Finally into our apartment in Napa now, although everything is still in boxes and we’re still figuring out where everything is. We took a quick tour yesterday – it was beautiful, perfect summer weather at 5 PM, and although there were a lot of “rental space available” signs in the downtown retail areas, it’s still a lovely small town that reminds me a bit of La Connor in Washington, where we used to go to the Tulip Festival.
We did all the neccessary, important things: went to the grocery store, got our library card, went to check out Copperfields Books. Copperfields carries a good selection of literary magazines and regular magazines, as well as the Buffy comic, and a decent selection of newer literary fiction. (I’m hoping they will agree to carry Crab Creek Review as well, soon!) I ended up buying, in the discount section, “Survival of the Sickest” – a terrific account by a biologist of the connection between evolutionary biology and illness – and a fiction book called “Blind Submission” about working in publishing, as well as a stack of magazines and various other things…I was very tempted by hedgehog erasers but managed to not buy them this time. We drove by the Oxbow market and did a little drive around all the relevant streets to get our bearings. We have not yet explored the neighboring towns: Sonoma, St. Helena, Yountville, etc…but we’ve only been here a little over 24 hours so you’ll have to give us some time!
The not-so-fun-parts-of-moving: I almost wept in frustration this morning trying to get ahold of a doctor (Internal Medicine) who was actually taking patients. No success yet. I forget how hard that part of moving was! So, if you know any good doctors in Napa, now is the time to share!
Anyway, we are safe and sound, a little discombobulated, but otherwise happy and excited about our new Napa adventure. It is beautiful, the air smells so clean – after living in San Diego a year, I’d forgotten how good clean air smells, like green and flowers – and the people so far seem fairly friendly. I also have my own room for an office, so as soon as I get that set up, I expect to be doing more writing and submitting – as well as having better concentration for my online teaching work at National. I’m a thesis advisor this quarter, which I’m looking forward to, as well as teaching the “advanced poetry workshop,” which is really a combination of workshop and regular literature class, since they have to read books and write essays on them. I’ve also sent out some e-mails to see if any of the local magazines are interested in a new food/culture/arts writer. I hope so!
Carol Lynn
Yay! Glad you’ve arrived at your new home- wishing you much happiness there! Good to hear that you’re breathing clean air – Looking forward to ‘wine country poems’
xo
Carol Lynn
Kells
delaney would go crazy for the hedgehog erasers!!
Congrats on making it to Napa. SOunds wonderful! much better than SD for you.
call you soon! (been busy and still FAB weather here!! it was in the 80s this week!)
Keith Wilson
You only mentioned it in passing, but having mentioned it at all makes me suspect you’re a fan of Buffy and/or the comic, so if you are:
How do you feel about the lesbian-ifcation of Buffy? I wonder what it is that Whedon thinks about women that there have been so many lesbians, especially ones who didn’t know they were lesbians and dated guys for a long time.
Supervillainess
Thanks Carol Lynn and Kells! It is beautiful here, I really think we made the right move.
Keith – I think Buffy’s girlfriend was more of an experiment (a la the cliche of college-girl experimentation) than a lifestyle change, given that she was still dreaming about Spike/Angel in a recent episode, but I can’t say for sure what Joss was thinking with that particular move. Trying to win over more readers, perhaps? All I know is that I’d like Xander to have a steady love interest that doesn’t die, please!