Archive for the 'Travel' CategoryPage 2 of 2

On the road again: West Coast, East Coast, Midwest, go!!

Yes, I am just about to take off again for parts known and unknown.
2 pm Saturday, November 10th, I’ll be doing a Teen Writing Workshop at the Lynnwood Library in beautiful Lynnwood, Washington. (Thanks for making such a cool graphic advertising it, Lynnwood Library webfolk!)

Exactly seven days later, at 2 pm Saturday, November 17th, I’ll have a signing at the National Conference of Teachers of English in equally beautiful (but in a different way) New York City.

And then, on Monday the 19th at 1:30 pm, I’ll be on a panel for the Assembly on Literature for Adolescents Workshop, with several illustrious compatriots: Holly Black, Cecil Castellucci, Garret Freymann-Weyr, and Jo Knowles; we will be illustriously moderated by Ann Angel.

10 am Saturday, November 24th, I’ll be at the Mid-Ohio Con, mostly to sell comics, but I’ll have some Rules and Empresses on hand, too.

I’m excited!

(Also kind of tired just thinking about it.)

But mostly excited!

Portland 1997/Stumptown 2007

September 28th, 1997: I was on a train from Portland back to Ann Arbor. I’d just interviewed for a job. I’d done my first (and so far last) storytime. I read, among other things, Caps For Sale, a story featuring caps (as you might suspect) and monkeys.

Caps for Sale

September 28th, 2007: I wear Bill Mudron’s cap at a Stumptown pre-party.

photo by Joshin aka ocean yamaha

(Also pictured, from right: Terri Nelson, Patrick Farley, and part of Steve Lieber. Photo by ocean yamaha.)

The next night, I take my one and only Stumptown photo, of the refrigerator downstairs at Cosmic Monkey.

whapmy.jpg

In 1997, I could count the Portland people I knew on the fingers of one hand.

In 2007, I need both hands and both feet just to get through all the members of the studio.

How did it happen? The right place, the right time. But you don’t know if it’s the right place, you can’t know that it’s the right time. I remember the night, a few months after we’d moved to Portland, when I kept pushing the radio button presets in my car and getting nothing but static. Finally it dawned on me: they were still set to Ann Arbor stations.

I’ve sat at a lot of tables at a lot of comic conventions since. I used to be notorious for bailing out. Sometimes I’d come back with a sandwich for Steve. Not always. (Sorry, man.)

Then I started writing comics. (Remember about vampirism?) These days, not only do I not leave the con, I often don’t even leave the table.

Everything I bought at Stumptown 2007 was from Dylan Meconis: some original art from Click (not to be confused with the multiple-author novel of the same name, which sounds cool, though I have not yet read it) and a super Shrinky-Dink necklace of a two-page comics spread, panels and word balloons only. Congratulations, Dylan: you’ve made an identity badge for comics writers.

It was 1994, not 1997, when the Offspring released “Come Out And Play (Keep ‘Em Separated),” but allow me a little artistic license with my ten-years-ago vs. today musings, because for the longest time, I tried so hard to keep ‘em separated: librarian life, writer life — and it’s impossible. The library has a table at Stumptown. I didn’t work at it this year, but I have. Other library staff were at non-library tables. People who knew me from the library asked me library questions while I sat at my comics-writer table. I was on a panel about Comics in Libraries and I shifted between writer perspective and librarian perspective so many times I got a sort of mental whiplash. (It was nice to hear the library called “radical and anomalous,” though.) Both/and. Not either/or. You’d think I’d have figured that out sooner.

Two people asked me, “What themes do you usually write about?”

I think the question was code for: “Are there always queer girls and do they always make out?”

But I looked at everything on my table and said, “Relationships and performance.”

A few more things about Stumptown:

This was the first year for costumes.

Hubcap Overlord

Photo again by ocean yamaha.

Spacious Chinese restaurants work well for the inevitable Gigantic Con Dinner, but you can never order enough Pepper Salted Pei Pa Tofu, because no one who hasn’t had it before thinks they’re going to like it, but then they totally do.

It was great to introduce friends to other friends. I had a good conversation with an exhibitor up from L.A., remembered how much I’d liked talking with her last year, and finally deployed the power of the Internet to learn her last name. She wants to move to Portland, it turns out.

October 1, 2007: I’m paying for breakfast, entirely in ones. The barista smiles, raises an eyebrow, and asks, “Are you moonlighting?”

Yes, actually. Have been for years.

I came for a job. I got a community. Thanks, everyone.

P.S. Because I didn’t remember to tag my previous Stumptown posts with News/Appearances (my lack of tagging skills is perhaps the subject of another post), I will tag this one and take this opportunity to let y’all know about the next couple places I’ll be:

September song

All the travel, it’s catching up with me.

Which is not to say I regret any of it. This summer I’ve been in Columbus (and The Usual Undisclosed Location), D.C., San Diego, Chicago (well, outside of Chicago), Boring (which wasn’t), Ashland, and last weekend, Seattle.

I’m very glad I went up. There’s no substitute for spending real, face-to-face time with friends who are mostly present in my life as phone voices, emails and blog posts. We went to some of my favorite places, and added some new ones to the list, notably the Kingfish Cafe. I love having favorite places in multiple cities. Little pockets of places I don’t live end up feeling like home.

But, as is clear from the second paragraph above, I’ve been away from home a lot, lately. And right now, I just want to hunker down and hide in my house and fight off the crud I am trying not to incubate. (No thanks to the lady on the train back to Portland who announced “I’m so sick…I’m totally getting strep throat…unless it’s the partying” in between coughing fits.)

Yesterday I walked a little over five and a half miles. Half that distance was a pleasant perambulation around Green Lake Park with dirtylibrarian. The other half was unplanned and occurred at night, with luggage. We were probably just too impatient, but when the third cab in a row arrived at Union Station, then turned around and drove away without picking up any passengers, it seemed more efficient to walk home. It was a beautiful night for a walk.

So now it’s September, and I’m not leaving town again for a couple of months. I’m trying to focus. To knuckle down without knuckling under. To stop worrying about things I can’t control. To keep the plates spinning, the i’s dotted, the t’s crossed. To close multiple tabs. We’ll see how it goes.

Y’all: what are some of your favorite places in cities where you don’t live?