have a partner who will jump onto the roof of the train and do what needs to be done before the dynamite reaches the bridge as I lean out through an open window and toss the bag of priceless heirlooms into the culvert. Which is to say: right now we are in especially good moods about each other. And so even though my brain is on the alarm, it is also basking, and that is when the poems want to come alive.

Friday, November 21, 2025

It's a chilly morning outside but the fire is blazing cheerfully and already the house is beginning to warm. Tom has settled on a repair guy who can do our furnace work after Thanksgiving, so there's an end in view, though really we're doing more than okay. But the household gods still have us in their cranky gunsights: yesterday morning the heating element blew in my kitchen oven . . . yes, a dead oven right before the biggest cooking holiday of the year. I started calling appliance repair shops, and one told me they were scheduling into January, which made my stomach lurch. I did eventually find someone who can come on Tuesday to replace the element, so for the moment I don't foresee cutting up the turkey into parts and fricasseeing them on the stovetop. Still, given our black cloud, who knows?

But the quotidian trudges forward and it even whistles a little tune. Yesterday my next editing project arrived, meaning that today I'll be back at my desk beginning to sort through files and figure out my tasks. I got the house cleaned yesterday, so for the moment life feels fairly orderly, despite our ongoing domestic disasters. I went out to write last night and scribbled a draft I might like to look at again. This afternoon I'll zoom with Jeannie and Teresa. Tonight I'll play cribbage with my dear one and sear venison steaks for dinner. My big kitten will chirp and cuddle and chase pencils under the couch.

I'm trying to find an appropriate line of poetry to end this we're-hanging-in-there post, but all I can come up with is Tennyson's "Half a league, half a league, half a league onward." That line is entirely inappropriate to the situation and therefore I will leave you with it.

Thursday, November 20, 2025

I got home late yesterday afternoon to a cool but nowhere-near-freezing house--good news, given that the stove hadn't been stoked since 6:30 a.m. and temperatures outside had fluctuated between the 20s and the 40s. Tom and I have both gotten so fond of this doughty little Jotul. How sturdily it saves us.

Still, we need to move forward, and T is close to formally hiring someone who says he'll be able to install a new furnace during the week after Thanksgiving. Now our decision to spend the holiday at home feels ever more prescient: we would not have been able to leave the house to itself so would have wrecked my sister's plans.

But fortunately this trip to Monson will be our only absence before the repair guy arrives, and for the next two weeks I can concentrate on keeping the place warm.

Today I've got to deal with a passel of housework chores, and I need to catch up on reading before I meet with Jeannie and Teresa tomorrow. I might mess around with a little poem I drafted during class yesterday. I need to read my son's grad school application essay. I'll do a bit of grocery shopping. I'll take my walk. I hope to go out to write tonight. It's good to be home.

By the way: Applications to the Conference on Poetry and Learning have been open for little more than a week, and we are already a third full . . . plus, I've had several more people express interest in registering. If you are hoping to attend, you should apply ASAP.

Wednesday, November 19, 2025

It's a cold morning here in Wellington. Since I was last here two weeks ago, winter has set in. There is a crust of snow in the woods and an icy layer on the gravel roads. The trees are bare and the clouds riot in the sky, and for dinner last night we ate fresh venison, as tender and sweet as filet mignon.

November in central Maine: so regal and stark and voluptuous.

Tuesday, November 18, 2025

The house is on the cool side this morning, but that's because we purposely let the fire go out overnight so I could scrape ashes this morning. With that chore done, the stove has returned to business, much to the satisfaction of Chuck, who is a big fan of the hearthrug.

The first estimates for furnace replacement are coming through, and they are just as shocking as I thought they'd be. But what choice do we have? None.

Thus, for the moment I am squinching my thoughts away from that bad story. Today will be sunny, and this afternoon I will drive north to the homeland to spend the night with the dearest of old friends. Tomorrow I'll be in the classroom with a pack of delightful kids. And then I'll drive home in the late-day sunshine to a tepid house and an ecstatic big kitten and a pretty great boyfriend. And then I will start turning my thoughts to Thanksgiving. Despite their hospital ordeal, our New York pair is determined to spend the holiday in Maine, though I've given them every opportunity to back out if that feels best for them. But, yes, they do appear to want to bask in our limping-along heating situation, and Tom says maybe we'll even have a furnace by then. Who knows what miracle an HVAC guy can pull off? If he doesn't, at least roasting a turkey will warm up the house and we can sit around the fire wrapped in blankets and drinking hot cider. Our boy grew up in the woods. He's used to it all.

You know what's worse than not having a furnace in November? Not having running water. That is my very least favorite household emergency, and I had way, way too much of that in Harmony. This no-furnace stuff is a comparative piece of cake.

Monday, November 17, 2025

This long-poem class turned out to be one of the most satisfying I have ever taught. Though it was complicated to both invent and execute, it brought everyone involved into startling new relationship with their material. The Whitman-based discussions and prompts built up the stamina of participants who had never undertaken such a big poem before while also encouraging the mess and ambiguity that is so necessary at the start of a long-poem adventure. And then we suddenly broke the Whitman container, which pushed us into entirely new conversations with our material.

I would love to offer this class again, so if any of you are interested, let me know and we'll figure out dates.

***

It is pleasant to wake up on a Monday morning with two big drafts of a curious big poem waiting for me. It is pleasant to find a bright bed of coals in the wood stove and to pad comfortably through a warm house when the outside temperature is 31 degrees and I have no furnace. It is pleasant to look forward to a walk in the cold morning air.

Tomorrow I'll head north for another Monson session, but today will mostly be mine. So I might rake leaves. I might fidget with my poem. I might finish reading some poetry collections. I might do some housework. At some point this week another big editing job will show up on my desk and I'll be back to hourly labor. But that long-poem class was hard work and I'm not sorry to have this brief chance to coast.

Sunday, November 16, 2025

For more than twenty winters I rose in the dark, scraped ashes, coaxed the banked coals alight, fed the flames before feeding animals, making coffee, waking children for school. All day whoever was home would tend the fire. Then last thing before bed T would pack the firebox with logs and turn the draft down low so that the embers would be simmering for me in the morning. That stove was our constant care. Our love for it kept us alive.

So it has not been hard to get back into the wood fire routine, and thus far the house has been completely comfortable. I worried that I would be cold during my zoom class, upstairs with the door shut. But the chimney runs through the study wall, and that ambient warmth keeps the room cozy. We may get to the point of having to borrow some space heaters. For now we are more than fine.

Altogether yesterday was a good day. T confabbed about heat systems with our older son, who is renovating his Chicago house so has been thinking hard about options and costs. Our younger son sent a photo of his partner, happily out of the hospital and back home with their cats. My class seems to be going really well, and I am still excited about my draft. In the evening we went out to a cheerful dinner party with a passel of friends. We returned to a warm house and a fine slow-burning bed of coals. And there was no sign of a bat.

