Category Archives: Postcard from the Slope

BAG To Artists: Show Us Your Brooklyn

Homestudio
I got this email from Catherine Weaver over at the Brooklyn Artists Gym:

I’m co-curating an exhibit/fundraiser at the Brooklyn Artist’s Gym and I"m
wondering if you could do a little post about it? It would help me and the
BAG Fund out eNORmously!

Produced by the BAG Fund, the show will be called BKLYN 111 and will speak
to Brooklyn’s one hundred eleventh year of colorful history. It will run
from October 17th to the 25, culminating in a party/fundraiser wherein all
works will be sold for the benefit of the BAG Fund which works to support
struggling artists with mentorship, studio space, and legal advice on
estates.

We are asking artists to show us THEIR Brooklyn in any medium, any style.

The deadline for submissions is Sept 26th. They can apply on the Brooklyn
Artists Gym site at: http://www.brooklynartistsgym.com/showbrooklyn111.html

New Zealand Man Seeks Info About Police Officer Killed in 1930

I just noticed this in my email. It’s a note from someone in New Zealand looking for information about Walter O. DiCastillia, a police officer who was killed in 1930. Does anyone know anything?

Greetings from New Zealand.

I’m trying to track down information on the killing of this police
officer on March 15 1930. He was stationed at the 84 Precinct in Polar Street in Brooklyn Heights.

He apparently interrupted a payroll robbery. Three men were subsequently
arrested but released.

I’ve tried every on line source I can think of. The NY Times does not
seem to have anything on it. Even the NYPD Roll of Honour only lists his name and date of death.

Any suggestions? Obviously if I lived over there I could go hunting in
libraries etc.

Hope you can steer me somewhere!

Thanks in advance,

Mrs. Cleavage’s Chicken

Mrs Cleavage called the day after the funeral and asked if she could drop by with some food. No fool I, I called her right back and said, "You bet I want some of your comfort food."

So on Saturday while I was out she came by with a large Tupperware container full of two boneless chicken breasts cooked in lemon, garlic, potatoes, the sweetest carrots you’ve ever tasted, bay leaves—and who knows what else.

That girl can cook to say nothing of her goat cheese salad making skills. Yum.

The meal was so delectable we devoured all of it quickly. Luckily, there was dessert. Mrs. Cleavage, a southern girl from North Carolina made us an absolutely delicious apple and cherry tart served on a southern looking plate. Well, we heated it up in the oven and it was heavenly. And comforting.

Can she bake a cherry tart? You betcha. Check out her cooking blog Eat, Drink, Memory and thank you Mrs. C. from the bottom of my heart—and stomach.

She writes about motherhood here.

Thursday: Elizabeth Royte’s Bottlemania at Old First Church

At Old First Reformed Church on Thursday, September 25th @ 7:00 p.m.

Elizabeth Royte reads and discusses Bottlemania: How Water Went on Sale and Why We Bought It
Presented in conjunction with Old First Reformed Church and Park Slope Neighbors

Award-winning investigative journalist – and Park Slope resident –
Elizabeth Royte will read from her acclaimed new book, an illuminating
albeit distressing look at the people, machines, economies and cultural
trends that have made bottled water a $60-billion- a-year phenomenon
even as it threatens local control of a natural resource and litters
the landscape with plastic waste.

Bottlemania was featured on the front page of the June 15th New York
Times Book Review, when it garnered raves from reviewer Lisa
Margonelli, and was praised again in a second review by the notoriously
hard-to-please Times critic Michiko Kakutani. The Boston Globe called
Bottlemania "one of the year’s most influential books."

Ms. Royte will be joined by Jay Simpson, staff attorney at the
environmental advocacy group Riverkeeper. Mr. Simpson, who will speak
about his work as a member of Riverkeeper’s Watershed Team,
investigates and prosecutes Clean Water Act violations, fights sprawl
in the Hudson River watershed, and works with community groups to
protect our public drinking-water supply.

This event will be held at Old First Reformed Church, on the corner of 7th Avenue and Carroll Street, in Park Slope, Brooklyn.

Classes & Activities Expo in Brooklyn

just got this note from the editor of New York Family Magazine, which includes a
monthly Brookyn edition.

This Sunday–tomorrow!–we’re hosting what
will hopefully be a wonderful Classes & Activities Expo in
Brooklyn……..and I’m wondering if you would consider my very last
minute request to blast the news of the event to your users.

It’s
a free event, including free face painters and free family photography
portraits, and goodie bags (with the new Dan Zanes CD).  And, Joyce
Szuflita, (founder of the schools consulting service, NYC School Help)
will be on hand to answer questions about nursery schools, and public
and private schools in Brooklyn. 

The Expo in Brooklyn is tomorrow, Sunday, 9/21,
in Park Slope, held at the Berkeley Carroll School – 762 President Street (between 6th and 7th Avenues), from 12:00pm – 3:00pm.

Loads of Community Bookstore Events

Saturday September 20th at 7 p.m.

Tariq Ali reads and discusses The Duel: Pakistan on the Flight Path of American Power
Born and raised in Pakistan, Mr. Ali is a widely published author and film-maker. In his new book, out this week, he describes the way in which American support for corrupt civilian presidents and undemocratic military rulers has been ruinous for Pakistan’s political life throughout its 60 years. At a moment when the United States is openly mounting attacks inside the borderlands of Pakistan, Mr. Ali’s book is both timely and important. It has already been warmly praised in the Washington Post. To read more about Tariq Ali and his work, visit: www.tariqali. org

This event will be held at Pakiza Restaurant, 1026 Coney Island Avenue.
Subway: B/Q to Newkirk Avenue
Food will be served
.

And happening right here in beautiful Park Slope:
On Tuesday, September 23rd @ 7:30 p.m.
Mark Lilla reads from (brand new in paperback)
The Stillborn God

Religious passions are again driving world politics. The quest to bring political life under God’s authority has been revived, confounding expectations of a secular future. In this major book, Mark Lilla reveals the sources of this age-old quest – and its surprising role in shaping Western thought.

