Oct 212011
 

Illustration from my work-in-progress. © 2011 Sean W. Byrne.

I am trapped in an era in which I’ve never lived.

It is the era in which my grandparents lived. A time when everyone wore hats. When automobiles and telephones came only in black. When letters were written with fountain pens and sealed with wax, and penmanship was important because (like a hat), it said something about its owner. In this time, letters weren’t written in haste, but composed with care.

Last Tuesday, at work: I am responding to an email. The phone rings. I stop typing and answer it. After I hang up, I manage to type two more words before a coworker sticks his head in my office and asks me a question. Ten minutes later, I return to my email. I type another two words when my cell phone beeps. I have a text message. While answering it, I receive a voice call on the very same phone. Much, much (much!) later, after many more interruptions, I finally finish the email. I notice there are over a dozen Autosave versions of it in my Drafts folder.

My grandfather worked for a company that made maps. His workspace consisted of a large room, and in the middle of the room was a shallow, rectangular reservoir filled with a developing solution. The whole place smelled of chemicals. Around the perimeter of the room were offices. My grandfather sat in one of these offices, at a big wooden desk with a wooden swivel chair. There was a high demand for road maps back then. The Interstates were new and road travel was big. The company updated their maps every couple of years. “It’s a neverending job,” my grandfather used to say.

Last spring: I am driving to a birthday celebration for a friend. We are meeting for dinner at a restaurant in a recently developed area of town. I am using my GPS. It indicates that the restaurant is straight ahead, in a strip mall on the right. I stop at the coordinates indicated. There is no restaurant there, only a newly constructed bank. I keep driving, past more strip malls, a parking lot, another bank. The GPS recalculates and gives it another shot, sending me back in the direction from which I came. Again, I arrive at the coordinates, and again…no restaurant. All the new buildings and roads have sprung up overnight like mushrooms, and nobody has bothered to tell the satellites.

My grandfather was an artist. He used to sit in his favorite easy chair with a drawing board on his lap and sketch. I would climb into his lap and ask him to draw me things: a dolphin, a monkey, a monster with a human brain. He was mysterious and exciting. He had tattoos on his arms (“Never get one,” he told me more than once, “you’ll regret it.”). One of his legs was artificial, from a motorcycle accident in his youth. I always sat on the other leg—the soft one. He had performed in vaudeville as a child and later, as a young man, earned a living as a nightclub singer. That was when he met my grandmother. They eloped to New York City in 1939. Jimmy Stewart’s New York. Katharine Hepburn’s New York. The New York of another time, when everything was magic.

I am trapped in an era in which I’ve never lived.

But “trapped” isn’t really the right word. “Trapped” implies I want to leave. And when I am done writing or drawing for the day (or more often, for the night), and it’s time to come back through the wardrobe to this world, I feel a tug in my chest akin to homesickness. I don’t want to leave the world on the other side of the keyboard, on the other side of the drawing board.

I am trapped, actually, in the era in which I live.

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Oct 182011
 

Inside Us (Nightbird)

Outside in the night
There are headlights, sidewalks, trees and a ditch
A darkened store hunches beside a car wash.
A nightbird sings and a piece of sky falls
Like hail, or a rock from a bridge.
The night feels so big.

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Sep 222011
 

A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness. Inspired by an idea from Siobhan Dowd. Illustrated by Jim Kay.

From Amazon.com:

An unflinching, darkly funny, and deeply moving story of a boy, his seriously ill mother, and an unexpected monstrous visitor. At seven minutes past midnight, thirteen-year-old Conor wakes to find a monster outside his bedroom window. But it isn’t the monster Conor’s been expecting—he’s been expecting the one from his nightmare, the nightmare he’s had nearly every night since his mother started her treatments. The monster in his backyard is different. It’s ancient. And wild. And it wants something from Conor. Something terrible and dangerous. It wants the truth. From the final idea of award-winning author Siobhan Dowd—whose premature death from cancer prevented her from writing it herself—Patrick Ness has spun a haunting and darkly funny novel of mischief, loss, and monsters both real and imagined.

I’ve been waiting anxiously for the US publication of this book (it’s been available in the UK and Australia for months). Jim Kay’s illustrations were what first caught my attention when I read about this book online. Dark. Moody. Moving. Beautiful. (You may visit Jim Kay’s website here, where there are more images of his artwork, as well as more from this book. You may visit author Patrick Ness’ website here.)

I got a call on Tuesday from Quail Ridge Books that my pre-ordered copy was in—a pleasant surprise since I wasn’t expecting it until the end of the month. I picked it up after work, took it home, and read it in one sitting.

It’s a quick read, but not always an easy one. The stark prose and eerie illustrations set the tone of the story early on. Author Patrick Ness steers clear of sentimentality—ensuring that the story never strays from its original idea: that truth is often painful and unfair.

From his bedroom window, Conor can see a yew tree on top of a hill. One night, the yew tree takes on the form of a monster, shambles up to Conor’s window, and speaks to him. (The monster reminded me of another yew tree monster: Green Noah from Lucy Boston’s The Children of Green Knowe, although Patrick Ness’ monster, which speaks directly into Conor’s mind, I found to be scarier.)

The monster says to Conor:

Here is what will happen, Conor O’Malley. I will come to you again on further nights. And I will tell you three stories…And when I have finished my three stories, you will tell me a fourth. You will tell me a fourth, and it will be the truth.

The stories the monster tells Conor make him angry. A good prince is a murderer. An evil queen is rescued. An innocent farmer’s daughter dies for no reason. They seem like, in Conor’s own words, “a cheat.”

“I don’t understand,” Conor says, “Who’s the good guy here?”

There is not always a good guy. The monster says. Nor is there always a bad one. Most people are somewhere in between.