Now here I sit, on a chilly rainy mid-November morning, tucked into my couch corner, ensconced in my shabby red bathrobe, a cup-and-saucer of black coffee steaming on the table, a big kitten crunching up chow in the dining room, my beloved upstairs among the blankets, fire purring, clock ticking. Okay, yes, we have no furnace and T is joking about staging an art heist so that we can afford to replace it. Okay, yes, the goddamn bats. But I surprise myself by how sunny I feel. I grew up in what you might call a glass-mostly-empty household. By some freak of circumstance I turned out to be a glass-mostly-full kind of simpleton. I have no idea how that switch happened. Well, I do have an idea . . . Thank goodness for friends and laughter.

Saturday, November 15, 2025

A few days ago I began occasionally smelling oil when the furnace would kick on. The odor always dissipated quickly but it didn't seem right, so yesterday I called the oil company and they immediately scheduled a service check. I wasn't overly worried--we'd had the furnace cleaned and checked in September--so I certainly wasn't prepared for what happened next. The service guy told me that there'd been a breach in the combustion chamber and now poisonous gases were leaking into the ductwork. The breach could not be repaired. We needed to stop using the furnace immediately and replace it.

This is not news one wants to receive, ever. It is November in Maine, and a new furnace will cost an obscene amount of money, and who knows how soon we can get one installed. And of course the disaster happened on a Friday, so we can't even start to get quotes on prices until next week.

I was shellshocked . . . dreading about sharing the news with Tom, wondering how I would coax our tiny wood stove into becoming our primary heat source . . . This fall has been a beast of misfortune: my terrible car repairs, Baron's death, ongoing bat trouble, our dear one in the hospital (though they've since been released, thank goodness), and now we've lost our furnace.

But here's the thing. When I told Tom, he did not rant or sulk. He did not stomp around the house or sigh heavily. He did not glower or woe-is-me. He made no mention of how-the-fuck-are-we-going-to-pay-for-this. Instead, he nodded. He sat down on the couch and ate some pretzels. He made a few jokes involving the furnace's brand name. ("Now that we aren't using it anymore, we can let it march in the Thermal Pride parade.") He waxed pretend-nostalgic about its long life of service. (It was installed in this house in the 70s.) He texted some co-workers for suggestions about HVAC guys to call. He did a little research on heat pumps. He was, in short, calm and sensible, as he has been about so many of the messes we've waded through in our life together.

And I, under the sweet balm of his temper, relaxed and did what I know how to do: make a wood stove work. This little Jotul stove was not designed to be anything more than an efficient fireplace. It does not have a catalytic converter or a built-in damper. It has the plainest of air controls and a very small firebox. But despite those limitations, it is sturdy and airtight and in excellent firing condition. And we have plenty of dry hardwood and a clean chimney. So last night I set myself to coaxing the baby stove into serious household service.

This morning, when I got up, there were still live coals in the firebox and the household thermostat hadn't dropped below 60 degrees, which is where I normally set the furnace temperature overnight. So that was an achievement, a sign that we'll be able to keep the house comfortable, at least for the moment. My travel to Monson will be a problem, as T leaves for work very early and the firebox is so small that it needs to be fed many times a day. But my neighbor has offered to stoke it, and I've only got one more class before Thanksgiving. So I think we can limp through.

This weekend I'll be back in class, which means I'll be excitedly working on my own draft as well as spending time with other excited people. T and I have been invited out to dinner with people we like a lot. Chuck is purring up a storm. My son's partner is home in their own bed and showing signs of feeling better. The coffee is hot and the little stove is singing. I am married to the best sort of friend. Things could be so much worse.

Friday, November 14, 2025

You are busy being born the whole first ascent of life, and then, after some apex, you are busy dying. . . . "Being born" here is an open and existential category: the gaining of experience, a living intensely in the present, after which comes the long period of life when a person is finished with the new. This "dying" doesn't have to be negative. It too is an open and existential category of being: the age when the bulk of your experience, the succession of days lived in the present, are mostly over. You turn reflective, interior, to examine and sort and tally. You reach a point where so much is behind you, but its scenes continue to exist somewhere, as memory and absence at once, as images you'll never see again.

None of it matters; it is gone. But it all matters; it lingers. The whole of youthful experience has slid away, the years and the people, the moments and feelings. In all that loss, a person continues to locate little tokes of joy from new and surprising places. Still learning, still becoming. Busy being born, and busy dying. You have a present, a now, even as you drag with you a snowballing bulk of what was. Sometimes you spike a new joy, you really do, and sometimes you hit an old one, and the more you've lived the more there are of the old ones.

                                         --Rachel Kushner, "The Hard Crowd"

**

Much of Kushner's essay "The Hard Crowd" circles around memories of growing up in San Francisco in the 80s and early 90s. She and I did not have the same childhood: Kushner is four years younger than I am, brought up by unconventional beatnik communist parents, immersed early in the grit of the city, intensely social, whereas I was brought up by isolated parents who seemed older than they actually were, who inhabited the mores and fears of an earlier generation, who were deeply nostalgic for an idealized rural past. Nonetheless, our worlds overlap, and not only in terms of pop culture and the historical moment (Also, oddly, we have the same birthday.) Among other things, both of us are the daughters of educated parents and both found ourselves, for chunks of our lives, immersed in worlds where people have no conception of books or art as mentorship or security. In those situations one can become, in Kushner's words, "the soft one" . . . or perhaps be revealed as such, for surely that is what we always were.

The excerpt I shared from "The Hard Crowd" both surprised me and did not. Teresa, Jeannie, and I have been talking for months about the sensation of having reached a moment of reckoning in our work as poets. For the most part we have stopped envying the trappings of success. We no longer strive for attention in journals and contests. We've stopped castigating ourselves for not being famous. We've "turn[ed] reflective, interior"; we "examine and sort and tally." This wrestling has been a central element of our Poetry Lab conversations, a commonality among us, though I am younger than the other two by a decade. But as Kushner points out, dying is a "long period of life."

Still, I was surprised to see these thoughts framed so jauntily. That's not to discount the note of elegy in her words, but "little tokes of joy" felt so cheerful, and also accurate. This dying business is interesting, absorbing, comical, and at times almost subversive. It keeps me busy and entertained. It is like sorting through piles at a yard sale: junk mugs, junk baseball hats, junk record albums, junk chairs . . . and then, suddenly, a random postcard becomes a portal. O past. O whiff of rust and bones and pulsing life.

Thursday, November 13, 2025

This will be a short note as I have been up all night dealing with yet another round of bat problems. I have reached the end of my tether. Clearly something must be done.

However, there is some comic relief: I have been receiving spam comments on this blog suggesting I click on a link to rent an industrial dock crane. Perhaps many poets long for good deals on dock cranes.

I've been reading a book of essays by Rachel Kushner and had plans to quote from one of them today. But I am too tired to copy out anything accurately, so that will have to wait.

Chuck thinks bats are cool.

Wednesday, November 12, 2025

I'm happy to announce that registration has opened for the 2026 Conference on Poetry & Learning at Monson Arts. And for the first time ever, we're going to reprise the entire faculty from the previous year's conference. Gretchen Berg and Gwyneth Jones were tremendous gifts to the program last year, and Teresa and I are can't wait to work with them again next summer.