Making us question what we thought we knew about religion, politics, and the fate of civilizations, Lilla reminds us of the modern West’s unique trajectory and what is required to remain on it.

Mark Lilla is Professor of Humanities and Religion at Columbia University. A noted intellectual historian and frequent contributor to The New York Review of Books, he is the author of The Reckless Mind: Intellectuals in Politics, and G.B. Vico: The Making of an Anti-Modern.

On Wednesday, September 24th @ 7:30 p.m.
The Modernist Book Group takes on Musil’s
The Confusions of Young Torless

Like his contemporary and rival Sigmund Freud, Robert Musil boldly explored the dark, irrational undercurrents of humanity. Published in 1906 while he was a student, Torless vividly illustrates the crisis of a whole society, where the breakdown of traditional values and the cult of pitiless masculine strength were soon to lead to the cataclysm of the First World War and the rise of fascism. A century later, Musil’s first novel still retains its shocking, prophetic power.

We hope you can join us for what is bound to be a colorful discussion. Copies of the book are available by the register at Community Bookstore – and there’s still time to read it if you’d like to come!

At Old First Reformed Church:

On Thursday, September 25th @ 7:00 p.m.
Elizabeth Royte reads and discusses
Bottlemania: How Water Went on Sale and Why We Bought It
Presented in conjunction with Old First Reformed Church and Park Slope Neighbors

Award-winning investigative journalist – and Park Slope resident – Elizabeth Royte will read from her acclaimed new book, an illuminating albeit distressing look at the people, machines, economies and cultural trends that have made bottled water a $60-billion- a-year phenomenon even as it threatens local control of a natural resource and litters the landscape with plastic waste.

Bottlemania was featured on the front page of the June 15th New York Times Book Review, when it garnered raves from reviewer Lisa Margonelli, and was praised again in a second review by the notoriously hard-to-please Times critic Michiko Kakutani. The Boston Globe called Bottlemania "one of the year’s most influential books."

Ms. Royte will be joined by Jay Simpson, staff attorney at the environmental advocacy group Riverkeeper. Mr. Simpson, who will speak about his work as a member of Riverkeeper’s Watershed Team, investigates and prosecutes Clean Water Act violations, fights sprawl in the Hudson River watershed, and works with community groups to protect our public drinking-water supply.

This event will be held at Old First Reformed Church, on the corner of 7th Avenue and Carroll Street, in Park Slope, Brooklyn.

And our regular groups for October, to keep in mind:

First Wednesday (10/1) @ 7:00: Community Bookstore Knit Night
Third Wednesday (10/15) @ 7:30: Books Without Borders discusses Mafeking Road by Herman Charles Bosman
Fourth Wednesday (10/22) @ 7:30: The Modernist Book Group discusses The Death of the Heart by Elizabeth Bowen

Hang On To Your Maps: Slope Restaurant Tour Big Success

Here’s a note from Catherine Bohne, one of the organizers of the Seventh Avenue Restaurant Tour, which was a great night in the Slope. She is urging everyone to hang onto their maps and to continue to patronize the places you liked. "Of all the food businesses around 7th Avenue these are the ones who were happy to sign on to give you free treats—so do stop in, eat their food, drink their drinks, say than you nicely and show ’em the love. We’re all in it together!" Bohne wrote on the beautifully designed map. Can’t wait for next year.

Hi Everyone —

INCREDIBLE turn out, a party in the hood!  Thank you so much for
coming and enjoying!  It was an amazing night, the like of which I’ve
never seen.  The Park Slope Chamber of Commerce (sponsor of the event!)
welcomes your input and suggestions for next year (write to buyinbrooklyn@ gmail.com), but in the interim, could I humbly personally
suggest that you express you gratitude by supporting all the businesses
who participated, but particularly and within the next week or so:
Nono Kitchen (who got swamped, which is a good sign of how good they
are, but who I think ended up . . . swamped), Tonio’s, which is a
hidden gem I didn’t even know about, and which is so sweet that they
just put out a buffet, and were not only amazed when it was all eaten
in 45 minutes, but (good Italians that they are) invited everyone back
next week, and Moim, who I think, judging by the lines I saw all night,
must have handed out hundreds of dollars worth of food.  Oh.  Also  La
Taqueria absolutely wins for their Margaritas — I saw litereally 100’s
of people clutching their wax paper cups, but it must have cost the
Taqueria a penny.  On the other end, Rancho Alegre is a winner — how
many of us have ignored them for years, assuming their longevity is a
sign of paucity?  Not at all — they are lovely, and threw themselves
into this with enthusaism.  And I have it on good recommendation that
their mole is without compare. 
 
In any case, dear neighbors, I trust you to hang on to your maps,
and remember all the businesses who turned out to give you a great
night.  The truth is that ALL micro businesses in the neighborhood are always
struggling.  We’ve been told not to admit this, but I think that’s
dumb.  We struggle!  Most of us do what we do NOT because it makes us
money, but because we love being here, being part of a wonderful
community, and doing what we do (FACT:  Most shops are bankrolled by a
gainfully employed romantic partner. You don’t know this, do you?  It’s
true.).  We’ll stay, and keep being part of the neighborhood that you love, but your support is invaluable.  So,
on behalf of my fellow merchants, and everyone who agreed to be
prepared to serve 150, but served 500, I’ll ask you to make a special
effort with the restaurant tour places for the next couple of weeks. 
 
Lots of love,
Catherine.

Oct. 1: Secret Science Club Meets at The Bell House

Secret Science Alert: This month, we will be meeting at the Bell House, an all-new all-awesome venue in Gowanus, Brooklyn , created by the owners of Union Hall (our lovely hosts). In November, we’ll be back in our regular digs at UH.

Wednesday, October 1 @ 8 pm

Move over Sudoku! Cosmologist Tony Rothman of Princeton University lectures on SACRED MATHEMATICS!!!!

At work, Tony Rothman studies the Big Bang and the early Universe. He also researches black holes on the verge of becoming naked singularities. But what does he do for fun? He does sangaku—clever math puzzles that decorated Buddhist temples and Shinto shrines in 17th-century Japan . Wha—?? He even wrote a book about it: Sacred Mathematics: Japanese Temple Geometry. It all adds up! Don’t forget to bring your slide rules and pocket protectors!!

