Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘books’

I have a young friend whose favorite color is white.  I discovered this information one day as we sat on the floor with a basket full of crayons and I asked her, “What’s your favorite color?”  At first she said, “All of them,” but then she shook her head and said with great certainty, “White is my favorite!”

Now, many months later, even as we sit with a blank piece of paper and draw bright multicolored rainbows and she describes her favorite blue birds and we talk about the purple of Peep’s friend Quack and so on and so forth …  Well, if I should ask about her favorite color, she will look at me with a twinkle in her eyes and say, “White.”

So for the holidays I am putting together a custom book of white images for this young lady.  If you’re familiar with my style then you know I am mostly drawn toward illuminated colors but as I peruse my portfolio, I do see a few white images … of sorts.  Plus I am inspired to take some new pictures.    I’ve already started a list:  white feather, white rice, straight pasta, curly pasta, boiled eggs, crumpled paper, sugar, vanilla ice cream.  Other ideas of items that might visually interest a child? 😉

Every image I find, I won’t necessarily share with a four-year old, but so far it is a very fun project to review my work … and to create new work … inspired by such a young friend.

 

Read Full Post »

Between 2006 and 2009, I had the pleasure of working in the vicinity of Edmands Park in Newton, MA.  As a writer (and a bit of a free spirit) I had a certain amount of leeway to get up from my desk to walk out into the nearby woods.  The jaunts were always short but long enough to clear my head and to focus my writing.  And sometimes I was able to carry along my camera and capture just a bit of the beauty that inspired me.  With the help of some friends, I have compiled the images into a lovely little book that I hope you will find enjoyable.  Available in softcover.

In Edmands Park

By Cynthia Staples

Read Full Post »

Steve's Bookcase

Books are on my mind today in part because I sit in Steve’s living room surrounded by his floor to ceiling bookshelves.  Handmade out of a dark wood, the shelves are asymmetric and stuffed with books, maps, correspondence and all sorts of object d’art from throughout his life. If you were to walk around that room — please try to avoid tripping over the books piled in various corners — and scan those bookshelves, you’d have a sense of who he is and the journey of his life.

The journey of one’s life is what comes across in the pages of Eudora Welty’s One Writer’s Beginnings, a thin lovely little book based on a series of lectures she gave at Harvard University in the 1980’s.  And that is the book next to me this morning which, along with Steve’s bookcase, makes me nostalgic about the place of books in my life.   The passage currently lingering with me is where Welty describes how her parents sacrificed to buy her and her brothers books.  I was reminded of my own parents who did the exact same thing for my brother and I.

Of course, not every book was bought.  My father worked for the sanitation department and so on trash days he would find all sorts of things that people would throw out.  He always brought home the books.  Some things he kept separate from us kids like the Joy of Sex which my younger brother and I did eventually discover in a bureau drawer.  After we were caught my parents placed that book high on top of the refrigerator with my dad chuckling and my mother hushing him.  But all other books were fair game for viewing from onion-skinned bibles to old encyclopedias and modern biographies of movie stars.

I rarely remember my father picking up any of these books though he read the daily newspaper religiously.  My mother read all the time.  Together they encouraged our love of books and reading and so when our elementary school sent home a book order form for the Weekly Reader Book Club, my parents found the money to allow us to order a book.   We must have selected more than one but the first book that comes to mind is Gus the Friendly Ghost.  It was a small purple book, about a shy ghost who makes friends with a wily mouse in an empty house.  My brother had me read that book to him many nights in our early years.  It was his comfort food, especially the time after having a bad dream in which he got mad at me and pulled my head off!  I crawled into bed beside him as he cried and read him the book.  The whole time he patted my shoulder to make sure that I was there.

 

Anyway … that’s me and my early morning memories of books.  What first books do you remember and why?  😉

 

Read Full Post »

Did you know that snails have teeth?  I didn’t until I started reading The Sound of a Wild Snail Eating by Elizabeth Tova Bailey.  The book recounts the author’s interaction, while bedridden, with a relocated woodland snail.  The language is quiet, beautiful and colorful.    “While the snail slept I explored the terrarium from my bed … the variety of mosses was so satisfying … Their hues ranged from bright grass greens to deep dark greens and from sharp lemon greens to light blue greens.”

 

As someone who spends a great deal of time snapping photos of plants, it was very helpful stumbling upon Sarah Simblet’s Botany for the Artist.  A beautiful book in and of itself, its contents reminded me to look more closely at the things I photograph and to better understand the different parts that make up a whole.  I found this blog post that actually shows the behind-the-scenes creation of the book in the artist’s studio.

 

And finally …

A gift from a friend, and what a source of inspiration.  I’ve been carrying it in my backpack so that whenever I am on the bus or needing a moment’s respite at work, out it comes. 

Any other book recommendations you’d like to share?

Read Full Post »

This beautiful, gentle-eyed beast is Shadow.  Recently, he carried me up Seneca Rocks, a famous West Virginia mountain, and brought me down safely.  But he wasn’t happy about it.   Since I was a child I have loved horses, but it was a love based purely on literary and cinematic exposure.  My favorite books were The Black Stallion series by Walter Farley.  My favorite movies included Black Beauty, My Friend Flicka and National Velvet.  It just so happened as an adult I found myself riding a water buffalo in Arkansas and an elephant in Thailand, but Shadow was to be my first horse. 

By horse standards, he was a teenager, his owner said.  And so it was with the recalcitrance of a teenager being forced to clean his room before supper that Shadow ferried me along the rock-strewn path up Seneca Rocks.  I swear he wanted to ditch me a couple of time, but he was well-trained.  Once back at the base of the mountain, we parted happily, he with a swish of his tail, and me with a much greater respect for horse attitude, not to mention the width of their barrel backs.

Read Full Post »

First, is this a Great Blue Heron?  I think so but if you know for sure, please let me know.  Found this fellow standing quiet in the shallows at the Beaver Brook Reservation.  Beaver Brook is  the first reservation established by the Metropolitan Parks Commission, later the Massachusetts Department of Conservation.

Did you know that Queen Anne’s Lace is also known as wild carrot? So I discovered while reading Peterson’s Guide to Edible Wild Plants.  But be careful!  Queen Anne’s Lace and poisonous Hemlock look very similar.

On a day when I have spoken with, emailed, texted and chatted with X-number of friends and family who are all going through tough times, it makes me wonder:  why not turn the world upside down and shake things up a bit?  Sometimes the result can be startling and quite beautiful as in this inverted reflection of the heron, and of grasses in a mountain lake.

And, finally, books.  Yes, books.  My friend Steve is a complete and utter bibliophile who built his own floor-to-ceiling bookshelves that cover two walls of his living room, and yet he still has books piled high as columns every where.  I asked him the other day, if he were traveling indefinitely and could only take three books with him, what would they be?  He answered, “Well, two books come to mind right away, the bible and the Joy of Cooking.”  When he said he wasn’t sure about the third book and that it would depend on where he was traveling, I added, “Well, let’s say you’re stuck on a deserted island.”  He chuckled and said, “Well then that makes it easier.  I’d want the third book to be The Manual of Practical Boat Building.”

What books would you choose?  Send me a note.  I’ll post peoples’ responses in next month’s Words+Images update.

Read Full Post »

I picked up this beautiful coffee table book at the Boston Book Festival this past weekend.  I got it for a steal, at about $3, though the normal bookstore price is about $45.  If you can’t find a copy, see if your library can get it for you.  Stunning artwork in brilliant colors.  I’m still making my way through it.  It’s easy to get lost in a single page!

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts