Tidy Tidbits: Summer Fare

THE LIBRARY’S MISSION BEYOND ITS WALLS

The Paris Library by Janet Skeslien Charles

Author Charles (simonandschuster.com)

This mostly gentle novel is for my librarian friends—and for other lovers of libraries.  When I was in high school, I was a page at my local public library.  I worked in the children’s room checking out books and doings lots of re-shelving.  The library used the Dewey Decimal System, and I became very conversant with the classification and what subjects were where.  In this novel, I was charmed by protagonist Odile’s love of reading and her intricate knowledge of the Dewey numbers for very specific topics.  She thought in terms of Dewey Decimals.  

Taking place in Paris in the WWII years and in Montana in the 1980’s, it is the story of Odile’s work life as a librarian at the American Library and then the later friendship between Odile and her young neighbor, Lily.  It’s based on the experiences of real library staff and how they kept the American Library functioning once France was occupied by the Germans.  The parallel story profiles Odile 40 years later and how Lily learns from Odile not only French, but ways to interact with the world around her.  This is not a particularly suspenseful novel, and the narrative arc is shallow, but it’s an enjoyable read and adds to one’s understanding of the importance of libraries, particularly in times of war.

MAGNIFICENT LIBRARIES

A friend alerted me to a recent article in Architectural Digest entitled, “15 Stunning University Libraries Around the World You Need to See.”  One reason for the referral was for the inclusion of the Linderman Library at Lehigh University where I spent considerable time.  I was pleased to see that four other libraries that I know or have visited were also included.  

I worked at Cornell University one summer when I was in college and have been in the Uris Library.  Likewise, I was a librarian at Penn when the Fisher Library underwent its renovation.  Some years ago, I visited Yale and toured its libraries including the Beinecke Rare Book Library.   And as my faithful blog readers know, I was in Dublin recently and was awed by the Trinity College Library Long Room.  Other featured libraries are in Spain, France, Los Angeles, and Chicago.  Perhaps I’ll get to one or more of them!

CRIME IN A GRITTIER DUBLIN 

Redemption (Prime Video)

Detective Colette (independent.i.e)

Detective Colette Cunningham is working in Liverpool when she receives a call about the death of her estranged daughter Stacey in Dublin.  Colette relocates to Dublin to take care of her two teenaged grandchildren.  The Dublin police accept Colette on a transfer and give her low level responsibilities.  Meanwhile, she has questions about her daughter’s suicide and begins to raise questions and do her own research.  

Interactions with her grandchildren are tense and challenging, Stacey’s old boyfriend and the kids’ father are somewhat dodgy characters, and Colette’s work environment is just tolerable.  This is a slowly unfolding story of Colette’s investigations showing some of the seamier sides of Dublin life.  While the viewer might question Colette’s judgement and actions at various points, they make for good drama. There are six episodes and each is about 45 minutes long.

LOCAL ASIAN EATERY

Spice Station in Sarasota

Dining room at Spice Station

I had previously checked out the menu at Spice Station, but not eaten there.  This time, while in Sarasota for appointments and errands, we decided to try it for lunch.  We were not disappointed.  It’s a very attractive space in the Rosemary District (sort of behind our favorite Artisan Cheese shop) and did a lot of takeout orders while were there.  There were other diners so it’s obviously popular.  Their menu includes both a wide selection of sushi along with Thai curries and noodles.  We opted to try the potstickers which were light and tasty followed by a curry for each of us, one red curry and one green, each with chicken. 

The menu showed one pepper and said the curries were medium spicy.  They were very good, but a tepid medium.  We learned later that you could order spiciness on a level from one to ten peppers.  We’d order up a few more peppers next time.  The portions were nice-sized, and I took some of mine home for lunch the next day.  The Chief Penguin is a fan of seaweed salad, and he ordered it and approved. We liked the overall ambiance of the place and our helpful waitress and plan to return!

Note: Header image of Florida sunset ©JWFarrington (some rights reserved).

Summer Lollipops: Reading & Watching

ADVENTURE IN NEW CALDONIA

Miss Benson’s Beetle by Rachel Joyce

This novel about female friendship is a joyful romp of a book.  Thanks to my sister Ann for recommending it.  It’s funny, painful, poignant, and just plain good!  The setting is London, 1950, and Margery Benson and others are still dealing with the losses and shortages of the Second World War.  In a fit of pique, middle-aged single Margery leaves her job as a teacher and decides to embark on a quest to find an elusive gold beetle in New Caledonia.  A beetle collector since childhood, she adds to her collecting equipment and advertises for an assistant to travel with her.  

Most of the candidates are unsuitable, but when one withdraws, she ends up with the flamboyant, uneducated Enid Pretty.  Margery (or Marge as Enid calls her) and Enid are complete opposites both physically and in personality.  Margery is large and plain and somewhat quiet.  Enid is petite, lovely, and a nonstop talker.  Each has a past with secrets and hurts.  