Before and After

–Groove to an ever-multiplying collection of science-loving tunes and video
–Stick around for the calculating Q&A and to get a signed copy of Dr. Rothman’s new book!
–Sample our cocktail of the night, the Bamboozler. (It’s a conundrum . . . try saying that 3 times fast after you’ve had a few.)

The “Secret Science Club” meets Wednesday, October 1st at 8 pm @ the Bell House, 149 7th St. (between 2nd and 3rd avenues) in Gowanus, Brooklyn, p: 718.643.6510   Web: http://thebellhouseny.com Subway: F to 4th Ave.

FREE! Just bring your smart self. Doors open at 7:30 PM.
For information: contact secretscienceclub@gmail.com    Or visit us on the Web at http://secretscienceclub.blogspot.com or www.myspace.com/secretscienceclub

This Friday: Park(ing) Day

So what is Park(ing) Day? Sustainable Flatbush knows all about it because she is helping to organize it!

To raise awareness of how public space is allocated in our neighborhood, Sustainable Flatbush will participate in International Park(ing) Day on Friday, September 19th, from 9am until dusk. We will be occupying a parking space on the corner of Cortelyou and Argyle Roads for the day and turning it into a public park to benefit the entire community (rather than a single car owner). Our park will feature real grass and plants, along with seating, craft supplies, games, an art exhibition (courtesy of F.A.S.T.), live music, and scintillating conversation. We will be taking photos to use in a media piece for the Green Jobs Now National Day of Action, and Flatbush Food Coop has generously donated a gift basked for us to raffle.

Last year’s event was a great success. This year, we invite you to participate in this community event…Park(ing) Day is a labor of love for Sustainable Flatbush and a way to give something back to the community. If you would like to join us we’d be happy to have you!

We are still looking for:
– volunteers to help with setup and breakdown
– musicians
– videographers
– art lovers
– coffee drinkers
– crossword enthusiasts
– finger painters
… Bring your special skills!

News From Catherine Bohne

Here’s the latest from the very busy owner of the Community Bookstore, Catherine Bohne:

Hi Everyone.  I have had a recent realization,
which is that I may well be the world’s most productive
procrastinator.  Therefore, I have been meddling, and wanted to remind
you of the following:

1. Wednesday night! The first monthly Community Forum with Craig Hammerman (flier attached)
2.  Thursday night! The first annual Restaurant Tour. [Psst — I have just heard that D’Vine Taste is running
amazing below-wholesale- specials (rock-bottom olive oil! and more!)
all day tomorrow, to celebrate the restaurant tour — check it out!]
 
3.  New news!  I have been asked to
help organize two fundraisers for Obama, and so . . I am.  The first
is October 1st, and Rory Kennedy is graciously attending.  The second
is October 3rd, and I will have more information soon.  If you would
like more information about either, please feel free to contact me, and
I’ll be delighted for forward you the invitation.
 
4.  Coming soon — REDUCE, reuse, recycle campaign.  Phase one:  The Tiffin Campaign.  It’s going to be great!
 

The Written Word As Art Installation: The Fictionist Hits The Streets

The written word as art installation seems to be the M.O. of writer, Jillian Ciaccia and her projects sound very  interesting. She sent me this yesterday:

Thought I’d drop a
note regarding a topic that may be of interest to OTBKB. I’m a native
Brooklynite and short fiction writer that just finished up doing the Bklyn
Book Festival on September 14th.  During that time I met a reader who saw
and complimented several of the art installations I’ve been doing around the
streets of New York.  I haven’t been quite vocal about the
project myself, but it seems to be gaining notice–first with a
feature on UrbanMolecule.com here: http://urbanmolecule.wordpress.com/2008/09/01/who-is-the-fictionist/ and
now at the festival.

Essentially I insert
my short stories into the surrounding urban environment: a construction site,
guard rail, park bench etc..  If you’d like to take a look, feel free: http://www.flickr.com/photos/18664840@N03/sets/72157607067183943/

More About School Report Cards

I got this email from an OTBKB reader about the school report cards:

I saw your post about the new school
grades and thought the info I posted on Park Slope Parents might be
useful to you. It is a list of overall scores for most of the Park
Slope area elementary schools. Quite a score for PS 10 (7th Ave and
Prospect Ave) — seems to be the highest in District 15 and one of the
highest citywide.

Individual reports don’t seem to be available for all of the area
schools, although information on each can be found on the (very large)
spreadsheet detailing the entire school system. In case this is helpful
for anyone, I’ve excerpted the overall grade/score for some of the
local PS-area schools below — all are District 15 with one exception.
(The actual reports are far more detailed than the macro figures below
— so keep that in mind.) I am sure I’ve missed some — and, of course,
am not trying to make any sort of representation or judgment about the grading system. Schools are listed below in numerical order fyi.

School    Grade    Overall Score

PS 10     A           94    (Percentile: 99.5)
PS 39     B           51.1
PS 107   A           63.7
PS 124   A           63.5
PS 146   A           63.6
PS 154   B           59
PS 282   B          49.5
PS 295   A          72.8
PS 321   B          52.5

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My father, Monte Ghertler, wrote an ad to promote National Library Week when he was a copywriter at the firm Doyle Dane Bernbach. This ad was included in the book When Advertising Tried Harder. The Sixties: The Golden Age of American Advertising. Thanks to two Third Street friends for finding the book and lending it to me. The ad was a full white page with the alphabet printed out small. Here is the copy.

At your public library they’ve got these arranged in ways that can make you cry, giggle, love, hate, wonder, ponder and understand.