With each story the monster tells him, Conor faces more of life’s truths. And when it comes time for Conor to tell the fourth story, his story, his truth…the book draws to its inevitable conclusion.

The words and pictures deftly capture the fear and instability surrounding 13-year old Conor. The loneliness, the isolation, the frustration…he is dealing with bullies at school, an absent father, an emotionally distant grandmother…and on top of all of this, the guilt and pain of losing a parent.

As the story unfolds, you feel Conor’s fear and anger as he watches his mother succumb to cancer, and the ending of the story is apparent. Any other outcome would not fit the central idea of painful truths (it would be a “cheat”), but knowing the ending did not make the journey any less compelling, or the story any less powerful.

Parts of the story moved me deeply (the tender relationship between Conor and his mother), and parts were so spare and detached they bordered on being cold (the bullying scenes at school). But the honesty and grief of the story is both challenging and satisfying. It grabbed me and didn’t release its hold till the very end.

Stories are the wildest things of all. The monster tells Conor. Stories chase and bite and hunt… When you let them loose, who knows what havoc they might wreak?

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Apr 232011
 

Since the tornadoes, I’ve got dinosaurs on the brain. This was written years ago, on a layover.

In an Airport in Texas

Through geometric window walls
Low clouds fat with rain
Hang over miles of asphalt and dinosaur bones.

Garbled noise funneled through tubes
ricochets in the space
between the I-beams and nylon flags

And punctures artificial air
Thick with the stink of
Cheap padding on plastic chairs.

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Apr 212011
 

The wind tore through NC last Saturday.

64 funnel clouds blew the sky down, uprooted trees, flattened buildings, and sucked the internet up and carried it away. Without email or cable for days… I lived in a news vacuum save for that antiquated old standby: the newspaper.

When the storm hit, the dogs and I huddled in the back bedroom (except for Huckleberry who, for some reason, felt determined to remain in my home office, under my desk, curled up on his cushion). The gusts blasted against the house, followed by sporadic, angry bursts of rain and hailstones. I’m not sure how long it all lasted. My sense of time, like the internet, was snatched away by the funnel clouds.

Later, when the world grew quiet, my phone began to ring and buzz with text messages. Are you okay? Is everything all right? Any damage? Calls from family members and friends… from here in NC… from PA and NY and VA…

That evening, out in the front yard with the dogs, I saw white shapes glowing in the twilight. Bleached dinosaur bones were scattered across the lawn. I heard a creak and a sigh from above and looked up. The power tower on the edge of the yard was twisted, its skeletal arms broken and hanging; the power lines sagging. The upper half of a shattered ceramic insulator dangled from its side.

My cell phone rang. It was Gaston calling from Washington D.C.

“The power tower is damaged,” I told him, “There are bits of ceramic insulators all over the lawn.”

“Did you call the power company?”

“No. We have no internet. I don’t know the number.”

“Look in the phone book.”

Phone book? Do we still have a phone book? Who has phone books?

The power company arrived the next day to take photos. More teams showed up on Monday to assess the damage and on Tuesday, the prehistoric bucket trucks arrived to bring the Future back.

They’ve spent the past three days replacing the tower with a brand new one: a single pole that is anchored ten or twenty feet into the ground. Unlike the old one that had a footprint as wide as the Eiffel Tower’s, the new one blends in better with the landscaping.

Yesterday evening they began disassembling the 40-year old (50-year old?) tower, breaking it apart from the top down and hauling it away. I could hear the groan of tired metal and the whirr of the buzz saw as I made dinner. And when the convoy of giant bucket trucks quit for the day and rumbled away down the street, three quarters of the old tower was gone, leaving behind a scattering of dinosaur bones on the ground.

I collected a few to keep as souvenirs. I made a small pile of the relics, fossils of another age. Unlike most of the composite polymer ones made today, these are porcelain. Sad they aren’t all still made of porcelain. I’m glad these dinosaur bones are made of the real deal.

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Feb 202011
 

My sisters and I celebrated my mother’s 70th birthday just two weeks ago. Today we spent the day packing her belongings in preparation for her move. Health and memory issues are making it difficult for her to live alone. It’s not something I talk about much, on this blog or anywhere really… because, I suppose, it makes me feel sad.

So, naturally, as I sit here typing in the glow of my computer screen… at quarter past midnight… the house quiet as a church… I am thinking about my mother.

Crane © 2009 Sean W. Byrne

I painted this crane for her two years ago. Cranes hold an important place in Japanese culture. They symbolize good fortune and longevity. They have a fabled life span of a thousand years.

Growing up, I was surrounded by Japanese art and symbols. Cranes, carps, cherry blossoms… they were in the storybooks my relatives sent from Tokyo. They were on the kimonos my mother brought with her to this country, and on the kimonos and other textiles my relatives sent us as gifts. To this day these symbols feel as warm and comfortable as old friends to me.

There is a Japanese legend that says if you fold a thousand origami cranes, a crane will grant you a wish, such as long life and good health. Cranes, in Japanese mythology, are mystical, magical creatures.

Maybe if I paint a thousand cranes for my mother, a wish will be granted. I’ve finished this one. 999 to go. And I would paint each one of them with love.

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Jul 182009
 

It’s been over a month since I’ve posted anything. Summertime is supposed to be lazy and languid but, at least for me, that never seems to be the case. The past month or so has included my niece’s high school graduation (congratulations, Haleigh!), my nephew’s visit from Charlotte, my beagle’s operation, July 4th activities, and of course work work work.

Sadly, there has not been much time for art. I am hoping the coming months will allow for more time. And finding time, of course, is still only half the challenge. You still have to hope and pray that once you finally get in front of the easel, the ever-elusive Mighty Engine will be present ensuring everything falls into place.

Neil Halstead “Oh! Mighty Engine”

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