Our theme will be transformation and, as we did last year, we will bring poetry into conversation with other art forms, both in our discussions and our generative work.

I hope to see you in Monson this summer, but if you can't attend and/or if you have the means, I beg you to consider supporting our scholarship fund. In this current political climate, fewer and fewer schools are allotting funds to teachers for professional development. Last year we saw a sharp rise in requests for scholarships, and we did not have enough in reserve to support everyone in need. The conference is an exercise in humanity, intellect, emotion, and collaboration. We are staunch in our belief in art and community as a power for good in this world. If you can, please help us continue to serve.

Tuesday, November 11, 2025

 The last sentence of Little Dorrit: 

They went quietly down into the roaring streets, inseparable and blessed; and as they passed along in sunshine and shade, the noisy and the eager, and the arrogant and the froward and the vain, fretted, and chafed, and made their usual uproar.

A sentence late in The Waves:

It is strange how the dead leap out on us at street corners, or in dreams.

I read both of these sentences yesterday, and both echoed in my chest. But now that I write them side by side I also see that they are the same. The streets, the people. Memory and love. The uproar. The strange. Separation and immersion.

And then the use of punctuation: so individual to each novelist, so perfectly placed.

I think about why I love books so much, why I reread with such stubborn dedication. These recognitions are part of it. The swift interlacing of craft with perception. The common humanity. I linger at the street corner, in sunshine and shade. Arm in arm, Charles and Virginia nod to me as they pass by.

Monday, November 10, 2025

I started my drive home yesterday in rain and snow, but the weather softened by the time I reached southern New Hampshire traffic, which was a help.  I spent the bulk of my afternoon on the couch with a Dickens novel, which was restorative, after a weekend of hardly reading anything at all. But then I got a call to say that my son's partner is in the hospital, which ratcheted the worry back up. Unclear what is actually going on, but they've been sick for a few weeks and things seem to be snowballing. Today we should learn more.

It's been raining all night and will rain more later in the day, but I hope to squeeze in a walk. I'll get caught up on laundry and work on an editing project. I'll go out to the fish market. I'll hope for the best.

Sunday, November 9, 2025

I'll be heading home at daylight, an attempt to avoid the steady rain coming in from the west. Happy to own four new tires, but the sight of snow in the mountains on Friday doesn't make me want to linger in the mountains today.

Talk to you tomorrow--

Saturday, November 8, 2025

Without incident, Tina the elderly Subaru made her doughty way across rivers and mountains into the Champlain Valley and spent a comfortable overnight parked on a hillock of grass in the cold rain.

Now at very first light, the Greens are a rumple of dark blue through the kitchen window and the Adirondacks are a rumple of dark blue through the living room window, and the cat of the house sourly waits for me to notice that it's breakfast time.

I have been rereading Dickens's Little Dorrit and have reached the part of the book when the Dorrit family has magically transformed from impoverished debtors in the Marshalsea Prison into a rich and haughty entourage crossing the Alps on their way to a Venetian palazzo. Little Dorrit, the shy, hardworking backbone of the poor family, has suddenly become useless in the rich family. Now she has no one to take care of. All she can do is stare out the window in wonder and imagine what is happening among the people of the prison, now that she can no longer see them, or even admit their existence.

In many ways Little Dorrit is an irritating character--the epitome of Dickens's obstinate pipe dreams about sweet, self-effacing child-women. But she is curious. She imagines. And these characteristics, in her new life as the daughter of a rich man, become liabilities. They reveal too much. She is constantly being told to show less wonder.

I have been thinking this morning about that sad fate. To never show surprise. To never be surprised.

The daylight is strengthening. I can glimpse the shapes of cows in the field beyond the house, thick black and white torsos, heads hidden among the dry stems.

Friday, November 7, 2025

Just a quick note this morning, as I'm swirling through my morning chores so I can get out of here soon after daylight. I'll give you the Vermont lowdown tomorrow.

Thursday, November 6, 2025

We got a bit of rain last night, and this morning the neighborhood is damp and blustery and Novemberish. Now the furnace is grumbling, and the kitten is purring, and the coffee is steaming, and T is making his sandwich for work and I am listening to sheets churn in the washing machine, and we are chunking forward through our quotidian hours.

Tomorrow morning I'll be hitting the road for Vermont, so today will be housework, and laundry, and catching up with emails, and getting onto my mat, though I hope I'll also be going out to write tonight. I dug up Baron's dahlias yesterday, so they are now safely stored in the basement for the winter. Really that's my last big autumn chore. I may cut back a few more frost-bitten plants, rake a few more leaves, but for the most part the beds are ready for winter. We've still got a smidgen of chard in the garden and some late lettuce, and the kale is doing well, now that the groundhog has gone into hibernation. I'll likely be harvesting into December, unless we get a sudden snow or the temperatures plummet.

I like November, when the hats appear and the coats get buttoned. I like turning on lamps in the late afternoon and lighting the wood fire. I like hot cups of tea and my warm walking boots. I like the smell of baking and roasting and a bouquet of sage on the counter.

Yesterday Teresa and I finished our Whitman reading project, and now we are going to turn our attention to Zbigniew Herbert's Mr. Cogito.  I am still working my way through The Waves and Little Dorrit and The Descent of Alette. Chuck is excited about a piece of kindling. The chickadees are noisy in the maples. I love my long-poem draft. America feels a touch less gruesome. It's a cheerful morning around here.

Wednesday, November 5, 2025

What a good election night!

My son was at Ray's bar in Brooklyn when Mamdani's victory was proclaimed, and he said the bartenders immediately blasted "New York, New York," filling everyone with weepy joy. If only Ray himself had been there to run the stereo. Here in Maine we solidly voted down a proposal to prohibit absentee ballots and voted in a red-flag gun law--a very big deal in a state with a strong gun culture. Portland raised the city's minimum wage. Democrats won large and small victories around the country. It's been a long time since we've been able to feel a little political happiness.

After my marathon work streak, I made it home last night and then T and I walked out arm in arm to the neighborhood barbecue joint, a comfortable way to settle back into town life. Today I've got a phone meeting scheduled and house stuff and reading to catch up on, but there will be airiness too. I'll go for a walk. I'll figure out dinner. I'll dig up my dahlia tubers and store them in the basement. Probably I'll be on the horn with my kid, emoting about the NYC election.

I'm very much enjoying this year's high school cohort. They arrived at the first class ready to be serious and engaged, but now they are starting to let loose and be silly together, which adds to the fun. And my car was very well behaved, which is a relief, given my looming Vermont trip. Altogether it's been a good, if hectic, week, and I am full of sap.

And my long-poem draft awaits . . . 

Tuesday, November 4, 2025

In the homeland the hardwood trees are mostly bare now, and the tamaracks have entered into their golden glory. Soon they, too, will drop their needles, but for a brief span they are suns.

Their brilliance made the drive north beautiful. Altogether it was a good trip. Yesterday was my car's first long trip with her new rack-and-pinion, and the tight steering made me feel like I was handling a sports car on the curves--an unaccustomed sensation, for sure. Clearly the steering had been deteriorating for a while, but slowly enough to keep me unaware, until things got really flabby. I can almost imagine I'm driving a new car (which, considering the number of pieces I've replaced in the past two years, is more or less true).