It’s astonishing what those twenty-six little marks can do.
    In Shakespeare’s hands they became Hamlet.
    Mark Twain wound them into Huckleberry Finn. James Joyce twisted them into Ulysees. Gibbon pounded them in The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. Milton shaped them into Paradise Lost. Einstein added some numbers and signs (to save time and space) and they formed The General Theory of Relativity.
    Your name is in them.
    And here we are using them now.
    Why? Because it’s National Library Week—an excellent time to remind you of letters, words, sentences and paragraphs. In short, books—reading.
    You can live without reading, of course. But it’s so limiting.
    How else can you go to Ancient Rome. Or Gethsemane? Or Gettysburg.
    Or meet such people as Aristotle, F. Scott Fitzgerald, St. Paul, Byron, Napoleon, Ghengis Khan, Tolstoi, Thurber, Whitman, Emily Dickinson and Margaret Mead?
    To say nothing of Gulliver, Scarlett O’Hara, Jane Eyre, Gatzby, Oliver Twist, Heathcliffe, Captain Ahab, Raskolnikov and Tom Swift?
    With books you can climb to the top of Everest, drop to the bottom of the Atlantic. You step upon the Galapagos, sail alone around the world, visit the Amazon, the Antartic, Tibet, the Nile.
    You can learn to do anything from cooking a carrot to repairing a television set.
    With books you can explore the past, guess at the future and make sense out of today.
    Read. Your public library has thousands of books, all of which are yours for the asking.
    And add books to your own library. With each book you add, your home grows bigger and more interesting.
National Library Week, April 16-22

The Awning is Up

Eric NYC, the new shoe shop on Seventh Avenue between 2nd and 3rd Streets, has put up its awning. It looks like they will be opening up soon.

Eric NYC is an upscale shoe store with locations on the Upper East Side. They’ve done a nice renovation of the shop that used to be Seventh Avenue Books. I am interested to see what the merchandise looks like and the prices.

Welcome to the Neighborhood

Thank You For Your Submission, a blogger from Chicago moves to Park Slope and what does she do? She blogs about it:

Finally, you make it to Park Slope and
unpack the truck. Your new apartment has been left in such a filthy, depraved
condition by the previous tenant that it feels radioactive. You start
scrubbing and won’t quit for the next seven days. But before that, you
learn that your rent check–the certified check you sent via
certified mail 18 days ago for your new dump– was lost, somehow. And
the next day you wake up to find that your Uhaul’s passenger side
window was smashed by a thief. You suppose this is your
official welcome to Brooklyn.

311 gets dialed, a police report gets made. After cleaning up the glass, you and your husband return the
damaged truck. For a solid ten minutes you go toe-to-toe with a tiny
Indian man with a pompadour and jagged, sharklike teeth, screaming at
the top of your lungs that you will not pay for the damage, that
you’ve already paid $70 for the Uhaul insurance. You turn out to be
correct, and are not liable. In triumph you march out looking for
pompadour-sharktooth Uhaul man, but he has wisely made himself scarce.
You and your husband go buy a loaf of bread, beer, and a small jar of
olives and pay $18. You know your life in New York has
begun.

But things start
to improve, sort of. The rent situation
gets straightened out. Stuff gets unpacked, put on walls. Books are put
on shelves, library cards are gotten at the Park Slope Brooklyn
Public Library (which is in a historic building and is quite
beautiful). The utilities are changed, new Internet service is
ordered, Lowe’s is found. You learn where to grocery shop, get great
pizza, ok Chinese, and you find the reasonably priced beer of your
choice (Miller). You learned that if you stand on the corner of 16th
Street and 6th Avenue, you can see the Statue of Liberty,
way off.

That was week one.

Crandall Public Library: A Library My Dad Liked

I feel this nice connection with the Crandall Public Library in Glen Falls, a local library near my dad’s house in East Greenwich, New York.

A great connoisseur of books, my dad thought it was a terrific library and he was a lifetime  appreciator of libraries. He always had a big stack of books out from that library when he was spending extended time upstate.

For those who would like to make a donation in my father’s name please do:  Crandall Public Lirbary, 251 Glen Street, Glens Falls, New York 12801. Remember to mention my father’s name.

I just spoke to the person in charge of fund raising there and we discussed some ideas of what they could do with the money and ways to recognize my dad.

She said she knows how important libraries can be in people’s lives and it’s nice to acknowledge that.

I want to visit the library and walk around the stacks. Go the places he might have gone when he was there.

He really liked it there.

This Thursday: Green Brooklyn Event

On Thursday, September 18th, the Center for the Urban Environment will host Green Brooklyn…Green City—drawing over 3000 residents from all five boroughs to a full day symposium event at Brooklyn’s Borough Hall.  “Green Brooklyn…Green City is unique in its sheer size and breadth,” says Aisha Glover, Director of Public Affairs and organizer of the event, “its New York City’s largest showcase of green and sustainability issues, programs, and products.”

At the 4th Annual Green Brooklyn event, businesses, nonprofit organizations, and government agencies come from across the five boroughs to share ideas with the public about how to live greener in their everyday lives. This year’s partnership with Greenmarket expands the event exponentially and couples the great work of the Council on the Environment of NYC with the Center’s own innovative programming. “Relationships like these,” says Sandi Franklin, Executive Director of the Center, “confirm the city’s status as a place of partnership and innovation. This great city is in the forefront of sustainability issues nation-wide.”

It is not surprising, then, that the event features some of the city’s preeminent leaders—from Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz to businesses like Icestone and Green Depot.

With over 75 exhibitors on site, attendees can learn first-hand from local experts about socially conscious investing, how to solar your building, choosing non-toxic home products (and of course where to buy them!) how real urbanites compost, shopping eco-chic, and what New York City is doing to create a more sustainable future.   Some are ‘events within events’ like the film showing of King Corn, a documentary that tells the seed-to-plate story of a crop that drives our nation—and a sustainability panel for nonprofits that features a number of community leaders, including pioneering nonprofits such as Sustainable South Bronx, Fifth Avenue Committee and Solar One.

“Green Brooklyn… Green City is in its fourth incarnation—and is reaching more and more New Yorkers every year,” agreed Franklin. “Its momentum is in close step with the city’s commitment to developing more sustainable communities. We are excited by the energy of this event and are eager to expand our role as a critical resource for discussions about the issues that most affect the future of our city.”