How they find their way to the northern tip of New Caledonia, the adventures they have collecting specimens in dense tropical forests, and how their tribulations bring out the worst and eventually the best in each of them, make for a delightfully absorbing story. It’s a book about finding and accepting the best in yourself and learning how to befriend someone else.  The following quote reflecting Margery’s state of mind sums it up nicely:

The differences between them—all those things she’d once found so infuriating—she now accepted.  Being Enid’s friend meant there were always going to be surprises. …However close they were, it didn’t entitle her to Enid’s memories and neither did it allow her to be part of Enid’s life before they’d met.  Being a friend meant accepting those unknowable things. …’Look how marvellously different we are, you and I, and yet here we are, together in this strange world!’ It was by placing herself side by side with Enid that Margery had finally begun to see the true outline of herself.  And she knew it now; Enid was her friend.

CRIME IN AIX

Murder in Provence (Amazon Prime)

Antoine & Martine

Fans of TV’s Endeavour series might be surprised to see jowly Detective Thursday as the debonair and svelte Antoine Verlaque in Murder in Provence.  Judge Verlaque, a Chief Magistrate works alongside his romantic partner, Martine Bonnet (played by Nancy Carroll), who is a criminal psychologist.  Slim and beautiful, Martine is always attired in simple classic designs.   Together with the police commissioner, this threesome investigates and eventually solves their cases.  

Set in Aix in Provence, the series is sun drenched (nary a cloud in sight) and bright, meals are taken in a series of cafes, and the wine flows freely.  It is as much a paean to the beauty of Provence as it is a detective story.  It isn’t quite a cozy mystery series, but it has a gentle quality that makes it relaxing to watch and perfect for summer.  Based on mysteries by Canadian author, M. L. Longworth, there are three episodes in the first season.   Each is about 90 minutes long.  A second season is slated to become available in 2023. 

RETURN AND RE-ENTRY

Eyre Square in Galway

It’s true what you’ve been reading about travel in the summer of 2022.  We loved being in Ireland but coming home turned out to be a big slog.  The Dublin airport has been the scene of long lines, lines to just get into the terminal building.  Everyone was directed to one set of entrance doors with Do Not Enter signs at other doors.  We checked out the lay of the land the afternoon before our flight and noted where the Delta counters were (opposite end from Aer Lingus).  

Even knowing that, we arrived at the airport at 6:30 am for our noon flight, quickly entered past the do not enter sign, and found almost no line at Delta.  The lines for security and then clearing U.S. immigration ahead of our flight (something new) were long, but we still had a few hours to sit until our flight boarded.

The transatlantic flight itself was uneventful, and we landed at JFK about 2:30 in the afternoon.  We had a long layover (schedule change well before we left home) until our 8 pm flight to Tampa.  Around 5 pm, we got the news that our flight would now leave at 12:01 as in just after midnight.  Inquiring revealed that we were awaiting the arrival of a co-pilot.  Further checking showed that all the next day flights to Florida that would be closer to home were sold out.  More long hours hanging around the airport lounge with lots of other people!  

A bit after 11:00 pm, we optimistically walked to our gate, eager for a change of scene.  Flight departure time was now delayed until 12:19 and then 12:55 am.  About 12:40, we boarded, and all seemed in order.  Then some quiet waiting.  

Eventually, the pilot came on to say that we should be leaving very soon after dealing with “some passenger discrepancy.”  The next thing we knew, two police boarded the plane and proceeded to march a couple (ordinary looking man and woman) down the aisle toward the door.  All the while, one police officer was heard saying to the man, “Keep moving, we’ll talk outside.”  

We took off just before 2:00 am and landed in Tampa at about 4:30 am.  I expected the airport to be empty, but no, quite a few folks around, probably there for a very early flight.  The Chief Penguin could have kissed the ground.  I was relieved to finally be in Florida!  By 6:00 am, we were in our own driveway, our 30-hour journey at its end.  It’s taken us a week to recover and feel human again, but we didn’t get Covid and we’re glad to be here!

Luminous Florida summer clouds

Note: Photos ©JWFarrington (some rights reserved)

Around Ireland: More Galway

SPECIFICS

Galway in County Galway is on Ireland’s west coast and sits on the River Corrib. With a population of around 83,000, it is the fourth largest city in the Republic of Ireland. It is a city of bridges and canals and strong breezes off the bay. One is never far from the honk of seagulls. The main center, around Eyre Square, is compact and walkable with a number of shopping streets closed to traffic.

Our original plan was to spend our second day in Galway with an excursion to one of the Aran Islands. The weather was lousy the day before, and the prediction for this day was for on and off light rain and temperatures hovering around 58 degrees, so we decided to bag the trip. Light rain here can mean an intense burst of rain for 15 minutes and then a brightening sky. Consequently, we spent all day partly inside but broken up by three separate walks. Said walks were taken between the rainy skies. Once, we got caught in an unexpected short shower.

EYRE SQUARE

Eyre Square, although somewhat small, attracts people throughout the day and evening. Whether to wait for a tour bus, sit on the grass, or gather to hear a street musician, it’s a popular venue. Here you see banners for the tribes of Galway and a seated sculpture of the first modern Irish writer. He initially wrote short stories in Gaelic.

