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January 26, 2012: HOMEbody ~ An evening with the artists…

Wednesday, January 18th, 2012

I am thrilled to be part of this incredible project — writing about home and leaving and returning and these unending prairie skies. It’s also been so exceptional to work with the Grade 10 and 11 drama students here in Yorkton.

We’re presenting the work we’ve done on “HOMEbody,” and with the students on Jan. 26 in Yorkton, Saskatchewan at the beautiful Anne Portnuff Theatre. If you’re in the neighbourhood, c’mon by!

Shannon’s written more about the project (and performance!) here.

AAAAND, we made the Yorkton paper. Read the article here!


Sky sky sky sky sky

Sunday, January 15th, 2012

lindsay zier-vogel, saskatchewan, homebody
I really and truly can’t get enough of these prairie skies. Here, I can see further than my eyes can make sense of.

lindsay zier-vogel, saskatchewan, homebody

It is the simplest province to look at,
its borders straight and nearly parallel,
scattered with lake blue
and the thick lines of highways.
They say there’s a road every mile in Saskatchewan.

If you travel west for long enough, Highway 10 hits the TransCanada,
and to the east it stretches into Manitoba, the flatter of the two provinces,
We take 10 in from town,
turning left onto the grid road,
a gravel stretch with deep ditches on both sides,
until the road lilts upwards,
and the barn speaks red at the end of the long driveway,
the house patient and grey
at the very end.

(From a writing/dance/film project I’m working on in Saskatchewan…)

Shannon’s written more about the project (and performance!) here.

~

I’ve also been trading poems daily with the ever-inspiring Rhya, something we spent years doing. There’s something about reading new, new words, and someone else’s words that reframes my own writing. I’ve spent so long working on a novel manuscript, I was afraid the poetry lens would have disappeared forever, but it’s returning, slowly, slowly…


Long prairie light

Monday, January 9th, 2012
lindsay zier-vogel, saskatchewan, homebody

The Saskatechewan skies never stop changing

I’m in Saskatchewan, writing and teaching and wandering around abandoned farm houses. It’s incredible. The light here reminds me of Nebraska

The light is longer here,
a run-on sentence
that stretches past the gravel
shoulder,
and down into the ditch
where the snow collects.


Welcome, 2012!

Wednesday, January 4th, 2012

Photo by David Tompa

The last few moments of 2011 flew by in a flurry of editing as I got Draft 6 of my novel manuscript tidied up. It was a mad dash and it’s 326 pages are in the very capable hands of Mark Freeman for the next while. It’s strange to not wake up each morning and get inside Bea’s world, and I must admit, I miss her, Bea, my main character, but it’s good to step away. And there’s that whole absence makes the heart grow fonder thing. That or more critical if it’s writing stuff…

I’m not much of a New Year’s Eve party girl, and for the last ten years have stayed in and made books, but this year, I needed do something decidedly not bookish, and ventured up north with some dear friends and new friends and we celebrated the end of 2011 and and the beginning of 2012 with apple pie and champagne and a walk along the ocean-like Lake Huron. Though that’s not our champagne cork, there was plenty of the bubbly stuff.

And just like that, it’s 2012! Glory be!

So far, so good. My soundtrack is Christa Couture’s Happy New Year ukelele tune. Man, I love that woman. I’m halfway through The Borrower, by Rebecca Makkai and I do so love the literariness of the tale. I finished up my Christmas thank you cards last night and think it’s safe to declare I have perfected a gingerbread cake recipe (that is SO delicious with lemon curd!)

And, though we’re only four days into this year, I’m nearly done knitting a scarf, which is good because I’m heading to the very chilly land of Saskatchewan for a three-week residency.

I’m writing the narrative/script/text for the incredible Shannon Litzenberger‘s new piece HOMEbody and will be poking around abandoned farm houses and teaching an integrated arts curriculum to students in Yorkton.

I’m excited to test out my parka in winter weather (not this mild, snowlessness Toronto’s been experiencing!) and start into the pile of books I’m going to lug west (including Esi Edugyan’s Half-Blood Blues, Patrick DeWitt’s The Sisters Brothers, and Dani Couture’s poetry collection, Sweet. There’re heaps more, but we’ll have to see what fits in my suitcase.

I say, bring on the huge unending skies…

 


Merry merry

Saturday, December 24th, 2011

This year's Christmas (post)cards

Ahh, tis the season of crafting, baking, copious amounts of gingerbread, (obsessive!) ornament making, mulled wine and the smell of cloves, clear, sharp sunlight and early dark with bike rides along Christmas-light-lit streets.

It’s also the perfect time of year to listen to the Hallelujah chorus on repeat (thanks, Mormon Tabernacle Choir!) and have Boney M dance parties in the kitchen.

Much love and light (and fast-forward buttons if that’s more your speed…)

xoxo


Toronto Brunch Maps head to the east end

Saturday, December 24th, 2011
Toronto Brunch Map

Photo by Tyrone Warner

Hooray! You can now get your Toronto Brunch Map out in Leslieville at the fabulous shop Nathalie-Roze & Co.

And if you’re north, south or west, you can grab a map from The Drake General Store‘s three locations.

My fav brunches these days are at Barque and The County General. Makes my mouth water just thinking about the lazy weekend yumminess…

Homefries for all!


Brunch maps + The Drake General Store!

Saturday, December 10th, 2011

Thrilling news!! The Toronto Brunch Map is now available at The Drake General Store! If you’ve never been, oh watch out! It’s dangerously awesome – all of the most wonderful treats and curiosities you see on the best design blogs ALL IN ONE PLACE.

Some of my fav finds include:

* decals by Shanna Murray that I’ve been swooning over on Design*Sponge for months

* Rob Ryan paper cut mugs (uniting two of my fav things – paper and hot beverages!)

* Scratch maps! These make my passport itchy!

* And to hearken back to my dancing days, where split feet were the bane of my existence: Bag Balm!

And now you can add a map to all of the very best brunch places in Toronto to the list of the Drake General Store goodies! (It even comes with a checklist so you can keep track of the deliciousness and a “I love brunch” pin so you can declare your love to the world!)

AAAAAND, the maps are at all three locations:

Queen Location
1144 Queen St West

Rosedale Location
1011 Yonge St

Bathurst Location
82A Bathurst St


The Toronto Brunch Map

Sunday, November 27th, 2011
toronto brunch map, toronto, brunch, map, lindsay zier-vogel

The Toronto brunch map - with a to do check list and an "I Love Brunch" button

Ta-Da! The Toronto brunch map is here! And it comes with a check list you can stick on your fridge, or keep in your wallet to keep track of all your brunchie deliciousness, AND an “I Love Brunch” pin, to prove to the world that you love your homefries/bacon/pancakes! And you can buy one here!


The Love Lettering Project on film

Sunday, November 27th, 2011

Though this year’s Love Lettering Project has been done for a while, I was approached by a team of Ryerson University documentary students about being included in their film on Toronto poetry. And so, off to the park we went to fill a tree with love letters and chat all things poetry.

We ended up seeing the Trinity Bellwoods albino squirrel (and I might have scared the bejeezus out of the sound guy with my shouting and clapping) and oh, the leaves were stunning.

Steadicam love lettering


Room magazine + The Love Lettering Project

Monday, November 21st, 2011

Room magazine 34.3: Fluency

I am honoured to be included in the newest edition of Room. They published my very first published poems way back in the day and the incredible assistant editor, Brigid MacAulay wrote a spot on The Love Lettering Project for the “Back Room” section of the journal. Such an honour to be sharing the pages with Fiona Tinwei Lam and Karen Solie.