For full details visit www.greenbrooklyn.org

New Venue for Fort Greene Indie Bookstore Initiative Event Tonight!

This just in. A change in venue for this Fort Greene Indie Bookstore event. Neighbors in Fort Greene are working hard to help Jessica Stockton Bagnulo open a bookstore in their neighborhood.

WHEN:
Tuesday September 16, 2008 from 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm

WHERE:
Because of the overwhelming Fort Greene community response to wanting to show their support for a bookstore in the neighborhood, we’ve decided to change the location to accommodate more people at the event. The party will now take place in the lobby of the BAM Harvey Theater at 651 Fulton Street, between Ashland and Rockland.

WHO:
Fort Greene Indie Bookstore Initiative

The Fort Green Indie Bookstore Initiative (FGIBI) is an all-volunteer non-profit organization that seeks to attract small business owners to Fort Greene to open a bookstore and other stores in response to the community’s needs.   The group also encourages current retailers to open new businesses locally and seeks to help local residents open their own businesses.

Jessica Stockton Bagnulo

Jessica has worked in New York City independent bookstores for the past eight years, and is currently the events and publicity coordinator at McNally Jackson Books in Manhattan.  She is active in numerous book industry organizations and is often called upon to speak and write about independent bookselling.  Her business plan for an independent bookstore in Brooklyn won the grand prize in the 2007 Brooklyn Public Library PowerUp! business plan competition in January 2008.  She lives in Park Slope, Brooklyn, and blogs at www.abookstoreinbrooklyn.blogspot.com.   

More Vanishing Cocotte News

This just in on the Cocotte front:

After I sent you the photo, the sign in the window changed–to "Coming
soon, Italian restaurant." But that’s still no excuse for painting over
the painted woman!  I wish the new owners had simply touched up the
Cocotte on the mural to make her look like Giulietta Masina in The
Nights of Cabiria.

Bedbugs!!! A New Musical From Paul Leschen

Paul Leschen, who was briefly OTBKB’s fabulous Brooklyn restaurant critic has resurfaced wearing his musical theater hat. To read his posts go here.

Sorry we’ve been out of touch so long. I still check in on OTBKB now and then. I’m really sorry to read about your father.

Things
are going OK on this end, I guess…I don’t do food writing anymore
(though I’m tempted to try) since food blogs and Yelp! seem to have
killed that art form. But I’m working in the musical theatre world, and
it’s been great.

I’d like to invite you to see my new rock musical, Bedbugs!!!. It’s
about a female exterminator who accidentally mutates NYC’s bedbugs into
blood-thirsty 80’s hair metal rock gods. It also weaves in themes of
fear, neurosis, and the need to rid ourselves of the noxious forces
which creep into our hypothetical beds (Bush, bad relationships, etc.)

The show is part of the New York Musical Theatre Festival (NYMF) and opens on Tuesday, September 16th.

So, if you’re up to it, I’d love for you to come see the show. Our website is bedbugsmusical.com

Today: Make Sure You Have A Health Care Proxy

I don’t. But the hospice social worker convinced me that it is very important to assign a trusted individual to every person  in your family. NOW. Do not wait. I found this online at the New York State Department of Health.

The New York Health Care Proxy Law allows you to appoint someone you
trust – for example, a family member or close friend – to make health
care decisions for you if you lose the ability to make decisions
yourself. By appointing a health care agent, you can make sure that
health care providers follow your wishes.

Your agent can also decide how your wishes apply as your medical
condition changes. Hospitals, doctors and other health care providers
must follow your agent’s decisions as if they were your own. You may
give the person you select as your health care agent as little or as
much authority as you want. You may allow your agent to make all health
care decisions or only certain ones. You may also give your agent
instructions that he or she has to follow. This form can also be used
to document your wishes or instructions with regard to organ and/or
tissue donation.

A Living Will is also a good idea.

Brooklyn for Barack Trip to Philadelphia

Brooklyn for Barack is organizing a trip to Philadelphia to register voters on September 21:

Sept. 21: Fired up for Philly? Two weeks left to register voters!

Want to bring our neighboring swing state home for Obama? Making sure everyone in PA is registered to vote is a great way to help! We will work with the amazing field staff in NW/North Philly, in a combination of door-to-door canvass and voter-reg. hot spots to find and register voters, recruit local volunteers, and lay the groundwork for get-out-the-vote efforts in November

We will be traveling from Brooklyn in a combination of cars and passenger vans. I will get back in touch with you about travel options.

To go on this trip, you MUST email me your name, cellphone number, and neighborhood, whether you have a car or need a ride. If you have a car, how many folks can you take? Email: jeanne@brooklynforbarack.org. Unless I get that information from you, I cannot add you to the list. Please put “Sept. 21 trip” in the subject line. Thanks!

This Thursday: 7th Avenue Restaurant Tour

The Park Slope Chamber of Commerce announces the first 7th Avenue Restaurant Tour.
When: 7:00 PM – 10:00 PM THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 18

Where: Seventh Avenue from 16th Street to Flatbush

Join a stroll along 7th Avenue, between 16th and Flatbush
where your favorite restaurants (and maybe a few you haven’t yet discovered) will be sampling some of their signature dishes.
The samples are free, so bring your friends and your appetite.

For a list of participating restaurants ( and growing fast every day) and more info contact Buy in Brooklyn or call 718-303-4364.

Smartmom Loses Her Dad

The Brooklyn Paper used the Smartmom page to memorialize my dad. They strung together some of these blog posts. I didn’t know a thing about it. On Friday Hugh said, "I like the thing in the Brooklyn Paper." I didn’t know what he was talking about. Now I do.

Our beloved Smartmom — Louise Crawford — lost her father, Monte
Ghertler, on Sunday. The Brooklyn Paper staff offers its full
condolences — and, in fact, was so moved by our columnist’s writings
about her father’s death on her Web site, Only the Blog Knows Brooklyn,
that we have compiled these excerpts:

In lieu of flowers, the family is asking for donations to the Crandall Library, 251 Glen St., Glens Falls, NY 12801.