I arrived in Wellington to celebration: it's hunting season, and Steve had just gotten a deer. The sorrows of death and life, so tangled. I've never been a hunter, but I understand the confusions of gratitude. How Steve thanked the doe. How winter looms.

Monday, November 3, 2025

Transcription of actual text correspondence between Teresa and Dawn, after this weekend's Whitman session

 T: 🔥

D: I cannot wait to spend time with your draft over the next couple of weeks. You are writing so well!

T: OMG I just was thinking about how you and I are going to have so much fun working together on what we’re writing!! I feel we’re figuring out the architecture of the next-poems that have been baffling us. Does that make sense? 

D: Yes!!!

T: It’s so fucking exciting!

D: I feel more energized about my work than I have for a long time 

T: Me, too.

I dearly hope this class is mattering to the actual participants. But it for sure has lit the burner under my own work--almost explosively so--and under Teresa's also. We've now got a two-week gap before the next zoom session takes place, and while the participants are sharing their work and responses among themselves, Teresa and I will be doing the same.

I am so deeply, massively relieved to be in the zone again. Of course I've been writing writing writing for the past month and a half, and of course that essay was real work. But it wasn't creation fire. And now the fire is back.

Today I'll drive up to Harmony to go for a walk with a friend, then slip over to Wellington to spend the night with other friends, then head to Monson on Tuesday for a day with my high schoolers, and then the long drive home, and voting, and catching up on home obligations. I'll be tired. But my heart feels so light now that I've got this big pot on the simmer. I don't mind being tired. I've got a poem.

Sunday, November 2, 2025

I do love baseball, and I am always a little glum when the last game of the season ends and winter buckles on its galoshes. Though I was rooting hard for the Blue Jays and game 7 didn't end as I'd hoped, this World Series was nonetheless excellent: one thrilling game after another and so many stellar performances. It was a fine end-of-summer party.

Yesterday's class went well, I think, despite a couple of unnerving participant emergencies. The quality of the poets' drafts is really, really high, to my great delight. Whitman is unlocking something for these writers.

Now, if only I can prevent them from scrubbing the dirt off their messy starts and tying up their flapping loose ends and inventing neat logical transitions and shaping tidy conclusions and nailing their metaphors to the wall, etc. That is the big danger: the urge to reduce, fix, polish, when you're in the midst of a sloppy strange mystery. I know there are participants in the class who feel safest when they're in control. But this is primordial mud we're tracking all over the house. I hope, hope, hope they will try hard to keep their mops in the cupboard.

Saturday, November 1, 2025

Three groups of trick-or-treaters knocked at our door last night, and Chuck was overcome with the excitement. At the end of the evening he flopped on the couch like he'd been chasing rabbits. Halloween! What a holiday!

This morning he seems to have recovered his equanimity and has resumed his usual purring spot against my left shoulder. The wind, which was whistling all day and all night, has died down to a steady breeze, and a coral sunrise is romantically staining my neighbors' white vinyl siding. It looks like the perfect day to talk about Whitman.

This morning before class I'll get out for a walk or a bike ride. I'll marinate chicken for dinner and deal with laundry and dishes. And then we'll begin the big Walt experiment. Can spending two weeks with "Crossing Brooklyn Ferry" really help us carve out a messy, surprising long poem draft? I guess we'll find out.

This class is among the most complex I've ever designed: lots of talk, lots of writing, plus lots of participant interaction, which can be tricky in a virtual setting. And it's long: two weekends on zoom, with a gap week between, when the poets will be working together without my interference. I'm excited. Rereading "Brooklyn Ferry" this summer blew a hole between my ears, and I can't wait to find out how I'm going to respond to our conversation about it as well as to my own prompts. With luck I'll dig a real draft out of this experience. With luck other people will too.

Nonetheless, the class will be a marathon. That's the long poem way, always chasing us up Heartbreak Hill.

Friday, October 31, 2025

It poured rain all night and is still drizzling now. The garden is beautifully sopped, and I'm so glad I did manage to get those hostas transplanted, and even a few leaves raked, before the storm.

Because I'll be teaching all weekend, today is my holiday. Other than answering a few emails and prepping for tomorrow's class, I am not planning to accomplish anything that isn't my own stuff. I finished both editing jobs this week, my high school plans are done, the Baron essay is done, the vacuuming and bathrooms are done. So I'll go for a walk in the dripping woods, I'll throw a load of sheets into the washing machine, and then I'll settle into whatever I feel like messing around with . . . poems, garden, reading, cooking. I do have a haircut appointment this afternoon, and afterward I'll step over to my neighbor's house to watch the baking show with her, but nobody could label either of those activities work. I am very much looking forward to my day.

I'd like to finish The Waves and "Song of Myself." I'd like to make my way through another chunk of Little Dorrit. I'd like to work on poem drafts and maybe start printing out pieces so that I can begin to imagine a collection. I'd like to pick up Alice Notley's "The Descent of Alette" at the library. I'd like to sit by the fire and do a crossword puzzle. I'd like to rake a few leaves and harvest some kale. I'd like to play mousie with Chuck. I'd like to slowly dice up vegetables for minestrone. I won't do nearly all of this, but any of it would satisfy me.

We'll probably get a few tricker-or-treaters tonight, but we rarely see many. For some reason our little street doesn't draw them. But no matter the number, Chuck will be amazed and excited. Everything thrills that guy. Dry leaves! Dixon Ticonderoga pencils! A bread tie! Dawn's nose! 

Thursday, October 30, 2025

I woke to a cool and cloudy morning, with rain in the forecast for tonight, I'm pleased to report. 

Yesterday afternoon I snagged half an hour to cut back the rest of my lily and iris stalks. This afternoon maybe I'll get a chance to split and transplant a few hostas before the storm arrives. That depends on how swiftly I can plow through my house and desk chores. I did get next week's high school plans sussed out, and I'm making quick progress on the copyediting, so I'm hopeful.

My brain is slowly beginning to unclot itself. I am feeling lighter, less tangled, which is a surprise to me as tomorrow is the first anniversary of Ray's death, which I have been dreading. Last night we went out to listen to Jonathan Richman, who of course I first heard with Ray . . . those Modern Lovers songs, so plain, so naked with longing, unwinding themselves at midnight in the concrete cocoon of a dorm room.

But somehow, last night, I wasn't freighted with loss. I was just listening to a man in his seventies sing and play guitar, and I was happy to be witnessing how lively and full of curiosity such a man can be. I was happy to be reminded that life is for being alive. Here we are. So let's be here.

Wednesday, October 29, 2025

I woke up this morning to the excellent news that the Blue Jays knocked superhuman pitcher Shohei Ohtani out of the game in the sixth inning, winning the contest despite an injury to one of their best hitters in the previous day's eighteen-inning grind. Ah, baseball. You are such a romance.

