RIP Harvey

Local-news site Cleveland.com reports that comic-book writer, jazz critic, and curmudgeon Harvey Pekar died overnight at his home:

Pekar, 70, was found dead shortly before 1 a.m. today by his wife, Joyce Brabner, in their Cleveland Heights home, said Powell Caesar, spokesman for Cuyahoga County Coroner Frank Miller.

I can’t help but think Harvey would be amused that his career’s end was presided over by a guy named Frank Miller.

I got to know Harvey a little bit about five years ago while writing about comics for various publications. Harvey loved to talk on the phone, as he often depicted himself doing in his work. He never failed to remind me that he was always available to talk – any time, he would emphasize.

Harvey always depicted himself as a guy who was bothered by stuff, who got bound up in grouchiness by obsessing over this or that. In his unsparing self-observation he laid bare the mechanics by which he was capable of making himself miserable. Despite this, it seemed to me that by the time I spoke with him he had got beyond this.

What struck me about Harvey on the phone was his profound generosity of spirit. I don’t think he saw it, and he probably would have been made uncomfortable by the observation. I do think the film American Spendor, starring both Harvey and the perfectly-cast Paul Giamatti, managed to capture that side of Harvey’s personality at the same time as remaining true to the source material. I love the film; Harvey liked it too.

Goodbye, Harvey. I’m so glad I got to spend some time with you, over those long circuits. I did know you were always there, ready to talk. Any time. I’m sorry I didn’t take you up on it as much as I should have.

Capture culture

I found some Possum videos today. She spent so much time in my lap that using Photo Booth was obvious, unobtrusive, and, frankly, forgotten until juts now. I may post some eventually.

I have been using an iPhone for a couple of weeks now. I’m predictably dissatisfied, primarily because of the many, many things it can’t do that my old phones have been doing for about six years. I gather there are routes around the feature denial, but the thrill of sticking it to the man by nearly breaking your fucking expensive toy has faded. I would expect some longwinded bitching in this forum when I decide to care enough to cut loose.

That said, I’m not unhappy with the device on its’ own merits nor on the late-adopter cost incurred. My last cell phone lasted five years and it was more fully-featured than the iPhone on the day I opened the box. I think when I tell you what sucks about my phone it’s probably useful to listen, but I can’t really say I care one way or the other. I endeavor not to bore the reader with my exegeses on car culture, automotive insurance, engineering reliability, and housing cost inflation. The iphone is much like a car or a house: boring, overpriced, underfeatured, and inevitable. I expect to hate it for the rest of my life.

Dead Bird

So, speaking of the dead young of our avian neighbors, one of our cats brought the body of a small bird into the house today. We’re not sure who it was, but the general hunterly evidence of late points to our nearly year-old boy cat, George.

Viv called out to me about it as was I was in the yard measuring our grill for some replacement parts. The tiny boy was on the floor of the dining area and Viv told me she had shooed Lark away from it. As I bent down to it, I at first took it for a sparrow, but then I noticed the long, curving beak and the elongated, barred tail-feathers. The baby, not yet ready to leave the nest, had been a juvenile flicker, one of my favorite neighborhood birds.

The body’s torso had yet to be feathered in any meaningful way, but the spotted head, wing feathers, and of course the beak and tail feathers were quite definitive. There was a not-terribly-bloody wound in the bird’s belly, but the corpse was other wise intact, not stiff, and quite cool to the touch. The pinkish-red of the little bird’s back and belly was distinct, as was the yellowish, knuckly look of the base of the bird’s torso from which sprouted those distinctive tail feathers.

I should have taken a couple of pictures, I suppose. I buried the not-quite-a-fledgling near Possum.

The Eagle

As I was rebedding lettuce this afternoon, the crows started squawking and raising a ruckus, a sure sign that an eagle is near. Usually you can tell where the eagle is by following the shifting trajectories of the crows as they fly toward the center of the mob, chasing the eagle around the sky until the bird leaves.

This time, however, the black birds were all streaming toward a nearby tree, clearly visible to me and about 200 feet downhill, placing the crown of the tree at my eye level. Crows were bouncing up and down out of the tree, clearly actually landing in it and not simply pursing their usual boom-and-zoom diving arcs. Puzzled for a moment, I realized that this almost certainly meant that the predator was in the tree.

Pretty much as soon as I figured this out, the massive shape of a bald eagle emerged from the boughs for a moment before returning to them. The bird appeared in no hurry to leave. I started calling for Viv, and she came to join me in watching.

A moment later, the eagle reappeared, flying strongly toward us before turning away to the south, crows in hot pursuit. The chase was lost to sight behind more trees a moment later, but in the second or two the eagle was flying toward us we clearly saw a small crow clasped in the eagle’s claws.

specs

Well over a year ago, I bought a turn-of-the-century pair of spectacles off ebay for around $5. One of the pulled-wire temples was broken, and I had it repaired before I got lenses cut for the hardware, which consists of a padless bridge, the hinges, and the temples. Unfortunately the temple repair was poor and broke immediately.

I waited a couple of months and got a different retro-styled pair of glasses, more mid-twentieth-century in style, but was always a bit sad that the other pair hadn’t worked out as hoped. In addition to the style, they were my third attempt at bifocals.

This morning as I got up I realized that my eyes were really kind of bothering me and that I should try to use the old bifocals at the computer today. As I went and rummaged for them I realized that I had another pair of frames, found long ago, which had temples that might fit the Victorian pair. After a bit of struggle with the screws in each pair of frames, I had the temples free and slid the good pair into the rimless hinge-set. They fit perfectly, as did the securing screws, and so all day I have been looking at bits and pixels through polycarbonate blended bifocals held to my face with three pieces of century-old gold and two pieces of somewhat newer metal which may also be gold.

The tiny size of the lenses means the new specs weigh less than any pair of glasses I have previously worn.

I don’t think these glasses will become my driving or going out glasses – the head-nod up-and-down I go through to see my feet while walking means that I won’t likely be comfortable with these for any other use than reading or computing. But otherwise, I’m happy about this in complicated ways that include a miser’s joy, a tinkerer’s satisfaction, and an antiquarian’s pleasure.