Hand brake

Sometime between 1970 and 1972, I think, my mom drove my sister and I to the nearest grocery store, a Marsh’s, in West Lafayette, Indiana. I think she was driving the family car, a 1967 Pontiac Tempest in flake sky blue. The top was up, and Mom left my sister and I in the car. The store was located on a slight rise above the parking lot, and Mom wheeled the car into the spot nose first, the car’s front angled up by the rise, facing the store’s front doors. She must have been intending to run in and pick up just one thing, because she decided to leave us in the car.

No sooner had she closed the driver-side door and started to cross in front of the car when the car began to roll backwards. My sister and I immediately began to yell in fear at the top of our lungs. Mom must have heard us because she ran top the car and got the door open in time to grab and set the parking brake.

I don’t know why, exactly, but that memory has been rattling around in my head for the past couple of weeks.

Chopper

On September 2, Rocketboom posted 10 minutes of semi-raw footage from a helicopter flying over the deeply-flooded neighborhoods of New Orleans. The footage includes radio chatter, and the longest segment captures a military Huey picking up a group of survivors from a rooftop. The pilots of the various helicopters struggle to establish radio contact and when people on the roofs are spotted find themselves relaying GPS coordinates to ground control in Baton Rouge.

Plywood

…one more Katrina thing: a French Quarter resident had the presence of mind to shot his entire Katrina experience, and the resulting photoset is very much worth your while.

Floating Couplets

New Orleans was the original capitol of the American imagination, before this country owned Louisiana. The port at the end of the great midwestern river system that provided the economic engine which begat this nation, its’ place in the country’s heart – and mine – is as central as that of New York or San Francisco. A tad reduced in circumstances, there’s no question in my mind that the city was the center of the Midwestern imagination for more generations than America has owned Minnesota.

I was raised in the upper midwest, mostly. New Orleans was the place you went on a whim and a dare. Since moving to Washington, it was the place one old friend and two new had chosen as home, and one of the choices left by the wayside in my own life. My only work of fiction concerns an encounter between William S. Burroughs and Elvis Presley beneath a portrait of Baudelaire in a New Orleans bar, instigated by Walter Matthau during the filming of King Creole.

I can’t imagine, can only imagine, what my friends are going though. They took that road, cobblestone and sinking brick, and in their various ways made the place their town, stepping into the stream of memory and creation that the city has ever-generously rained upon this nation, upon us, on me.

Released or spewed forth upon us in a great arc across the country, what will the diaspora bring? What news of the Quarter? What fresh mix of fertile muck do they carry on their boots? The Mississippi Delta shines, yes, like a National guitar. It’s the place where everything good about a huge country filters into the swamps. The cargo of alluvial deposits drops, concentrating the finest silt and ensuring the region’s polyglot fertility. It’s no accident that New Orleans sits on the same river as a town called Memphis. The Mississippi is our Nile, and New Orleans the domain of its’ ancient kings, whose ways and troubles we have adopted until we cannot see them for what they are, for good and for ill.

Here lies Vera. God help us.

Vera Smith’s makeshift tomb strikes me as a symbol not only of the devastation and foolishness that have killed uncounted numbers in the past week. It also strikes me as an expression of the character of New Orleans and the nation, the organic character of this country – improvisatory, interim, sensible, creative, adaptable, tragic, flawed.

I read yesterday that Vera’s full name was Elvira Smith. “Elvira” is said to mean impartial judgement, while “Vera” has connotations of truth and faith. Vera’s body lies beneath the earth of a rock garden and a spray-painted sheet. In time, I trust, we will duplicate her makeshift burial palace in bronze and marble, lest we forget. Do her honor, citizens.

Wrong number

As expected, today’s Apple fooraw generated a big yawn from me. Another iPod! Imagine that! Whoop-de-doo!

And a phone with iTunes but no other Apple-designed user-interface features, except, I guess, the ability to synch contacts with Outlook. Which, one supposes, bemuses the Mac-owning folks out there that have been using Address Book over Outlook lo, these many years. The most interesting thing about this announcement is the fact that Apple bent enough to let Cingular advertise iTunes with the Cingular font in that orange box:

 Itunes Mobile Images Indexitunescingular20050907-1

Which, I suppose, lends credence to the rumors that the phones release was delayed because Apple was fighting with the labels about licensing and pricing – Cingular would be in a better negotiating position regarding branding issues the longer Apple had to delay launching, I would think.

Ah, what do I know?

Flotsam

Someone highlighted a long list of the MetFilter threads on Katrina, and someone else added the comprehensive, longer list (ninety-three and counting) to the MeFi wiki.

Meanwhile, AZ links to two interesting New York Observer pieces on, respectively, how the Times-Picayune managed to do such a gripping job of covering the disaster (apparently, the blog post on the NOLA blog concerning the broken levee was in fact the T-P breaking the news) and on the remarkable media meltdowns that have marked the televised coverage.