Thursday, November 08, 2007

Monday, November 05, 2007

Ruthie Monday

For those Ruthie fans who never saw it, a Ruthie Dance with a Dust Mop:



Please excuse the maniacal laugh....

Thursday, November 01, 2007

Halloween

Francine sent this pics around of Vivian's costumes for this Halloween and I love them!!!!



Look how much she has grown!

Francine and Viv, Halloween 2005

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

posted by The Nation October 29, 2007,

Bobby Jindal: Not Much to Celebrate

Billy Sothern

On October 20 Louisiana voters defied the state's image by electing America's youngest governor, an energetic, wonkish 36-year-old suburban New Orleans Congressman who has built a reputation for competence and repudiating government corruption. The election made news across the country. It also made big news in The Times of India; the paper reported that the villagers in the governor-elect's ancestral home of Khanpura celebrated his victory by handing out sweets and performing bhangra, a Punjabi folk dance. In a state where many office holders have nicknames in quotations between their first and last names, Piyush "Bobby" Jindal's election was something different. It was the first election of an Indian-American governor in US history and the first reported time the election of a Deep South governor was celebrated with bhangra.

On election night former Governor Mike Foster, who launched Jindal to power by appointing him secretary of the state's Department of Health and Hospitals at 24, echoed the sentiment of many Louisianans when he explained that Jindal's election means race is no longer an issue in Louisiana politics.

Jindal similarly dismissed the importance of race and class in Louisiana in his victory speech. After a pandering "Go Tigers" in observance of Louisiana State University's football win--but before the country song "Louisiana Saturday Night" ended his speech--he observed, "In America, the only barrier to success is a willingness to work hard and play by the rules."

To arrive at such a conclusion, of course, he must have overlooked Hurricane Katrina's victims, many of whom faced insurmountable barriers to success and wound up in watery graves due to floods from the collapse of poorly designed levees. Jindal also must have looked past the fact that many of the people exposed to that crisis were willing to work and play by the rules; their road to success, however, was barred by an education system ranked among the worst in the country, streets filled with violent crime and few decent-paying jobs for those who did manage to escape all of the other snares of living poor in Louisiana. Indeed, though there are weekly reports on the city's progress and struggles in the national media, Jindal's campaign ignored Hurricane Katrina and Louisiana's crisis of poverty and racial inequality, the issues the storm exposed to a horrified nation.

Perhaps this is why Jindal won only 10 percent of the votes from the state's black population and why he lost in Orleans Parish. Apparently black voters did not see Jindal's prospect for victory as corresponding with their own, even though Jindal broke the conventional wisdom that only white politicians can win statewide office.

Jindal is Louisiana's first nonwhite governor since P.B.S. Pinchback served briefly during Reconstruction in 1872. But for the 90 percent of black voters who cast their votes for the white men who ran against Jindal, the state--which recently contributed to America's discourse on race with a noose hung from a "whites-only tree" in a schoolyard in the rural town of Jena--has not moved past race with Jindal's election.

This is the state where the mostly black citizens fleeing New Orleans after Katrina were barred from crossing the bridge into Jefferson Parish, the white-flight suburb Jindal represented in Congress. (And Jefferson Parish Sheriff Harry Lee, the recently deceased Chinese-American lawman, was one of the chief defenders for his officers' actions, a natural given his past endorsement of racial profiling and using caricatures of African-Americans for paintball target practice.) This is the state from which the US Supreme Court recently granted review of a capital case involving a black defendant wherein the prosecutor struck all potential African-American jurors and then urged the all-white jury not to allow the black defendant to become another O.J. Simpson and escape responsibility for his actions. And most important, this is a state where the black citizenry is disproportionately poor (even worse than most other places in America), cut off from the little prosperity that exists and worst served by crumbling public institutions like the education system and the anemic health system (which Jindal once ran).

So while race may no longer matter to former Governor Foster and may not have barred success for Jindal, there is reason to believe that it is still important to black people in Louisiana, who overwhelmingly rejected Jindal's vision that the state already offers all people equal opportunity.

Even with images of bhangra in my mind, so long as the music goes something like "My brother Bill an' my other brother Jack/Belly full o'beer and a possum in a sack/Fifteen kids in the front porch light/Louisiana Saturday night," it's hard for me to believe that things have changed very much.

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Monday, October 22, 2007

Ruth-Anne

I forget how tiny this dog is. Her personality is HUGE.


Friday, October 19, 2007

Thursday, October 18, 2007

Monday, October 15, 2007

Nap Time

The dogs love nap time. They could be in the middle of super-frenetic activity and if you settle in for a snooze, they drop everything and crawl right in a nook and fall asleep IMMEDIATELY. Wish I could fall asleep like that.

Photo by Billy

Friday, October 12, 2007

Thursday, October 11, 2007

Tuesday, October 09, 2007

Thursday, October 04, 2007

A Conversation With Jenne On the Train to Antwerpen

I have already been yelled at by Jenne since the last post (despite the time difference), but I think one should never pass up an opportunity to tell a friend what you love about them if it is clear in your mind...or camera.

Formulating.




The Delivery:











Reflecting

Wednesday, October 03, 2007

Jenne Thinking

Jenne is always in action, but sometimes I can snap her thinking.


