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In a forthcoming memoir, a Kansas writer sees the land and herself anew
In a forthcoming memoir, a Kansas writer sees the land and herself anew

Yahoo

time10 hours ago

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In a forthcoming memoir, a Kansas writer sees the land and herself anew

The home of Caryn Mirriam-Goldberg and Ken Lassman can be seen from a field to the southwest. Kansas. In her recent memoir, Mirriam-Goldberg writes of the effort to preserve their 130 acres near Lawrence. (Ken Lassman) It's a rainy June evening and I'm on the phone with Caryn Mirriam-Goldberg to talk about her new book. On my end in Emporia I can hear the steady drum of rain. Caryn is at the door of her home south of Lawrence, about 80 highway miles from me, and she's looking out at the land that is largely the setting for her true and personal tale of survival. I ask her to describe what she sees. 'What I can see right now is this incredible lush, green upon green upon green,' she says. 'You know, I've been looking at the colors a lot in different ways. I've started drawing and painting. And there's probably half a dozen shades of green, some very close to each other. We have very large cedar trees just off, kind of on the edge of our yard. We have a, let's see, Ken, is that a dying elm tree?' She asks her husband, Ken Lassman, who is nearby but not on the phone, to identify the tree. After a moment, Caryn reports. 'The tree that's dying is an ash,' she says. I think of Yggdrasill, the sacred ash of Norse mythology. Death in the midst of life. Life amid life. Caryn is legally blind in her right eye. She sees the world blurred as if in watercolor, the result of an ocular melanoma, a rare and particularly aggressive form of cancer. Diagnosed in 2019, just in time for the pandemic, and after having survived breast cancer years before, the eye cancer might have killed her. But she received treatment and surgery and now counts herself among the lucky. She took notes through it all, and the result was a book not just about the ordeal her body and mind went through, but about Ken and their children and good friends and that 130 acres of land. 'The Magic Eye: A Story of Saving a Life and a Place in the Age of Anxiety' will be released in July by Mammoth Publications, a small California press. Caryn is a former poet laureate of Kansas who has published a couple of dozen books, both fiction and poetry, but 'Magic Eye' is unlike anything she's written before — memoir, yes, but also a kind of found poem in the dust bin of the universe. Caryn is a survivor but don't call the book a survivor's story, because it's really about the interconnectedness of people and places. She is philosophical that death is not so much to be beaten but something we must all come to terms with, whether soon or late. In a chapter titled 'I Don't Want to Die,' Caryn leads with the following: What do you do with old fear, the kind that sets up a cot in the basement of your psyche, somewhere between boxes of essays you wrote in college and a giant pressure cooker you'll never use? Just how lucky she is, at least statistically, Caryn doesn't dwell on because she avoids searching online for the cancer and the survival rates. But according to the Ocular Melanoma Foundation, in about half of cases the cancer spreads to other parts of the body, particularly the liver, and is often fatal. Ocular melanoma occurs in about one in 100,000 individuals and typically is diagnosed in persons between 55 and 60. Caryn was 59 when diagnosed. There is no cure, according to the foundation, but there are treatments. Among the treatments Caryn underwent was ocular brachytherapy, in which radioactive gold seeds are surgically attached to the eye to reduce the tumor. The patient remains hospitalized in radioactive isolation during the treatment, which was successful. When I ask if people have told her she was brave, she takes time to compose her reply. 'It's easy to appear brave when you are surround by loving friends, including my husband and family,' she said. 'Plus, when it comes to serious illness, people often equate bravery to doing the next step and the next because you want to live. When I think of bravery, I think of a close friend who lost his wife and still, missing her terribly while having to re-do almost everything in his life, gets out of bed in the morning and works in the garden.' There is much more she could say about bravery, she said, in this time of anxiety. Relationships are inherently brave, she said, and when she feels the most terrified is when she's dealing with other people. It's terrifying to be deeply intimate, she said, to be honest, to put yourself out there, to be vulnerable. And that's not even taking into account the times in which we live. 'There's so many emergencies right now,' she said. 'I think it's a peculiar balance point with what you open your eyes to take in, your relationship to it, and how do you keep from going out of your mind?' Part of what has helped, she said, is working with therapists and acknowledging the spiritual part of the journey. She also said she was lucky to have married somebody who had a 'pure, clear relationship' with the land. Mammoth, publisher of 'Magic Eye,' is owned by another former Kansas poet laureate, Denise Low. The house specializes in the work of indigenous and regional authors. 'My health is good,' she said. 'You know, I'm legally blind in that eye but it's not like blind blind, it's just a different way of seeing. It is certainly not precise out of my right eye. And I continue to do follow ups. Each time I get a clear report, I'm very relieved, and the further out I get, the better. But then again, none of us exactly know what's coming down the road.' The specter of uncertainty is woven through the book, linking COVID and tornadoes and the vagaries of fate. Caryn grew up in Brooklyn and found herself staring often at whatever sliver of sky she could find as a child. She describes a household where her grandmothers cried out in Yiddish at the death of an infant brother and where she carried her bruises from an abusive father to high school. 'I turned to poetry as my saving grace,' she writes. 'But what my poetry was always about, is still about, is the earth and sky.' She came to Kansas for college, originally studying journalism. She met Ken in 1982 at the first Kansas Area Watershed Council, a 'deep ecology' group. She was 22, he was 27. A fling turned, three years later, into a marriage, where a quote from environmental writer Wendell Berry was part of the ceremony. In marrying Ken, a fifth-generation Kansan and now an occupational therapist and nature essayist, she also married the land. They vowed to protect all of his family's original acreage, which was tied up in a complicated inheritance worthy of Shakespeare. It took 35 years to untangle, she said. During our talk, I betray a bit of land envy. I say something — or I perhaps mumbled it — about my family never having land beyond the footprint of whatever house we lived in. I'm also thinking about how private land is a religion in Kansas and how the state ranks dead last in public land. But then I realize the kind of ownership Caryn writes about is not so much acquisition as a kind of transcendence. How are we made? Caryn asks in the book. From stardust and dirt, s*** and bones, climate and climate change, toxins and medicines, the damage and the cure. Healing is part of us and the earth, made of ordinary and rare time, weather, and place. Replant what was once a native tallgrass prairie and let the rotation of the earth for 12,000 years do the rest, whether or not humans are here to witness it. The land and the sky belong to everyone, she says. Max McCoy is an award-winning author and journalist. Through its opinion section, the Kansas Reflector works to amplify the voices of people who are affected by public policies or excluded from public debate. Find information, including how to submit your own commentary, here.

