Showing posts with label Thirtieth Street Station. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thirtieth Street Station. Show all posts

Jan and Lana Dance Jive at 30th Street Station

Thursday, March 1, 2012


I've written about Jan and Lana so often on this blog that I don't need to introduce them (do I?).  They are the dancing stars, the soon-to-be movie stars, the team that keeps me honest in a Norah Jones waltz, the instruction that burns but lasts.

Here they are, dancing at Philadelphia's Thirtieth Street Station.

Because that's how good they are.

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Traveling Library

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Over the next ten days, I'll be back and forth to New York City on behalf of a fundraiser for Penn, the BEA (thank you, Egmont, and can't wait to see any of you who may be there on Thursday, May 27th), and the Book Blogger Convention (thank you, Amy Riley).  Travel means time to read, and at the moment, I've got these books to choose from, thanks to some aggressive recent book buying:

On Whitman (Writers on Writers) by the extraordinary (in person and on the page) C.K. Williams

Old Friend from Far Away by Natalie Goldberg

The Glass Room by Simon Mawer

My Name is Mary Sutter by Robin Oliveira

Girl in Translation by Jean Kwok

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A Memory of Rescue, from long ago

Thursday, January 28, 2010

One of the very first times I took a train alone, I was a kid, taking summer ice skating lessons at the Wissahickon Skating Club. My mother dropped me off at the Bryn Mawr station and I climbed on board among the business suits wearing my furry sweater and my thick nude tights; my skates, wrapped in an old pink towel, were safe in my plastic blue bag. It wasn't yet 90 degrees, for it was still the morning hour, but by the time my connecting train broke down, it was hot, and the business suits had left, and it was only me and a number of lovely ladies bound for their cleaning jobs in Chestnut Hill.

After a long time of sitting on a train that wasn't likely to move again, the conductors let us off and we walked the final stretch of track like a sad processional—me with my skates, the ladies with their cleaning things. I wasn't even close to where I needed to be. In fact, I had no idea where I was. I had, I remember this, five dollars in my pocket.

I was rescued by the ladies bound for Chestnut Hill. They hailed a cab, they stuck me between them, they made sure that I was dropped off first at that Wissahickon rink—late for my lesson and sticky hot in my fake summer fur and thick tights, my five dollar bill still in my pocket.

I never saw them again, of course. I never learned their names, or if I did, I don't remember. But they remain with me.

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