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Westwood Theatre Lands

When I was a kid, we used to go to the Westwood Theatre most of the time when we wanted to go to the movies. It was located in Etobicoke, or should I say the former Etobicoke, in the midst of that traffic monstrosity known as the 6-points interchange. It’s been sitting vacant for years and the City owns the land. At one point the City was looking at putting a courthouse on the site, but that never happened. Now there’s some noise in our community newspaper about possible redevelopment on the site. I was surprised to read that the redevelopment was not going to be based on new condos. Instead, there is a possibility that a YMCA community recreation centre will anchor the development. I understand some kind of recreation centre like this would be very welcome in the area. Sounds like a good idea. I’ll be following this one to see how it unfolds.

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Why do you listen to all that traditional music anyway?

I may have shared this before, I’m not sure. This is the kind of thing I like to have around for those days when people say, hey why do you listen to all that traditional music anyway?

This is just right, just perfect.

 

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Sneakers on a wire

It’s a widely held belief around these parts that sneakers on a wire have to do with marking the boundaries of gang territory or signifying the presence or availability of certain drugs.

sneakers on a wire

sneakers on a wire

A pair of sneakers appeared the other day on a wire crossing 27th Street, about a block below Lakeshore. Do you see this kind of thing where you live? Anyone know the history or anything else about this odd activity?

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What are you reading these days?

Having just finished By Blood by Ellen Ullman, I’m about to start Canada by Richard Ford.  I don’t know much about it except that it is about the life of a teen-aged boy whose parents rob a bank, and that it was published last year to some critical acclaim. I haven’t read anything at all by Richard Ford.

What are you reading these days?

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By Blood

Screen Shot 2013-06-17 at 10.40.52 PMI started reading By Blood by Ellen Ullman on my road-trip and finished it up tonight. Ms. Ullman challenges us early on to suspend our disbelief with a premise that might seem overly contrived, but I bought in and was well rewarded with a somewhat creepy, very well-crafted novel about identity, history and psyche. A professor on some kind of questionable leave from a university rents an office in a building in San Francisco. It happens to be next door to a therapist. The therapist uses a white noise machine to fog voices in her office so nobody can hear sessions from outside, but one patient doesn’t like to use the noise machine. It happens that the professor has a long history of therapy himself. He’s a mess. The protagonist-patient is working through identity issues as the professor begins to listen through the walls, becoming obsessed with the patient. The therapist, like the professor, has a hidden history. OK, that’s the premise. If you can jump on that ship and go sailing, you’re going to love this book. It deals with identity, roots, adoption, family secrets, lesbian politics, even the Holocaust, and it does so with a story that is cleverly layered and interwoven and at times dark and twisted.

The story is revealed mostly through therapy sessions as heard through a wall. Parts reminded me of the wonderful HBO drama In Treatment, starring Gabriel Byrne as Dr. Paul Weston. The comparison only holds true on certain levels in that in both, we get to listen in, to witness therapy sessions, and as well, both share a very measured pace developed through the interaction of patient and therapist. The book offers the added complexity of a single very well-developed story-line, a therapist whose own history is uniquely pitted against the patient’s narrative, and the mysterious narrator who is obsessed with his own psychological difficulties and who has a long history of failed therapy.

Ellen Ullman is a novelist and also a computer programmer who has written numerous articles about technology. I never would have guessed that from reading this novel. In fact By Blood betrays a love for the English language I wouldn’t expect from someone whose background is writing code as much as sentences. I really enjoyed the use of language in this novel. I’m definitely going to track down her other works and put them on my reading list.