Oseberg tapestry: Viking Age artwork from a boat burial that may depict the Norse tree of life
Oseberg tapestry: Viking Age artwork from a boat burial that may depict the Norse tree of life

Yahoo

time19-05-2025

  • General
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Oseberg tapestry: Viking Age artwork from a boat burial that may depict the Norse tree of life

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Name: Oseberg tapestry What it is: Fragments of a woven, patterned textile Where it is from: Tønsberg, Norway When it was made: Around 834 Related: Hatnefer's heart scarab: An exquisite ancient Egyptian gold necklace inscribed with the Book of the Dead What it tells us about the past: More than a century ago, archaeologists excavated a Viking ship buried in the ground at the Oseberg farm in Tønsberg, Norway. Inside the unusually well-preserved carved oak vessel were the skeletons of two women who had been richly buried with clothes, farm equipment, domestic animals and a detailed tapestry that depicts one of the only known examples of a horned Viking helmet. Tree-ring dating of timbers from the grave placed the Oseberg ship burial at around A.D. 834. Inside the main burial chamber, excavators discovered fragments of a tapestry that, when reconstructed, measured 6.3 by 9 inches (16 by 23 centimeters). Made of wool, silk and flax, it includes depictions of humans, animals and wheeled vehicles. Fragments of only one part of the full tapestry have survived, and experts are unsure of the original size. Although the textile appears brown and beige today, it was originally made with yarn colored with a range of natural dyes. Remnants of the original red can be seen, for example, in the rough diamond shape in the middle of this fragment and in the concentric circles below that. Given the poor condition of the textile, experts are unsure of the exact scene it depicts. The mix of people, animals, wagons and houses suggests a possible funeral procession headed toward a large tree that may represent Yggdrasill, the Norse tree of life. Other human figures — both male and female — hold weapons and wear ritual clothing. Stylistically, the Oseberg textile is similar to the Bayeux tapestry, which was made over two centuries later in what is now France, as both show a narrative in linear fashion similar to a comic strip. MORE ASTONISHING ARTIFACTS —Hårby Valkyrie: A 1,200-year-old gold Viking Age woman sporting a sword, shield and ponytail —Apulian rhyton: A 2,300-year-old Spartan-hound-shaped cup that was likely used at boozy bashes —Lviv pysanka: World's oldest Easter egg One reason the Oseberg tapestry is famous is its unique depiction of a horned helmet. Horned Viking helmets have long captured the imagination of the modern world, but they are likely a 19th-century myth. Although the fragmentary metal Viking helmets that have been discovered do not have horns, the portrayal of a warrior — possibly a berserker — wearing a horned helmet on the Oseberg textile leaves open the possibility that some Vikings did indeed own horned helmets, perhaps for special occasions. The Oseberg tapestry is in the collection of the Museum of the Viking Age in Oslo. Experts continue to study the numerous fragments in an attempt to virtually stitch the tapestry back together someday.

