Saturday after more than two years of a lock-out the office workers and journalists at Le Journal de Montréal voted 64 per cent to accept a compromise settlement. Not a very happy day in the history of journalism.
Photo: Rue Frontenac
Mary Soderstrom's blog
It's always nice when people that you write about like what you write. I'm no musician, and one of the big unknowns about River Music was what musicians might think. In fact, I was so unsure that I went out of my way not to ask musicians I knew what their opinion was.
But to my great delight, the reaction of musicians has been spontaneous and very positive. Here are three:
From pianist Jana Stuart:
"Mary, I just finished River Music. I could not put it down. I related so much to the character of Gloria Murray and the plight of the young pianist. I loved it to pieces. "
From Madeleine Owen, lutist and artistic director, Ensemble La Cigale:
"Gloria, is tough and not always likable and yet, I had to recognize some of her difficult choices as merely typical of what a musician, especially a woman, has to do in order to succeed in the competitive world of music."
And Cléo Palacio-Quintin, flûtiste-compositrice says:
"River Music nous emporte dans le flot d'une vie musicale riche en émotions. Dans un rythme fluide, Mary Soderstrom transcrit avec finesse la passion intime d'une interprète pour sa musique...difficile de poser le livre avant la fin."
The Walkable City: From Haussmann's Boulevards to Jane Jacobs' Streets and Beyond
Skating is something that every Canadian youngster ought to learn to do, especially if there is natural ice in a park nearby. This Satuday morning saw a Mom and four or five year old trying out skates for what seemed the first time in Jeanne Mance Park on the eastern slopes of Mount Royal. The stroller is good on ice, and Mom could walk along, encouraging her older child."Given this reality, it’s important to have institutions that can act as counterweights to the power of big money. And unions are among the most important of these institutions.
"You don’t have to love unions, you don’t have to believe that their policy positions are always right, to recognize that they’re among the few influential players in our political system representing the interests of middle- and working-class Americans, as opposed to the wealthy. Indeed, if America has become more oligarchic and less democratic over the last 30 years — which it has — that’s to an important extent due to the decline of private-sector unions."
Note to self: keep track of what is happening in Quebec where anti-strikebreaker laws are up for review.
"Money changed everything. Almost overnight, a wave of brilliant dramatists emerged, including Christopher Marlowe, Thomas Kyd, Ben Jonson and Shakespeare. These talents and many comparable and lesser lights had found the opportunity, the conditions and the money to pursue their craft.
"The stark findings of this experiment? As with much else, literary talent often remains undeveloped unless markets reward it."
The part of Montreal's Plateau district where we're living for the duration once was quite industrial. Not big factories, it seems, but many small little workshops. Old maps even show a tannery just about where our building sits now.
A sunny window is a great place for plants during the winter, and obviously the owners of this small restaurant on the Plateau district of Montreal have great success in getting theirs to bloom.
Various activities have kept me from doing much promotion recently to follow-up on the launch of Making Waves: The Continuing Portuguese Adventure. But we've been enjoying our stay in the Bairro Português a lot. Among the delights is the food: the Rotisserie Ramados has absolutely terrific roast chicken and Chez Doval offers a wider menu of delicious but modestly prices meals.
One of the nice touches in our temporary digs is a small window, facing south west. It functions something like a skylight, letting the afternoon sun fall into the interior of what would otherwise be a rather dark section of the apartment.