This man and music

When I was young, my father dutifully paid the family bills in a small enclosed porch opening off the bedroom he shared with my mother in our house in Lexington, Massachusetts. There was just enough room for a secretary, a chair, a narrow bookcase, and two filing cabinets. On the shelves behind the glass doors of the secretary he kept memorabilia: a 1961 Ford Thunderbird he’d made from a plastic model kit and painted cherry-red when my brother and I were toddlers (anticipating, he once told me, the father-son model making to come); a home run baseball he’d got his hands on from inside the scrum when it rolled under the bleacher seats in an Orioles game in the 1950s; a kaleidoscope; a prism; a beautiful old ivory Keuffel & Esser sliderule from his graduate school days; The Bluejacket’s Manual. On the outside of one of the doors, tucked between the glass and a fake mullion, was a photograph taken of him while he was in the U.S. Navy:

Sun-damaged old photograph of Louis Alton Hall in Navy seaman's uniform on a Chicago street in 1946, counting change in his palm

I regret the damage, which is all my fault. I’ve loved that photograph ever since I was a small child, and after my father died and I inherited his secretary, I made sure to slip the picture into its old place, by way of a memorial. But I neglected to consider that the room in which I keep the secretary, unlike my father’s old cubby-hole, gets a lot of direct sunlight.

Continue reading “This man and music”

A music playlist for The Stone Loves the World

Largehearted Boy is a marvelous site where authors are asked to create a music playlist for their books, accompanied by a paragraph or two explaining the reason for each selection.  Links are provided to the relevant recordings.  It’s hugely fun to wander around the site, discovering what music has inspired which writer for whatever reason.  I provided a list for The Stone Loves the World, and you can access it here.