Showing posts with label James Howard Kunstler. Show all posts
Showing posts with label James Howard Kunstler. Show all posts

Sunday, February 20, 2011

World Made by Hand: A Novel by James Howard Kunstler

Page 105:

"I love to watch the horses," he said. "You know, all those years back down home, my people were just crazy for the NASCAR. They'd go out to some honking huge oval track at Darlington or Daytona and watch those dadblamed machines go round and round and round, making all that noise. A horrible din. For hours and hours. If I knew how somebody could endure that, I'd die happy. Not to mention calling it recreation! Heck, it'd be more interesting to go out to the freeway overpass and watch traffic. At least the goldurn cars'd go in different directions. Anyway, I'm glad that foolishness is over. The car wrecked the southland. It wrecked Atlanta worse than Sherman ever did. It paved over my Virginia. They made themselves slaves to the car and everything connected with it, and it destroyed them in the end. Well, here's to the New South. May it rest in peace."

Saturday, February 19, 2011

World Made by Hand: A Novel by James Howard Kunstler

Page 33:

We didn't have coffee anymore, or any caffeinated substitutes for it. I made a pot of rose-hip tea, which was our chief source of vitamin C, and fried up three slices of Jane Ann's brown bread with plenty ofbutter in a cast-iron skillet that I had owned my entire adult life-I actually remembered buying it in a Target store in Hadley, Massachusetts, the year after I graduated from Amherst College. When the bread slices were crispy and fragrant, I took them out and dropped in three small pullet eggs. I missed black pepper terribly. We hadn't seen any for years. Cinnamon too. Anything from the Far East was no longer available. But over the years I had developed some skill in brewing my own hot pepper sauce. It was worth something in trade. I put plenty on my eggs.

Friday, February 18, 2011

World Made by Hand: A Novel by James Howard Kunstler

Page 33:

"We're building our own New Jerusalem up the river. It's a world made by hand, now, one stone at a time, one board at a time, one hope at a time, one soul at a time. Tell me something: do you know Jesus Christ."

"No, I never met the fellow."

"Would you like to?"

"Is he outside there on one of those mounts?"

"He's in your heart."

"Well, that's news to me," Ricketts said. "All these years I thought it was single occupancy.

Sunday, December 12, 2010

World Made by Hand: A Novel by James Howard Kunstler

Page 33:

What used to be the rear patio of my house was rigged up to be a summer kitchen. You didn't want to run a wood-burning stove indoors when it was ninety degrees, and it was that hot much of the time, May through October. I had a sheet-metal wood-burning cookstove out there under a roof with open side walls, a sturdy eight-foot pine table I'd made, and a cupboard with pierced tin panels to keep my salt and cornmeal and honey safe from little animals while it let air in. A smoker sat a way back from there, an old refrigerator on blocks, over by the fence. It was hard to imagine that we used to cultivate lawns. My yard was now a raised bed garden. It was geometrical, a cruciform pattern, the beds transected on the diagonal as well, with brick paths carefully laid. With our many material privations, it was not possible to live without beauty anymore. I spent a lot of time in my garden, and the feel of being in it was as important to me as the vegetables I grew. At the center, I built a birdbath out of stacked granite blocks with a concave piece of slate on top that caught the rain. The birds seemed satisfied with it and it was pleasant to look at. I would have preferred a statue of the goddess Diana in the manner of Augustus Saint-Gaudens, but I hadn't managed to scrounge one up. The smoker, much as I needed it, was an insult to the garden. It galled me to see the damned thing: a scarred old Kelvinator that mocked our failed industrial dreams. I intended to replace it someday with a proper brick smokehouse.