Now Little Chuck has had his breakfast, Tom and I have had our coffee, and I am sitting here in my couch corner contemplating the day ahead. I had a good night's sleep, and I'm feel vastly lightened, now that I've finished that essay. I turned in my first CavanKerry assignment as well, so I'm altogether less overwhelmed than I was. Today I've got to work on high school plans and return to my academic copyediting project, but later I might actually have a chance to work in the garden, or even look at my own poems. And tonight T and I are going out to a Jonathan Richman show, so altogether the day will have a novel flavor.

Yesterday Teresa and Jeannie and I talked about moving forward with the Substack journal we've been planning but have thus far not executed. For all three of us Baron's death has been a blow, not least because he was the person who brought us together in the first place. We've been churning in a sort of group maelstrom over it, none of us able to make much progress with other work. So it was a relief to discover we were able to compile a few sensible plans about moving forward with the journal.

Sunshine today. 

Tuesday, October 28, 2025

Today is my younger son's 28th birthday, and I wish him the sweetest of days in far-off Brooklyn. He is one of the great joys of my life, so full of feeling and thought, so wholehearted about what matters. He remains my most persistent phone caller, the family member most likely to get a poem read to him, a sports romantic, lover of rivers, whisperer of cats. How I adore him.

Yesterday I got a solid start on my two editing projects and, thank goodness, I finally finished the Baron essay and was able to send it to his wife for her okay. Today I'll run it past the rest of the contributors, and then I'll submit it to the journal editor, and then, I hope, I can take a deep breath and let myself off the hook. Writing that piece has been a massive undertaking. From the start I have felt unqualified, unready, unhappy, and also unable to say no. So I did it, and now there are twelve manuscript pages of shadow.

This morning I'll get onto my mat and return to my editing jobs, and in the afternoon I'll zoom with Jeannie and Teresa. I'd like to think I'll finish the manuscript commentary today, but we'll see. That kind of focus can be slow work. The press sent me one of Baron's author letters to show me how he was thinking and talking about the collections he edited, so in that regard I am still carrying his weight, even without the essay around my neck. But I guess that is my job right now.

Anyway, the sun will shine. Little Chuck will sit at the open front door watching the leaves blow. I'll pour tea and read Virginia Woolf over lunch. The Carolina wren will sing in the bare lilacs. Far to my south a hurricane will shred lives. The abyss is difficult to fathom.

Monday, October 27, 2025

It's 34 degrees this morning, just shy of a frost. I got a lot done in the garden yesterday, though not everything I'd hoped to accomplish. But the furniture is stowed, I cut up sticks and bagged them, and  I pruned the massive elderberry and bagged the trimmings. I also made good progress on cutting back perennials. I hope I can get more of that finished this week, as well as do some transplanting, but these jobs always take longer than I think they will.

The next few weeks are going to be hectic. I'll be teaching or traveling for three weekends in a row, plus embarking on my usual Monson jaunts. But at least I'll be sleeping in my own bed for the next seven days. This morning I'll go for my walk, and then I'll turn my thoughts to finishing the Baron essay. This week I've got a poetry manuscript to comment on and a small academic project to copyedit. I need to prep for my high schoolers and go over my long-poem syllabus and show up for some meetings. I've got to keep up with house chores and cook meals and, with luck, get back into the garden. Life feels kind of dizzying, but the great news is that I am not sick and my car isn't terrifying and my cupboards are full of ingredients.  Also, my kitten is no longer sad.

I still don't know when I'll be able to think seriously about my own poems. I keep writing them, tucking my drafts around the edges of obligation. I keep reading and reading. But there has been no space to plan a collection. Maybe once I finish the essay, I can hoard that space for myself. Life seems so eager to crowd me out.

Sunday, October 26, 2025

I spent yesterday morning in the garden: cleaning out the last of the delicate crops--peppers, eggplant, okra. We haven't had a frost yet, but they'd clearly stopped growing, so goodbye. I pulled carrots and dismantled the insect nets, and did a thorough weeding of the vegetable beds. I planted, then mulched the garlic. I collected the outside chairs, drained the hoses, stowed the table, the fire grate, and the cold frame. Today T and I will finagle the chairs and hoses through the cellar hatch for storage, carry the snow shovels out to the shed, and then that stage of fall cleanup will be done.

Today I'll work on pruning perennials, bagging sticks, and, I hope, splitting my hostas so I can fill some blank spaces in the backyard beds. I might start raking leaves into the gardens, though there are many more leaves to fall.

Baron's pink dahlias still bloom bravely. The orange nasturtiums and white zinnias are hanging on. The blueberry bushes and the Japanese maple are brilliant crimson. Despite the drought the yard glows red and gold and green. Kale, chard, and lettuce flutter in the vegetable garden. The sturdy herbs are thriving; even the basil, though wan, is hanging onto life.

In the cellar, the firewood is stacked. Boxes and buckets are filled with kindling. The furnace is clean. The tank is full. There is a basket of potatoes and onions. Drying shirts and pants tremble on the clotheslines. Upstairs in the freezer are bags of wild mushrooms, green beans, kale, corn, peppers; boxes of tomato sauce, peaches, chicken stock. In the refrigerator: peppers, carrots, cabbage, celery, beets--some of it mine, all of it local.

I feel rich. It's not like I've forgotten that obscene car-repair bill and the rest of our endless suck of expenses. But the homestead snugness of late autumn is so reassuring. We have food. We have heat. Let the storms arise.

Saturday, October 25, 2025

Saturday, dark and cool. A fire in the stove. Hot coffee in my cup. I dreamed that Chuck was dreaming, and that I had access to the rolling receipt for the expense of what he was dreaming: $4,000 and counting. What might a little cat dream that would cost so much? Perhaps pushing crystal off counters or eating an expensive parakeet. The dream-within-a-dream did not divulge.
 
Hey, how about those Canadians and their pinch-hit grand slam? I suppose I ought to be rooting against the Blue Jays, given that they're divisional foes of the Red Sox. But I've seen so many of these players in their youth: the Jays' AA squad is the New Hampshire Fisher Cats, which regularly plays our Portland Sea Dogs. So I have been watching Vlad Guerrero and Bo Bichette since they were baby big leaguers and am feeling motherly pride in them.

This weekend will be my last restful one for a while. Next weekend I'll be teaching, the following one I'll probably be in Vermont, then I'll be teaching again, and then Thanksgiving will be upon us. So today and tomorrow I'm going to plant garlic, stow away hoses and outside furniture, continue cutting back my perennials, and otherwise try to catch up before the cold decides to arrive. The days won't just be chores: this afternoon T and I might go to a movie; tomorrow we're having dinner with friends.

I am looking forward to being outside, to the crunch of leaves under my old sneakers, to the satisfactions of mulching a garlic bed for winter. I like the sleepiness of autumn; I like saying, "Goodnight till spring."

Yesterday I finished a small editing assignment in the morning, then spent much of the rest of the day fine-tuning the Baron essay, reading The Waves, reading "Song of Myself." I baked an apple cake so that my neighbor and I could have a snack while we watched the new British baking show episode . . . the exact same cake I'd baked the day before for my poetry group, assuming I'd have leftovers for our tea party. That was not the case: apparently poets really like apple cake. The recipe is my tweaked version of a Joy of Cooking standard, and one of these days I'll type it up and share it with you because this cake is a winner: beautiful, delicious, and quick, especially if you possess one of those fine old-fashioned apple peeler-corer-slicers.

Once I finish this essay, I'm hoping I can transfer some of that momentum to poetry. I need to start thinking seriously about organizing a new collection; I need to start trudging through my own rough and rocky fields. I'll be on the road so much during the next few months. I've got so many work and family obligations. But surely the poems will come to me. Because I want them so much.

Friday, October 24, 2025

I spent much of yesterday with young Chuck, my sticky shadow, who preferred to keep me in sight at all times. Every time I sat down, there he was, coiling himself against shoulder or hip, climbing into my lap to lick my face. At night he immediately got into bed with me (which has not generally been his pattern) and curled against my cheek for the next eight hours. That was annoying, but I more or less put up with it because the poor kid is clearly in need of reassurance. Here's hoping he has a more relaxed Friday.

Today I'll get onto my mat and then turn my thoughts to a small editing project before going back to revising the Baron essay. My work life, it seems, is about to undergo yet another shift. I was contacted a few days ago by the editor-in-chief of the press where Baron had worked for years as the primary developmental editor: that is, the person who reads accepted manuscripts and shares advice about organization, infelicities, poem choice, and so on--not copyediting (which focuses on line issues such as spelling and punctuation) but holistic commentary on the overall presentation of the collection. The editor-in-chief wondered if I might want to take on this job. I thought about it and decided yes. The work won't accrue into a lot of hours, but it is paid and will allow me to step away, at least occasionally, from the copyediting grind. So I'm pleased . . . to be honest, I'm really kind of chuffed to have been invited to take over for the man. Somehow his generosity continues, even after death.

I should get off this couch and start dragging the recycling and compost outside for pickup, but a fire is crackling in the stove and I would much rather stay here and watch it. Though I dearly love the cottage, I'm glad to be back in my tidy shabby familiar nest. I'll roast mackerel for dinner; the World Series begins tonight. Go, Canadians! Have a sweet day, friends.

Thursday, October 23, 2025

I taught all day yesterday--a really good and lively class, I'm glad to report. Then Tom picked me up and drove us home through pouring rain, and after we unloaded the truck, I went out again into the pouring rain to fetch home young Chuck.

So now our little pack has been reunited. Chuck appears to have grown several inches while in custody, and he came home bewildered . . . happy to see us, but very confused by why and what and where. Fortunately, the comfort of bed seems to have reassured him, and I woke up this morning with his cheek pressed against mine, just like old times. In his short life he's had so much uproar: born into chaos, then the coils of foster care, then a calm stint with us, and then suddenly the cat kennel, which I'm sure felt like a return to the dark, no matter how nice they were to him, and I do know they were nice.

Well, today I will devote myself to him. I've got various catch-up things to accomplish--laundry, housework--but I can certainly make the kitten the center of attention if he needs that. I'd like to work on my Baron essay, and I'd like to go out to write tonight. I want to take a walk. I want to wander in my garden. I have a small editing assignment awaiting me, but I won't look at it until tomorrow. Today is about remembering home.

Wednesday, October 22, 2025

On this dark morning Monson is cocooned in fog. Truck headlights slice through, heading toward work in Dover-Foxcroft or Greenville. A few windows shimmer.

Yesterday morning I sat in the cottage and finished the first draft of my Baron essay. It's got a few holes, but essentially it is there, beginning to end. The writing has been a huge task, one I wasn't very sure I could accomplish. I am still not sure I have accomplished it. However, something exists.

Then, in the afternoon, we left the island and wound our way into the interior. The sea feels very far from this solid land of lake and ledge and tree. And now here I sit, wishing for coffee, which I can't get until the store opens at 6:30, and trying to cast my memory over the teaching plans I prepped a week ago and haven't thought much about since.

I do know we'll be working with Sappho fragments, writing drafts that play with ideas of swelling and shrinkage. But my mind is distracted, a little sleepy, enwrapped in essay, fogged over.

Tuesday, October 21, 2025

After last night's gale, the cove is a slow band of ripples. A breeze trembles the sodden hedgerows, and the spruce trees shiver in their granite beds. The sky is streaked with cloud and a few raindrops swirl.

It is our last morning here till April. Yesterday, before the storm, T chainsawed up some fallen cedar and we carted the logs to our friend's woodpile. Cedar doesn't put out much heat, but it is sweet-scented and crackly, lovely in an open fireplace. Then we drove out to Long Pond and did a five-mile hike over Western Mountain, nearly deserted on an autumn Monday. Now and again rain spat into the lake. The forest was mossy--dark spruce and fir glowering under the impending storm, the hardwoods bright glimpses of gold and red.

Now I sit in front of the big glowing wood stove, coffee pot hissing, wind wailing in the chimney. Maybe we'll go out for a last clamber over rocks. Maybe we'll stay snug. After lunch we'll head west, back to the mainland, skirting Bangor, following Route 15 into the homeland, our old familiar landscape of forest and shack, rough fields, weary towns, slow hills, long low sky.

Monday, October 20, 2025

 I had a visitation from Baron last night in my dreams. He looked and acted like himself, though he was driving a Mustang. I looked and acted like myself, though I was also immersed in my familiar dream distress about forgetting to feed my goats. In this dream it was my job to empty out the barn, scrub it clean, right down to the concrete floor. Then, and only then, would Baron show me how to repair the cracks. And I did get that barn clean, the cleanest barn floor you ever saw, webbed with almost invisible cracks. But of course the dream faded away before I learned how to fix them.



Yesterday morning we drove over to Ship Harbor to watch the waves crash on the rocks, then spent the afternoon on a somewhat too cold deck overlooking the marina at Southwest Harbor watching an 80-year-old gravel-voiced powerhouse named Roberta sing and strut and play the piano. It was pretty great.

Today we'll probably get out for a more serious hike, and we'll need to do some firewood chores for our friend before the rain comes in. But for the moment I am recovering from my visitation. My dead friend Jilline still visits me regularly. But Ray has never visited me. I did not expect Baron, and here he was.

Sunday, October 19, 2025


This was Goose Cove yesterday afternoon.

We arrived just before 4, stopping first for crab sandwiches and the No Kings rally in Ellsworth, then for a walk through Nature Conservancy land on Indian Point. The temperature has been mild, in the 50s day and night, and now sea air filters into the cottage as I start a wood fire crackling in the big stove. An open window and a warm wood stove: it's one of the great luxuries.

Usually we're here a couple of weeks later in the season, when the leaves have fallen and the weather has stiffened. But this year we've arrived during the sweet height of autumn. Though the drought has dimmed the tree colors, they're still laden. Asters bloom in the hedgerows, and wandering clusters of nuthatches peep like little kazoo orchestras. 

Now, at sunrise, this is the cove. The lobster boats are at work, engines grumbling, lights ablaze, as the lavender clouds unroll. One crow shouts, then another. I stand in the yard, amazed to be bare-legged outside at 7 a.m. in mid-October Maine, a little too cold, yes, but persevering a moment longer before returning to coffee and wood fire.