$25 million Boca Raton home decorated with dragons, mermaids featured on Zillow Gone Wild
$25 million Boca Raton home decorated with dragons, mermaids featured on Zillow Gone Wild

Yahoo

time21-02-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

$25 million Boca Raton home decorated with dragons, mermaids featured on Zillow Gone Wild

A whimsical Boca Raton home whose baroque design is an ode to mythology, folklore and the four elements is on the market for $25 million. The more than 12,700 square-foot estate on the Intracoastal Waterway has 12 bedrooms, 10 full bathrooms and three pools, including one shaped like a fish and one designed for fish pedicures. A hand-carved enclosed wooden slide from the second floor to the foyer is likely included in the deal. A Norse-style 20-seat kitchen table shaped like a Viking long ship with a carved dragon head rising from its bow is negotiable. The unique elements of the custom-built home came from the imagination of Angela Nalbantu, who owns the 0.53-acre property in the Sun & Surf Club with her husband, Thomas Shrager. With just two of seven children left at home, the couple has decided to downsize from the house it took Nalbantu more than five years to design with themed rooms where every inch off floor to ceiling is tiled, muraled or stained glass. More: Iconic pink building in West Palm Beach to get facelift, and $150 million mansion for sale on Manalapan 'The spaces speak to me,' said Nalbantu, who has a degree in philosophy and math. 'We tried to make it a life-affirming place. I also try to put in something whimsical because if you are very serious, life will trip you up.' Crystals were put into the home's cornerstones. The concrete foundation was mixed with gallons of holy water. An elevator represents several levels of Norse mythology's nine realms, including the ash tree Yggdrasill, which connects the worlds. Midgard, the world of men, Asgard, the world of gods, and Niflheim, the world of frost giants, are also included. Outside, three large basalt columns represent the Oregon mountain peaks called the Three Sisters. Joyce Schneider, owner of Castles by The Beach Realty, is representing the owners in the sale of 1201 Marble Way, which was featured on Zillow Gone Wild. She said she held an open house for agents that was scheduled to run between 4 p.m. and 7 p.m. "Everyone stayed until 11," Schneider said. "No one wanted to leave. The house has such a sense of euphoria. It's amazing." Nalbantu said she has artist friends in Germany and Canada who visited her to help with specific details. Ceilings were painted by professional French artist Narbero. 'Originally, I told my husband I wanted to make it only by myself, and he said, 'I don't have 100 years to wait for this,' ' Nalbantu said. 'So, fortunately, I have many friends, and everyone said they wanted to make something for the house.' Room themes range from mermaids to dragons to Archangels to peacocks to roses to horses to Buddha. There is a frog-themed bathroom, a steampunk bathroom, and one dedicated to sunflowers. Nalbantu, a native of Romania, said she always decorated elaborately, even before she had money to do so with high-end finishes. In an apartment in England, she painted the walls in a jungle theme and hung veils from the ceiling so they would add movement to the rooms as if a breeze was blowing. The Dirt: New private club debuting in West Palm Beach is in historic hotel with notorious past She said she's surprised about the number of views her home has racked up on some social-media sites. And she said it will be hard to give up the home into which she has put so much passion and effort. But there's always the next house. 'I just go with the flow,' Nalbantu said. 'Everyone should make their home a representation of who they are on the outside and inside.' Stay up to date on South Florida's sizzling real estate market and sign up for The Dirt weekly newsletter, delivered every Tuesday! Exclusively for Palm Beach Post subscribers. Kimberly Miller is a journalist for The Palm Beach Post, part of the USA Today Network of Florida. She covers real estate, weather, and the environment. Subscribe to The Dirt for a weekly real estate roundup. If you have news tips, please send them to kmiller@ Help support our local journalism: Subscribe today. This article originally appeared on Palm Beach Post: $25 million waterfront Boca Raton home is a zillow-gone-wild kind of place

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