2009

Bookclub, anyone?

Restocking the reading list, focusing on New Orleans economic development.

Repose, New Orleans, Louisiana
Repose, Fuel Cafe, New Orleans, Louisiana

Sloane and Carl started this, whether they know it or not. After their rave reviews of Why New Orleans Matters, reading it wasn’t an option but a requirement, a part of my introduction to New Orleans.

After it sat on my nightstand (um, floor) for a week, I read it straight through the other night, the first time I’ve been able to sit and devour a book in a long time. *Amazing*.

I would love to try to read a book a week like Julien; it’s the kind of investment I made throughout my youth but have failed to contribute to recently, kinda like the neglected retirement account at the bottom of the statement I don’t pay enough attention to.

Even if a book a week isn’t going to happen, there’s still a big investment opportunity here. So, what should I read? As a green New Orleans resident, obviously, I should be reading about New Orleans. And as a business and (lapsed) history geek, obviously I should be reading about local business and economic development history.

And so I asked friends for suggestions: David recommended anything by Richard Campanella and pointed to the lists by Pelican Publishing and LSU Press as good resources for more books. Townsend added Rising Tide to the mix (and Jessica even says she’ll lend me a copy). And then Susan helps with some killer specific recommendations: New Orleans: The Making of an Urban Landscape by Pierce Lewis, An Unnatural Metropolis: Wresting New Orleans from Nature by Craig Colten, and Geographies of New Orleans: Urban Fabrics Before the Storm and Time and Place in New Orleans: Past Geographies in the Present Day by Richard Campanella.

Adding to the mix, even though Nine Lives: Death and Life in New Orleans by Dan Baum isn’t exactly on the same topic, it looks rocking in its own way. I’m looking forward to reading it, soon.

Any more suggestions?

Or perhaps: bookclub, anyone? No book reports, no formal summaries, just good reads, good minds and good times?

Update: Adding to the list, Andrew suggested New Orleans after the Promises: Poverty, Citizenship, and the Search for the Great Society by Kent B. Germany.

Yes, those are affiliate links. You know the deal.

Best. Christmas. Gift. Ever.

Next time you’re homeless and you don’t know what to give yourself for Christmas, give yourself a home. I highly recommend it.

Reflecting, New Orleans, LA
Reflecting, New Orleans, LA

One week into a new adventure, and I’m more all-in then ever. Every day I’m asked by friends new and old, “how long are you staying?”

“I’m staying until I’m kicked out.”

I readily acknowledge that both good and bad days are on the horizon.

But I’m looking forward to them all. I’m looking forward to being able to talk about how long I’ve lived in New Orleans not by days and weeks but by months and years. I’m looking forward to when local traditions are no longer new-to-me but understood-and-enjoyed-by-me. I’m looking forward to having a map of New Orleans in my mind, to when I no longer think of directions as north-south-east-west but upriver-downriver-uptown-downtown. I’m looking forward to when the everyday proliferation of new starts to settle down, to when I can hear the name of a street, bar, restaurant and neighborhood and know where it is, what it looks, smells and feels like, when to go, and how to find the “you have to try this” and “I know I love this” delectables that help form a good life.

But most of all, I’m looking forward to truly contributing to the community, to being able to help and give and create rather than having to ask for help and depend on others. To when I know my friends’ favorite libation, their favorite place, their in-jokes, the details of their daily and not-so-daily lives.

One lesson to pass on to anyone that already has a home: take a fresh look at your daily life and your relationship with your environment. You don’t have to move to create a new life. Break routines. Take a new route, try a new place, listen to new suggestions. Find your lost “awe of the beauty in the ordinary”.

I had to go through a pretty tremendous change to get here, but you don’t have to.

That’s what I’m thinking about this Christmas Day. A new life. New adventures. Opportunities. Revelations. Putting preparation into action. Contributing to something meaningful. Hope.

I couldn’t imagine sitting here, at home with family on Christmas Day, without having given myself this gift, the gift of a new home and a new life. Now it’s time to take advantage of this opportunity.

Merry Christmas.

 

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