This afternoon we're going out with our friend to listen to a jazz show in Southwest Harbor. That's the only plan on the schedule, other than chicken on the grill for dinner. Maybe we'll climb a mountain or clamber over rocks on the shore. Maybe we'll stack firewood. Maybe we'll wrap ourselves in coats and sit in the yard and read. Maybe it will be a good day to be wordless.

Saturday, October 18, 2025

Saturday morning. I still have all of my packing to do, but the groceries are in the house, the laundry is done, the editing project is shipped, and Little Chuck is at the cat motel. I think we're going to try to time our arrival so we can take part in the No Kings rally in Southwest Harbor, if I can get myself pulled together.

We'll be traveling heavy, with a chainsaw and its accessories and possibly our bikes, as well as the usual coolers and baskets and boots and books and games and water supply. I've decided to bring along The Waves and Trollope's Barchester Towers, plus Anne Carson's Sappho translations and the ms of Baron's new collection.

I wonder what I'll actually find myself reading.

I am feeling lighter, with the big editing project temporarily off my shoulders. I'll have a couple of smaller projects waiting for me when I get home, but this breathing space is a boon. I might actually spend the weekend not thinking about either teaching or editing . . . though the essay still looms large.

We love the cottage for many reasons--the sea outside the window, the cozy sweet shabbiness, our old friend across the yard. It does not belong to us, but also it does. I'll dig in the garden. T will cut up tree limbs. A lobster boat will idle in the cove. Bluejays will quarrel in the spruce trees. Chimney smoke will tremble in a cloud of drizzle.

Friday, October 17, 2025

Friday, cool and dark. All week I've been able to sleep in a bit, thanks to Tom's uneven work schedule, and  this small respite has been really helpful. My health is better, my general weariness is lifting, and I've been able to buckle down and get things done during the day. Yesterday I did indeed finish the editing assignment, and this morning I'll pull together the bits and pieces and send the files to the author, then turn my attention to travel prep: laundry, meal plotting, groceries, packing, plant watering, waving tearful adieu to Little Chuck.

Always the burning question: what books do I bring? And how much work will I actually accomplish there? The cottage is a famous place for doing nothing in particular, no matter how I plan otherwise. There we are, two energetic people on vacation in the middle of a national park, and are we climbing Cadillac? Are we making art? No, we are lolling on a beat-up wing chair, drinking coffee from a mug named Ernie, eying a Louise Penny mystery, and considering a 10 a.m. nap.

It's possible that won't happen again on this visit, but I have my doubts.

On the other hand, maybe in the quiet mornings I'll write a few more pages of my Baron essay. I'll mull over hazy thoughts of my next collection. I'll read Virginia Woolf with care and attention. Who knows?

Last week's bad-news birthday was a sucker punch, and I've had no chance, or desire, to undergo my annual take-stock-of-who-I-am reflections. I am now 61 years old . . . that's a lot of old, and I ought to take a look at it and ponder what's going on. Maybe that's what I'll end up doing at the cottage: I'll think about being.

Or I'll venture into the drizzle, perch myself on a pile of broken granite, and stare at seabirds rocking wildly in the surf,

Thursday, October 16, 2025

Another cool morning, though we haven't had a frost yet. Still, by late afternoon it feels good to set match to paper and feel the first flames of warmth lick up from the kindling.

The next couple of days will be busy. I hope to finish my editing project this morning. And Thursday is my usual housework day--bathrooms and floors and general tidying. Today and tomorrow I've got to start pulling myself together for our trip to the island on Saturday. Poor Little Chuck has to go to the cat kennel tomorrow, and I'm sorrowful about dropping him off in a strange place. But he is too young to stay alone in the house and has too many gut issues for a long car ride.

Tonight I'll go out to write; tomorrow I'll do the grocery shopping for the cottage and attempt some sort of reasonable packing strategy. We will be on the island for a few days, then in Monson overnight so that I can teach the next day, then home that afternoon. So I'll have to pack camp clothes and school clothes, books for the cottage and books for work. Clearly I won't be traveling light.

But for the moment I am allowing myself to be quiet. The clock ticks. The refrigerator hums. The books on the table whisper among themselves. The walls of this house are a fragile shell. Above the roof, the universe lofts its uneasy weight.

Wednesday, October 15, 2025

T goes back to work today, but with a later start than usual so we've had yet another small respite from the alarm clock.

Despite my small wake-up holiday, I've been editing hard all week and have nearly caught up to where I should be, schedule-wise. And I've prepped for my Monson class, finished the Ondaatje novel, and spent time with The Waves and Alice Notley's The Descent of Alette. Work is getting done.

Today will be more scattershot. I'll need to drive my car back to the garage for an inspection sticker. I'm walking with a friend early; then another friend is dropping by in the afternoon because he needs to mourn Baron in company. Maybe, after he leaves, I'll work in the garden--cut down a few more dying perennials, spread a few more bags of soil. I don't know what my state of mind will be, but I am beginning to feel less tired . . . less wrung out, anyway.

In a few minutes I'll get showered, get dressed, get moving. I'll deal with laundry, dishes, firewood, litter box. I'll drop off the car, make breakfast, kiss Tom goodbye. I'll prepare to be sociable.

But always, behind the busyness, the rattle of loneliness. A pebble in a cavern. It echoes.

Tuesday, October 14, 2025

Somehow, though the wind whipped and the skies glowered, we never got a drop of rain yesterday. Such a disappointment. I long for days of wet, but the drought goes on and on.

Tuesday. T is home again, so I am allowing myself another slowish start before I trudge up to my desk. I'll finish editing a chapter, then turn my thoughts to high school plans. I'll get onto my mat; I'll return a library book; I'll figure out something for dinner.

In the meantime the big kitten curls against my shoulder and purrs into my ear. Dear little Charles. He glows with such cheerful light.

Today Vox Populi has published "Don't Tell Me You Don't Know What Love Is," my elegy to Ray. I didn't choose the timing but it is poignant. Ray died last October, while we were staying at the cottage in West Tremont. And now it is another October, and we'll drive out again to the cottage on Saturday.

I wrote a note to myself while cooking dinner the other night: "In a way it is romantic to grow old." All of the loves gathering round.

Monday, October 13, 2025

Monday morning, and Tom is still asleep. Because he's being shifted from one house assignment to another, he's ended up with a couple of empty days, so he's taking them off, and I'm glad for him. We're heading to West Tremont next weekend for our autumn visit to the cottage, which means he'll have time off next week too, and that's a very good thing. He works so hard; too hard. Being an aging laborer is not an easy life.

But I'll be at work today. I'm already behind schedule on the editing project, thanks to being sick for three weeks. And I need to prep for next week's high school class and return to my Poetry Kitchen plans and keep grinding away at the Baron essay.

Still, I was able to sleep a bit late, and I can sit here quietly for a little longer than usual. I'll get out for my walk before the rains begin. Even though I have to work, I feel less rushed than I usually do on a Monday morning.

I did get another few pages done on the Baron essay yesterday, and I did attend to my poem draft. I weeded and deadheaded dahlias and spread new soil in the garden boxes. I fell asleep, hard, for two hours. I made baked penne with fresh sauce and leftover lamb. I made quick pickles. I listened to an hour of baseball and was delighted to learn that the Blue Jays' radio broadcast is sponsored by "Armstrong Bird Food." For some reason that struck me as hilarious.

And today the rains will come. And I might start a fire in the wood stove early, to celebrate. And I'l make fish chowder for dinner because chowder is a rainy-day comfort.

We are snug here. And I am still feeling kind of lost.

Sunday, October 12, 2025

I slept badly for most of the night, then fell asleep hard at around 4 and didn't wake until after 6. I do appreciate these unclocked weekend mornings. So many years and years of 5 a.m. alarms . . . it's been wearing. I'm naturally an early riser, but there's something exhausting about being constantly told what to do.

The house is quiet. Tom and Chuck are still a-bed. I hear a distant growl of traffic. I hear a crow.

Yesterday I tore out the cucumber, bean, and cherry tomato plants. I took down the groundhog fencing, pulled up stakes and trellises, emptied flowerpots, lugged everything into the shed for storage or to the leaf pile for composting. I cleaned and trimmed the garlic that had been curing in the shed. I chopped hot peppers for the freezer. I simmered a batch of sauce.

And I worked on a poem, the first I've attempted for many weeks.

The garden isn't bare. There's still kale and chard and lettuce. I left the okra and pepper plants. Marigolds and nasturtiums and zinnias and dahlias are blooming wildly.

I wish I could say that my poem draft is also blooming wildly. But I'm not sure what it's doing. At least it exists, and at least I am attending to it.

My plan today is to do some weeding and then start spreading bagged compost over the garden beds and boxes. And to read Woolf's The Waves and Ondaatje's In the Skin of a Lion. And to attend to that poem draft.

What I am is tired.

Saturday, October 11, 2025

Saturday morning dark. Coffee steams in a white cup. A big kitten full of breakfast leans against my shoulder and purrs lustily into my left ear. Outdoors the air is chilly, but in the house dregs of warmth still rise from last night's wood fire.

I have nothing on the calendar, nowhere I have to go. My plan for the weekend is to work in the garden, work in the kitchen, work on Baron's essay, work on my own poems. I'll probably treat Monday like a regular weekday as I'm unsure if Tom has the day off. (His schedule is temporarily weird.)

The living room is shadowy. On the mantle Baron's dahlias are rosy and subdued in the gray light. The kitchen clock ticks. The refrigerator growls. The books on the table are mysterious.

Yesterday afternoon Teresa, Jeannie, and I met on zoom to talk about Baron. For all of us his death has been a blow, not least because he was the one who brought us together. I met Jeannie at his house in Hallowell. I met Teresa at the Frost Place when I was his assistant at the teaching conference. That was the kind of thing he did: he saw who needed each other, and he opened a door.

It's hard to overstate how lonely I was as a writer in Harmony. I had made two friends at poetry retreats; yet though they were real friends (and remain so), neither clung to poetry with my obsessive seriousness. But Baron not only taught me; he led me into a world of real ambition: not for place or prize, but for poetry itself. As a Romantic, I was starry-eyed. This was what being a poet could mean. This was the life I dreamed of.

And in many ways it is the life I have lived, the life that Baron showed me was possible. To make poetry the center of my days. To bring words into conversation with the work of my hands. To become more generous to other people. To take the risk of saying something that is almost impossible to say.

Last October, Ray died, and with him a certain wildness in me died. But Baron's death has left me in a different state of mind. In all the years I knew him, he was constantly working to give me to myself. He strove to keep me from depending on his opinion. He pushed me into teaching situations that I didn't think I was ready for. He gave me friends and then detached himself, let us swim away into our own futures. His goal as a teacher was to teach himself out of a job, and that's a motto I have since shared many times in my own classes and conferences.

Yes, I do feel like an orphan. But also I feel like a poet.

Friday, October 10, 2025

Outside the temperature is 34 degrees and inside the furnace is running for the first time this season. Maybe we didn't quite get a frost, but it was close.

Yesterday afternoon I picked all of the Serranos, the only one of my pepper plants that came to anything in the drought--though it was supposed to be a hot pepper and the fruits are not, so what's the explanation for that? I picked a few tiny eggplants and the last of the cherry tomatoes and a bouquet of basil. But I let the beans and cucumbers ride: they have more than done their duty for every other vegetable this summer.

The day was busy. I cleaned house, finished most of an editing chapter, and walked down the street to pick up our first CSA delivery, a beautiful bundle of carrots, potatoes, peppers, spinach, and scallions, with a fat spaghetti squash on the side. When Tom got home, we drove to Yarmouth to fetch my car from the mechanic. I made a batch of biscuits and took them with me when I went out to write.

And now it's Friday. In a few minutes I'll deal with recycling and trash and compost. I'll get sheets started in the washing machine. I'll do my exercises and answer emails and get back to my editing. I'll go to the grocery store and have a zoom meeting.

Behind all of this busyness, the memory of Baron shifts in my mind like small ripples in a cove. He was a gardener, with a special love for flowers. He cared about the work of the hands: digging soil, splitting wood. Our chores were a bond, as much as our passion for words.

I am doing my chores.

Thursday, October 9, 2025

I spent so much time talking yesterday--blessedly, over coffee with Gretchen, then over the phone with Teresa, then another phone call with my sister, then via countless notes that I still haven't fully waded through. I did manage to do some editing around the edges, but the sorrow words were heavy. "That's not bad, though," said Tom, after he got home later in the afternoon. I was standing wanly in the kitchen, surely looking overwhelmed. But he was right. It's been more than not bad. It's been necessary. When a beloved writer dies, words are the mourning.

Last October, after Ray died, Tom and I and our boys knew that we were not officially family, but we were nonetheless treated by the real family as part of them, given our long and complex closeness. This time around there's a starker difference. I'm in no way family. But I know I do stand in a unique place: I was Baron's student who became his colleague and then the chosen heir of his program. He brought me up, and then he trusted me to carry on a sliver of his work. There was certainly a kind of parentalism involved, but also, in later years, there was a detachment. He didn't oversee me. He left me alone to find my own way of managing the conference. I wonder if that was difficult or easy.

Today I need to continue working my way through the emails. I need to clean the house. I need to get more editing done. My car is still in the shop, but supposedly it will be ready sometime today. I dearly hope I'll go out to write tonight. I've missed two weeks in a row and I'm lonely for my poets.

Ah, sorrow.

Wednesday, October 8, 2025

My dear mentor, Baron Wormser, died yesterday, only weeks after being diagnosed with inoperable brain cancer. He died at home, quietly, with his wife and children and sister present. It was, his wife tells me, a good death.

I told her that I don't know whether the fact he died on my birthday is a weight or a lightness.

I told her that Baron made me, as a poet. He gave me myself.

Tom took me out for dinner last night and we had a celebration/wake.

My car got towed away to the shop. My phone is pulsing with love notes and sorrow notes. Apparently something shitty happened in the public realm yesterday, but I haven't been able to look at the news yet.

A small rain is falling. The scent rises through the open window.