Rare, Collectible, & Otherwise

Tag: Jenks (Page 115 of 122)

Top of the world. The ladder, anyway.

You didn’t volunteer to climb up and change my dead light bulb, so I’m dragging you along with me. I love the light fixtures in the shop but when one goes poof the thought of ascending that ladder brings back childhood fears.

In truth, in my childhood I was pretty fearless. The fear came around in later years when I realized I probably should have died during one of the neighborhood-crazy-kid stunts. Like the giant firecracker we made, emptying the powder from a pack of Black Cats into a single cardboard tube – stuck a fuse in it and ran.

Whoooooomph!

The deep-kabooom echoed off every house in the neighborhood. Needless to say, we made ourselves scarce.

No one even asked us about it, although it was such a mighty explosion that it had to have been heard inside – even those houses at the far end of the block.

Then, there was the tree house. It was little more than a platform built across the gap in a Y-shaped branch. It was probably thirty feet off the ground in an old oak. A climbing kid could get to the platform by way of the tree trunk, where tennis-shoe sized pieces of wood had been nailed into the bark. Or – there was the long pipe.

It was probably a natural gas pipe, long dark metal, from one of the several houses under construction, no doubt, held to a fork in the tree by a short piece of rope wound around and knotted. Strong-armed kids could shimmy up the pole directly onto the platform.

That’s what I was doing and I had just reached the top when the knot came untied. Right in front of my eyes. Literally. I remember staring in disbelief as the last trace of the knot came loose and the rope slowly unwound. One loop, two. Three.

At that point, I was like a pole-vaulter at the apogee of the leap, somehow stopped in place. I was balanced on a long, long pole, hanging on with a hands-and-legs-death-grip, afraid to even take a breath.

Balance doesn’t last long if you aren’t a circus employee. The pole began to lean and I rode it down, finally giving that pole-vault push off ten or fifteen feet above the ground.

I landed flat on my back and – immediately – expelled every square inch of air that had been in my lungs. I was knocked so flat that I couldn’t draw the air back in. It was like a fish out of water, pursing and puckering lips in hopes of a breath, but getting nothing.

Finally it came in with a rush and I realized the worst was over.

Until my Dad came running up. I found out later that one of the gang had run to my house and hammered on the door, yammering that I was dead, having fallen out of a tree. When my father came racing up to my still-prone self, I believe he was more out of breath than I was.

Climbing up a ladder reminds me of how it feels to smack the Earth with the backside of the human body. Hard. I’m cautious as I reach those top rungs, climbing one-handed with a fresh lightbulb in my grip.

On the highest rung that is legal, I can stand on my toes and extend my arm and fingers just high enough to catch the bulb and unscrew it. Don’t like to look down, but it is worse looking up. That requires leaning back over that empty space called air.

The bulb is changed – once the twisting starts it is a pretty quick fix – but just so you can share the feeling of that top of the ladder excitement, you can click on the image for a bird’s eye view of the shop.

I’ll climb back down for you.

Brubeck. Jazz great. Gone.

Today the shop is filled with violins and cellos, but on other days you might hear pianos and saxophones slipping among the book stacks. Music can set the mood or suit the mood, and a man who was good at both was Dave Brubeck.

Jazz music has always intrigued me, although I can’t claim to be one of those finger-snapping, sunglasses-wearing aficionados. I could always recognize Take Five, the Dave Brubeck standard that seemed to be extremely simple and daringly complex at the same time.

Mr Brubeck died of heart failure in Boston today, one day before his 92nd birthday.

Since WWII, the pianist has been a fixture of the modern jazz scene, but I couldn’t say whether his would be considered a household name. Certainly anyone who has dipped into the jazz genre to any depth would have come into contact with his work.

His 1959 album (that’s what they called CDs back before they got small and shiny and cased in plastic) entitled Time Out was the first jazz record to sell more than a million copies. Brubeck was the first jazz musician to appear on Time magazine, in 1954.

He played before presidents and smoky-jazz club audiences and received Kennedy Center Honors just a few years ago, reminding people (and introducing new listeners) of his unique style of music.

During the Second World War, Brubeck served in Europe under General George Patton, although he wielded sheet music instead of a rifle. His group was called the Wolfpack Band and was the only racially integrated unit in the military.

More than sixty years of music and most of those years as an active player. The likes of him won’t be seen again soon.

Twilight on Main.

It is pretty rare to have open parking spaces in front of the shop in the early evening. It is the week following Thanksgiving, and it could be that people are at home recovering from Black Friday, Cyber Monday (with Small Business Saturday wedged in between), and those dollars spent on turkey and the fixin’s.

Not just the Rose District on Wednesday evening, either. Fab reported her first slow day in years in Midtown with only a slight increase in hungry-traffic from breakfast to lunch.

I took the opportunity to take some pictures – strolling outside just after dusk. A cool evening, the breeze having died down. Not cold, but comfortable for this late in November. Delicious is drifting by, no doubt something on the grill at the Main Street Tavern. Click on the image to join me on the street corner…

In the darkness of the twilight, it is a little easier to see inside the shop. The window tinting makes for a greatly reduced electric bill, but makes it tough to peer in during the day. And it’s clear that I need some outside lettering on the windows to replace the hard to read computer printed sign taped up on the inside. (That’s been in the plans all along, but all things have their time and place on the priority list.)

The awning stands right out though.

There is news in the Tulsa World this morning about imminent announcements regarding the Rose District, including further restaurant plans. There have been rumors along Main Street for a time, and it is exciting that the details will shortly be shared.

I’m happy to be a part of the new Rose District, and there are changes and new announcements being readied for McHuston Booksellers and Irish Bistro as well.

Stop in and see us, or at least – keep in touch!

« Older posts Newer posts »