Dad, we love you

My dad died yesterday at 4:15. I was with him when it happened. He
was in hospice in the sunny living room of his Brooklyn Heights
apartment on the 27th floor with its view of the Manhattan skyline he
adored.

For most of the day he moaned softly. At 3:45 or so, my sister
played one of his favorite records, scratches and all, on the
phonograph: “Kinderszenen or Scenes from Childhood,” by Robert Schumann.

Just before he died he had three labored breaths. But there was no fear, no panic in his eyes.

Writing the Eulogy

Last week at the hospital, Hillary, my stepmother, told me that my
father wanted me to speak at his funeral. That was an honor like no
other, but also a huge pressure.

How could I write something — anything — that would compare to what my father would say on such an occasion?

His wanting me to do this was his way of showing his faith in me
about this most important thing that we share: the ability to turn
experience into words, to find the right way to say that which is so
hard to express.

Hillary also said that my father wanted me to read a poem and that I’d know which one.

Hmm. I was stumped. Was it something by Yeats, Shakespeare or Frank
O’Hara? I really didn’t know what poem he was talking about. And I was
stressed. But then it came to me: he probably meant the last two pages
of “The House at Pooh Corner,” by A.A. Milne, a book he cherished. I
read this section at my high school graduation and my father was moved
to tears.

So I am putting all my grief, shock, and numbness into the writing
of this eulogy. At my computer is the only place I want to be right now
tinkering with it, making it better, adding things, trying to write
something worthy of the man.

Planning The Funeral

Sitting in the funeral directors plush office at the Frank E.
Campbell Funeral Chapel was surreal; one of those situations you dread
your whole life but is much more normal than you expect.

We had to choose the coffin and discuss my father’s entombment in
the family mausoleum. We even looked at a layout of the mausoleum. We
want my father next to his dad, Dewey.

“Flowers or no flowers?”

My sister wanted flowers, my stepmother did not. No real stalemate.
We decided against them, because we couldn’t really think of a flower
that represented my father.

The secretary typed up the New York Times death announcement that I wrote and we proofread it.

“It needs a comma here,” I said reaching for a pen.

It all felt so ordinary.

Meeting The Rabbi

This morning, my sister and I met with Rabbi Andy Bachman at
Congregation Beth Elohim. He asked a lot of questions and we got a
chance to tell him much about my father’s life.

Rabbi Bachman seemed to enjoy the story about the time my father
went to work at a shoe store. My father, then 19 or 20, assured the
store’s owner that he had plenty of experience in the shoe business,
but when he was caught inexpertly trying to force a shoe onto a large
woman’s foot, the owner replied: “You’re no shoe man, Ghertler.”

My sister told Rabbi Bachman what a funny storyteller my father was.
It felt sad to have to describe it knowing that we’d never again see my
father rub his hands the way he did when he was warming up for a great
punchline.

Afterwards, we waited under the scaffolding at Beth Elohim for a fierce downpour to die down.

I walked toward Seventh Avenue, but the sudden feeling of wet and
cold made me rethink my plan. Then I saw a black car service car and I hopped in
the back.

“You got lucky,” said a man who was standing on the corner of Eighth Avenue as I got into the car.

Today, the grief was a fog around my forehead. I had the sense that
the world was moving on and I wasn’t part of it. I wanted to say,
“Don’t these people know that Monte Ghertler is gone?”

Friends

Friends called all day. One helpfully stopped by my apartment to
pick up an envelope that needed to be driven over to my stepmother’s
apartment in Brooklyn Heights.

I feel overwhelmed at the thought of seeing a lot of people today.
I feel so inside myself and I don’t know if I will be able to connect
with anyone. I’m nervous about my eulogy and keep thinking of all the
things I didn’t say in it.

Monte Ghertler, 1929–2008

Monte Ghertler, legendary advertising copywriter and creative
director, author, songwriter, connoisseur of art, literature, music,
philosophy, birdwatching, opera, and thoroughbred horse racing, died
peacefully in his Brooklyn Heights home on September 7, 2008,
surrounded by loving family members.

Monte, who had a successful career in advertising, had a way with
words, a sharp intellect, a hilarious sense of humor, and a love of
books, music and his family.

He is survived by his wife, Hillary; his daugheters, Louise and
Caroline; his sons-in-law, Hugh Crawford and Jeffrey Jacobson; and
three grandchildren.

Eulogy For My Father

I have a really cool dad. Ask any of my friends. It’s one of the very first things you learn about me.

I always felt that way and I still do. In fact, today I feel it even more strongly than ever.

There is so much to say about this man who lived (and died) in a 27th floor Brooklyn Heights apartment with a sumptuous view of the NYC skyline he adored.

A man of many passions, including his wife Hillary, his children, grandchildren, relatives and many friends, my dad enjoyed an eclectic array of culture both high and low including painting, sculpture, literature, music of all kinds, philosophy, film, bird watching, horse racing, food, wine, the natural world and so much more. One has only to browse his huge collection of books and records to see the scope of this man’s interests and the places his mind liked to travel.

To say he was smart would be an understatement. This was a man who read almost constantly and always knew what was going on in the world, the city he loved, as well as what was going on at the museums, the Chelsea galleries, the local film houses, jazz clubs and concert halls.

A connoisseur of both the pop and the esoteric, the atonal and the swooningly harmonic, my father loved Louis Armstrong, Billie Holiday, Cole Porter, George Gershwin and Duke Ellington as much as he appreciated Debussy, Bach, Schumann, Schoenberg, opera, Roland Barthes, William Butler Yeats, Martin Heidegger and Theodor Adorno. 

He loved the new as much as the classic and always liked to be—no needed to be—up to date on the latest thing in the cultural zeitgeist.

But the classics were his passion and he knew his way around the  Metropolitan Museum, where he loved to peruse the 19th century paintings, the ancient Chinese art and the New Greek and Roman sculpture Galleries on the first floor.

And then there were the horses.

His lifelong love of horse racing meant that he missed his own college graduation from the University of California at Berkeley so that he could watch Citation, a Triple Crown racehorse, run in nearby Golden Gate Fields. It also meant that he spent every August at Saratoga Racetrack, not far from the beautiful colonial country home in Washington County, New York he shared with Hillary.