Banners represent tribes or families of Galway
Padraic O Conaire, early author of stories in Gaelic (1882-1928)

CHURCHES

Like many Irish cities, Galway has several large churches. One is the Galway Cathedral (Roman Catholic), and another is St. Nicholas Collegiate Church (Church of Ireland or Anglican). St. Nicholas was built in the 16th century and has been open for worship ever since.

St. Nicholas Collegiate Church
I liked the simplicity of the sanctuary of St. Nicholas

Galway Cathedral, the official name of which is Cathedral of Our Lady Assumed into Heaven and St. Nicholas, was actually built in the late 1950’s and completed in 1965. With its Renaissance style, it seems to be of a more historic time. The massive green dome dominates the city skyline even from a distance.

Galway Cathedral

OTHER SIGHTS

On this quiet Sunday morning when the sun was shining, we took a lovely walk on a path along the river. Several men were out fishing and across the way was the occasional old stone building.

Sunlit footpath
Corrib River view and arched bridge

Later in the day, we walked through the Spanish Arch and along the Long Walk in the dock area. This arch is part of what remains of a city wall originally built in the 16th century; the name Spanish is probably not connected to Spain. The Long Walk was added much later and intended as further protection for the docks.

The Spanish Arch

FOOD

We have eaten very well here. As you would expect, potatoes feature prominently at both lunch and dinner. Often as chips (fries) or crisps (potato chips) or sliced Lyonnaise style, sweet potato chunks, or just little round potatoes in their skins. A favorite lunch item is a toastie (usually grilled ham and cheese on sourdough), and we each had several. The so-called classic Caesar salad served in Ireland has lardons of bacon in it in addition to croutons, and sometimes thin slivers of Parmesan, but not always.

Breakfast buffets usually included some cold sliced meats and cheeses along with juice and pastries. And you could also order off the cooked breakfast menu, a full Irish breakfast or some eggs, sausage, pancakes, and always smoked salmon. At various evening meals, we enjoyed excellent fish and seafood, everything from turbot and sea bass to cod and hake plus shrimp and crab.

Our final dinner in Galway was at a relaxed place with a tasty menu aptly named the Brasserie on the Corner. The Chief Penguin and I shared the little bites on a seafood board and then tucked into our entrees. He had a perfect stuffed chicken breast with broccolini and mushroom cream while I savored every morsel of my sea bass with Thai red curry sauce. It was a delicious capstone to some wonderful eating adventures.

Irish Chicken Breast
Sea bass with coconut rice and tempura prawns

After all this wonderful food, great sights, and friendly people, we head back home, trading cool days for Florida’s heat and humidity.

Note: Photos ©JWFarrington (some rights reserved). Header photo is along the River Corrib.

Around Ireland: Adare & Galway

After our tour of the Dingle Peninsula, we moved on to less dramatic sights. We had a short stop in Adare and then drove on to Galway (mostly divided highway) where we are for two nights. Friday was the first really rain day we have experienced on this trip. It was hard rain some of the time and also cold (high 50’s) and windy. When there was a break and it became just drizzly, we took a walk. One of the natives told us that this type of heavy rain was atypical for Ireland in June.

ADARE

Adare is a village in County Limerick and considered by some to be the prettiest town in Ireland. Its history dates back to 1200, and it is a government designated Heritage Town. What strikes a visitor immediately are the thatched cottages and shops along the main drag.

Row of thatched cottages
Holy Trinity Abbey Church

There is also this historic church, portions of which date from the 13th century, and on the edge of town the remains of Desmond Castle. The town is located on the banks of the River Miague and has a lovely small park.

Adare Park with thatched gazebo

Based on the heavy traffic on a Friday afternoon, it is popular with tourists. In 2027, this area will be the site of the Ryder Cup, a golf tournament between Europe and the United States held every two years.

ON TO GALWAY

The drive to Galway was rainy, and it remained cold, breezy, and mostly rainy the remainder of the day and evening. Once in the city, finding our hotel was a bit challenging due to the small winding streets with tight turns. But we are now nicely located in The Hardiman overlooking Eyre Square, the city’s main green. The official name of this square is the John F. Kennedy Memorial Park in honor of his visit here in 1963.

Braving the elements, we took the a first look-see in this neighborhood and then later, we walked to dinner at cozy Oscar’s Seafood Bistro. Many of the nearby streets are pedestrian only and despite the weather, lots of folks were out and about.

We deliberately made an early dinner booking and were glad as the restaurant quickly filled up. Their menu was seafood and fish as stated, but the preparations were slightly different and somewhat more sophisticated. I had some tasty smoked codfish cakes on a yogurt sauce with pumpkin seeds to start, followed by plump and delectable scallops sitting on blue cheese potatoes with some greens and a swoosh of crab bisque. The Chief Penguin had their version of shrimp scampi on a polenta waffle and then also the scallops.

We exchanged pleasantries with a French couple at the next table. Oscar’s is friendly, casual place that’s been successfully doing business for more than 20 years.

Codfish cakes at Oscar’s Seafoood Bistro

Note: All photos ©JWFarrington (some rights reserved.). Header photo is also of Adare Park.