Reading

Fixing Hair

Quick Think Before Speak

Speaking

Thinking

Tuesday, October 02, 2007

Leuven, Belgium


I stayed here with the Vereertbrugghen-Adriaens crew. City Hall is where they (Jenne and Pieter) were married, in the left background and below.

I had to visit to see the new addition: Amos!

Monday, October 01, 2007

Ruthie Monday and Such



Well, I am missing time spent with my computer. I have been running around since getting back form overseas, moving from the apartment to the finished-enough (no plumbing in most of the house, yay!) main house where we plan to stay forever or shoot ourselves.

I am hoping to post pictures of sites from Belgium and various parts of England as soon as things settle down. That would be nice. So nice.

Monday, September 24, 2007

Ruthie Monday

Ruthie just has not stopped wiggling since I got home:

Thursday, September 06, 2007

Billy Sothern Invites You To a Reading From His Book, Down In New Orleans

Hello fellow New Orleanians,

Please comeThursday, September 6, at 6 pm, to Octavia Books for my first ever reading of Down in New Orleans: Reflections from a Drowned City. Hemingway daiquiris (agricole rum, maraschino liquor, fresh lime and grapefruit juices), wine, cheese, and maybe even some raw carrots or broccoli will be available for your reading, pre-game refreshment.

Hope to see you
there.

-Billy

PS Please pass along to others who might
be interested.

Wednesday, September 05, 2007

Currently Out of the Office

I have been and will be away on a trip until the middleof September. Ruthie is with Billy, so no Ruthie Mondays for a bit!

Billy is doing a reading from his book this Thursday at Octavia Books. More info to come!

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Thank you, Karen Cramp!

A lovely Connecticut woman sent us the nicest compliment:


I’ve attached a couple of pictures of Billy’s book on our main display, front and center. Do tell people who are looking to get copies that their local, independent bookstore should have no problem getting it for them. Baker & Taylor and Ingram, the two big distributors to independents like us have plenty in stock. We get our special orders in two days and don’t charge shipping, unlike some large, unpleasant online places that start with an ‘A’.



It took me only two days to tear through the book. It was even better than I’d hoped, based on the wonderful op-ed piece he’d done for the Times. I do a lot of what’s called ‘hand selling’ in our business. I have a herd of loyal customers that take my word for what’s good, and trust that I know their taste and I’ve been so pleased to put this book into their hands.

Best,

Karen Cramp

House of Books

Kent, CT

Saturday, August 18, 2007

A Beautiful Built-in, My Studio and Billy's Office

This cabinet was covered in thick, white paint

The floors had linoleum, there were three layers of sheetrock which even covered the cypress wainscotting in my studio (which you cannot see due to the photo angles and furniture).


This is Billy's office and what my studio looked like before



But the milk paint color is pretty

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

Just arrived in NYC after stopping by New Haven area to visit friends... Ruthie Monday will come as soon as I have all my equipment set up!

Saturday, August 11, 2007

Inez Scroogs, Student Harmonica Instructor

These are photos of a young girl who used to live in our Carondelet house. These photos were taken as a WPA project. Billy found these photos in the Louisiana Division of the New Orleans Public Library online.



Isn't that neat?

Wednesday, August 08, 2007

Thanks for your support!

A lovely woman from Portland, Maine named Shannon asked a very good question. She wanted to know who to contact if she wanted to refer her local bookstore to the distributor of Billy's Book, Down in New Orleans. The publisher of down in New Orleans is the University of California at Berkeley Press. I asked Billy about the specifics and here is his answer:

The information for booksellers interested in ordering books from UC Press is located on their website at http://www.ucpress.edu/books/bookstore/ There is a link for the sales representatives on that page and at that link there is information for the representatives for each region. I think that is how independent bookstores can order copies of the book.

-B


We are happy to hear from Shannon, and double-happy to hear that she thinks that the Portland community would be interested in the book. Thanks!

Tuesday, August 07, 2007

Down in New Orleans is Finally Available!

Look to the right!

Yay!

If you should want to support the book, which we would greatly appeciate, please order it from your local bookstore. We really want to support local business!

Two NOLA bookstores we love:

Octavia Books
-Billy will be reading from his book here on the first Thursday, September 6, time to be announced, but he will probably start at 6pm
Maple Street Bookshop

Billy will be on Thacker Mountain Radio on September 13 at 5:30pm, in Oxford, MS.

Monday, August 06, 2007

The Kitchen

I am very excited about our kitchen. It was a much, much later addition to the house, so it is sort of modern in its lines. We outfitted it with some stand alone Ikea kitchen furniture -the white parts of which will be painted a nice, bright color. Note to all: never drink and put togther Ikea furniture. Never. Not even one harmless little cocktail to deal with a no-AC work environment. It is a very easy process, but a nonchalant/overconfident attitude inspired by the cocktail will result in putting pieces that almost look alike into incorrect places and that royally stinks.


I am most excited by the stencils that I made for the walls. I painted these to about plate rail height and I like the way these turned out. Excuse the dark pics.



For lack of better materials, I used an old vinyl shade I had hanging around for a stencil plate.



Billy and I have always had a Chambers oven in our Nola kitchens. Someone threw this one out after the storm, and Billy picked it up of the street! Free! Now all we have to do is refurbish it and drag it in...