Born to Ethel and Dewey in 1929, Monte grew up in Manhattan a smart, funny kid whose parents divorced when he was young. He lived with his mother and maternal grandparents and sometimes with his beloved Aunt Gladys and Uncle Al Luria in their palatial apartment on East 88th Street with its view of the Guggenheim and the Central Park Resevoir.

Later his parents remarried one another and they moved to LA, another city close to his heart, where my dad became an avid collector of jazz records and autographs, and a student at LA High. He graduated from the University of California at Berkeley and did graduate studies at UCLA in philosophy where he made many lifelong friends.

Returning to New York in the 1950’s, my father went to work in the mail room of an advertising agency and was soon promoted to copywriter when his talent for brilliant word-smithing was discovered.  Soon after he met my mother on the island of Nantucket. They married, had twins and lived on Riverside Drive while he became creative director at Papert Koenig and Lois, an innovative advertising agency..

After PKL went out of business my father spent a couple of years pursuing his own personal projects including a screenplay about the night Henry David Thoreau spent in jail, a Thoreau calendar, an opera based on Nixon’s Checker speech, a suite of songs which can be heard on a terrific album by Bob Dorough called This Is A Recording of Pop Art with lyrics based on a weather report, a Brooks Brothers collection bill, a traffic ticket, a laundry ticket and my sister and my favorite, Webster’s dictionary definition of love. There was also the best selling book called The Couple.

Did I mention that he was a three-time winning contestant on TV’s Who, What or Where Show, probably one of the most exciting times of my life.

Later he met his second wife Hillary, whom he loved dearly. They married in 1989 and enjoyed a full and interesting life together in Brooklyn Heights, Fisher’s Island, and East Greenwich with many interests, friends, and travel to places like Death Valley, Paris, Monhegan Island, and the islands of Greece.

My father retired from advertising sometime in the early 1990’s, which gave Dad and Hillary plenty of time to enjoy their life in Brooklyn Heights and rustic East Greenwich, where they also made some wonderful friends.

In 1991, my husband Hugh, newborn Henry and I followed my father and Hillary to the borough of Kings. Living in Park Slope, it was great to live our lives in close proximity. We had so many memorable times celebrating holidays, birthdays, talking around the dinner table, and watching fireworks from their windows.

Last Fourth of July, a small group of family and neighbors gathered to watch. My dad had been sick for almost a year and it was a gift to be able to do this with him. We’d always joke that my dad was putting on a private show just for us. It really felt that way when the Grucci fireworks illuminated the sky right outside his windows. Thanks dad, we’d say, for putting on such an incredible show.

To say that my father was a huge influence on me would be another understatement.

His appreciation of music and art is inscribed in me as it is in my children. So is his love of words and his superhuman ability to come up with great copy, just the right turn of phrase, something funny, a double entendre or hard to ignore headline. (Get Your Daily Dose of Dallas). An idea man, he was revered by all who worked with him for his pitch perfect instincts and conceptual flair.

So what was it like to have such a cool dad and grandfather? 

Well, my father was a good and generous man who loved his children and his grandchildren, who never forget a birthday, Halloween or Valentine’s Day card and always tried to give everyone the gift they really wanted. I can still hear him ask, “So what does Alice want for her birthday?”

He was protective in all the right ways. I was 30 before he stopped reaching for my hand when we crossed the street. And who can forget the first time I took the crosstown bus alone to school and he followed behind on his bike. And when I needed help (and boy have I needed help) he was always there).

My son Henry, now 17, adored my father and was endlessly impressed by the hilarious true stories he used to tell. For years Henry would ask why doesn’t someone do a documentary about grandpa? Why isn’t grandpa on NPR? Henry is now the repository of all those great tales.  He also wears his grandfather’s shoes (as they share a shoe size) and ties.

Last week at the hospital, Hillary told me that my father wanted me to speak at his funeral. That was an honor like no other but also a huge pressure. How could I write something—anything—that would compare to what my father would say on such an occasion?

Obviously he knew that I’d work hard to convey the multi-faceted man that he was. He knew I’d try to write something worthy of him.

His wanting me to do this was his way of showing his faith in me about this most important thing that we share: the ability to turn experience into words, to find the right way to say that which is so hard to express.

He also told her that he wanted me to read a poem and that I would know which poem he meant.

Hmmmm. I was stumped. And then I felt pressure. Was it something by Yeats, Shakespeare or Frank O’Hara? I really didn’t know what poem he was talking about.

But then it came to me, he probably meant the last two pages of The House at Pooh Corner by AA Milne, a book he cherished. I read this section at my high school graduation and my father was moved to tears.

Now my sister Caroline will read it to you. It’s a beautiful passage and it sums up my father’s penchant for existential sentimentality. Thank you dad for sharing this with us and for everything else you taught us to listen to, read and see.

Don’t worry, dad. We will never ever forget you.

How could we? You are the coolest dad in the world.

Writing the Eulogy

Dad_at_the_metropolitan_27
Last week at the hospital, Hillary, my stepmother, told me that my father wanted me to speak at his funeral. That was an honor like no other but also a huge pressure.

How could I write something—anything—that would compare to what my father would say on such an occasion?

His wanting me to do this was his way of showing his faith in me about this most important thing that we share: the ability to turn experience into words, to find the right way to say that which is so hard to express.

He must have known that I would struggle to find the words to convey the many layers of the man; that I would honor him and do him justice. Dad, I’m going to try to get it right.

Hillary also said that my father wanted me to read a poem and that I’d know which one.

Hmmmm. I was stumped. And then I felt pressure. Was it something by Yeats, Shakespeare or Frank O’Hara? I really didn’t know what poem he was talking about. And I was stressed.

But then it came to me, he probably meant the last two pages of The House at Pooh Corner by AA Milne, a book he cherished. I read this section at my high school graduation and my father was moved to tears.

So I am putting all my grief, shock, and numbness into the writing of this eulogy. At my computer is the only place I want to be right now tinkering with it, making it better, adding things, trying to write something worthy of the man.

Monte Ghertler 1929-2008: We Love You

Dad_at_the_metropolitan_16
My dad died yesterday at 4:15. I was with him when it happened. He
was in hospice in the sunny living room of his Brooklyn Heights
apartment on the 27th floor with its view of the Manhattan skyline he adored.

For most of the day he moaned softly. At 3:45 or so, my sister
played one of his favorite records, scratches and all, on the
phonograph: Kinderszenen or Scenes from Childhood by Robert Schumann.

I know he loved that piece because just three weeks ago we listened intently to this LP in his bedroom.

Just before he died he had
three labored breaths. But there was no fear, no panic in his eyes.

Monte Ghertler, legendary advertising copywriter and creative director, author, songwriter, connoisseur of art, literature, music, philosophy, birdwatching, opera, and thoroughbred horse racing, died peacefully in his Brooklyn Heights home on September 7, 2008 surrounded by loving family members.  Devoted husband of Hillary, father of Louise and Caroline, father-in-law of Hugh Crawford and Jeffrey Jacobson, grandfather of Henry and Alice Crawford and Sonya Jacobson, Cousin of Joan Fisher and former husband of Edna ghertler, Monte leaves behind many family, friends, and admirers who will never forget his way with words, his intellect and many interests, his love of books and music, his great sense of humor and his irresistible personality.

Photo of my dad taken by me at the New Greek and Roman Galleries at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in September 2007.

At Home Hospice in Brooklyn Heights

We brought my father home from Mt. Sinai Hospital on Friday morning. We were glad to leave the  10th floor oncology unit with its 24-hour florescent lighting, ever-beeping noises, and sometimes inadequate nursing care. There were, however, two nurses who gave my father such empathic and attentive care that I cry just thinking about them. His doctor is also an amazing human being and doctor (and he responds quickly to text messages).

The idea of Hospice was first suggested to us by the social worker at Mt. Sinai, who was also lovely and helpful. My sister went home that night and spoke with a man in her apartment building who is a hospice worker with Visiting Nurses/Hospice. She was very moved by his description of his work and shared with me what she found out.

I learned that hospice emphasizes palliative rather than curative treatment; quality rather than quantity of life. The dying are comforted. Professional medical care is given for symptom relief. The patient and family are both included in the care plan and emotional, spiritual and practical support is offered.

We weren’t sure at first if my father should go back to his apartment in Brooklyn Heights or into a hospital hospice. Last Tuesday I visited Calvary Hospital, a hospice hospital located inside Lutheran Hospital in Sunset Park. With a large facility in the Bronx and this 25-bed unit in Brooklyn, Calvary is considered one of the best hospice hospitals around.

Still, I concluded (and my sister and stepmother agreed) that it might be better to bring him home and use Calvary’s home hospice services. A hospital/hospice was certainly a possibility in the future, but for now it would be best for him to be home with his things, his books, his huge collection of classical and jazz music, his beautiful view of the Manhattan skyline, his cat Rajah, his family and friends.

It was a bumpy ride down the FDR in the ambulance Friday morning. Talking to the EMT guy was distracting; I was nervous about how my father would feel at home. He was very disoriented and not altogether sure where we were taking him. He grimaced in pain when the van hit pot holes and bumps but overall he was in a peaceful mood.

Once home we knew we’d made the right decision. The hospital bed was already set up and made in corner of the living room and all the other furniture had been cleared away to make room for a hospital table, oxygen machines and all kinds of miscellanous supplies. The room, with its four huge windows facing the East River and the Manhattan skyline, was suffused with sunlight and fresh air. The cat, a Bengali, looked on warily but eventually jumped onto my father’s bed, which my father seemed to enjoy.

With the help of a friend, we’d hired, sight unseen, a 24-hour caregiver. From the moment I walked in the door I knew she was heaven sent. Her ability to throw herself into the situation at hand was incredible. It made all of us feel safe that she was there as we were not going  to meet the Calvary health care aide, who will come four hours a day, until after the weekend.

Coming home to hospice is a lot like coming home with a newborn from the hospital. I remember the terror and exhaustion. Yikes, what do we do now? Who left us alone with this baby. We’re not ready for THIS.

In the early afternoon, a social worker and nurse from Calvary came to speak with us. Their hardcore talk about health care proxy’s, do not resuscitate forms, and realities of the dying process was hard to hear. But I felt they were knowledgeable and empathic. Most importantly, they outlined all the resources that Calvary has to offer, gave us their 24-hour nursing line and made me feel like we had a good team of people helping us (not at home but out there somewhere).

Importantly, the nurse discussed my father’s pain medications and instructed me  in how to administer them.

While we spoke with the team, Hepcat talked to my dad and held his hand. They talked about his Suburu and the fender bender I was in three weeks ago; my father told him about his old blue Austin Healey and even the existence of his Living Will.

My father’s expressive speech is impaired by all of this so it is hard to understand him. But at times he is lucid and cognizant.

Friday evening was hard. Hospice requires the acceptance of what is really going on. You are looking the end of life in the face day and night. It is deeply sad and denial is virtually impossible. It is bracing and humane all at the same time.

Most of hospice care falls on the family members and/or a hired caregiver. I worried at first if we’d be able to turn him over frequently, remake the bed with him in it (and he absolutely hates to be moved) and care for him in the way he needs to be cared for.

Day two was much better even though there were plenty of difficult moments. My father slept for much of the afternoon. He asked for water frequently which I gave to him through a straw. Lydia, the caregiver made an incredible homemade soup that filled the apartment with the most delicious smells of cooking onions, carrots, cabbage, and beef.

I was able to nap while he napped. I stretched out on the living room sofa and looked at my father’s esoteric philosophy and photography books: all evidence of his brilliant and creative mind.

There is no shame in dying and he is teaching us how. It’s the most heartbreaking thing in the world to see. But necessary. Some people die fast, in an instant. For others it is more slow. Either way, it is something we must face and embrace.

We can’t run away. None of us can.