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    Lisa Brackmann


    Greetings from San Francisco—and Houston!

    June 7th, 2010

    I’ve had a crazy weekend, flying to Houston very early Saturday AM for an event, in which I discussed Rock Paper Tiger, at Murder By the Books with authors Victor Gischler and Duane Swierczynski.

    First, if you are ever anywhere within a hundred, maybe two hundred miles of Houston, go to Murder By the Books. McKenna and David run an amazing store and are awesome hosts. I’d write another mystery/thriller/suspense-type book just to get a second invitation from them.

    That, and meeting maniacs wonderful authors like Victor and Duane made this a truly memorable day. Also, the amazing seafood at that place we went to after.

    And oh yeah, the bar fight…

    Good times!

    I completely spaced out on taking photos, but a part of our talk is available on Youtube thanks to author Bill Crider. I’ve been too embarrassed busy to watch it yet, but from the opening snip, I look pretty much like a person who didn’t sleep and caught a 6 AM flight from LA and arrived at Houston just in time to catch a Supershuttle from George Bush International Airport, get dropped at the wrong Crowne Hyatt on Southwestern Freeway Rd. (I mean, my thinking was, “how many Crowne Hyatts could there be on Southwestern Freeway Rd.” Answer: two), catch a cab to the right Crowne Hyatt—a large number of Houston cabbies seem to be Caribbean or W. African immigrants. This cabby was great and had a GPS that played the Racing Fanfare every 15 seconds— and just happened to encounter Victor and Duane in the lobby of the Hyatt, so we cab-pooled to Murder by the Book, and, oh yeah, then we talked for a bit, me on no sleep.

    Send coffee, STAT

    A longer version of our talk, which I’m REALLY scared to watch, is here…



    A few scenes from the road…

    December 11th, 2009

    Near Yangshuo, China…

    Bamboo drift area

    Yuelong River

    Yuelong River

    Sausage for Spring Festival

    New Year's sausage



    Strangers on a Train…

    December 2nd, 2009

    Closet Pot

    Sometimes a long trip on a Chinese train is a better concept in theory than in actuality…

    I do like the train. I really do. I like the rattle of the rails, the mournful horns, the sense of distance and the time it takes to travel. I like having my little bunk surrounded by my stuff and a book and the feeling that I’m wrapped up in the quilt in this weird mobile cocoon. It reminds me when I was a really little kid, how I used to love to fall asleep in the car, in the dark. There’s just something wonderfully comforting and soothing about the movement and the sounds of it.

    Except for the fact that, you know, I rarely sleep when I’m actually on the train. There’s the cheesy guangbo (broadcast) — in the olden days, patriotic anthems and Chinese renditions of “Do Ray Mi” and “Home on the Range.” Nowadays, it’s more likely to be a video screen (which you can’t turn off) showing whatever lame history soap is on tap, preceded by endless safety recitations. Lately, I seem to suffer some respiratory ailment every time I’m on a train for a long haul, which I’m guessing has to do with the cigarettes smoked in the vestibules and occasionally sneaked in compartments and hallways.

    The real weirdness of long train trips inevitably comes down to your compartment mates. I offer as an example my two day marathon from Chengdu to Xinjiang. After that epic misadventure, 22 hours from Shanghai to Guilin seemed like it should be a breeze.

    And it really was, except for the aforementioned sudden onset of sneezing and nose-blowing and trying to do all this quietly in an upper bunk. And the inevitable eccentric compartment-mate.

    The first guy in after me was a young man on a business trip, hauling a dolly stacked with some kind of, I’m guessing, electrical components housed in hard plastic cases. Naturally this couldn’t fit in the overhead compartments or under the seats so it just squatted there on the floor. He was a nice guy though, friendly, and we bonded over our mutual loathing of the video that couldn’t be turned off.

    Next was a middle-aged woman, trim, energetic and loud. She came in hauling a large suitcase, a laptop and several shopping bags (she’d been on a shopping trip for clothes in Suzhou), and after she sat down, the first thing she did was get out a kleenex and blot her forehead, saying that she was “Re si le!” “Hot to death!” from her exertions. The second thing she did was pull out her cellphone and start up a loud and complicated conversation. Third, she grabbed a cigarette, lit it in the compartment and stood outside in the corridor smoking and chatting, until one of the train workers shooed her toward the smoking area — “Ah, wo re si le!” she exclaimed again, by way of explanation for her scofflaw behavior.

    Not more than twenty minutes into the trip, she was replaced by another man, who had asked the train workers if he could switch compartments. I didn’t hear the explanation for his request, but whatever it was, the woman agreed, and with the help of one of the attendants carried her stuff into her new compartment. “My suitcase! My bags! My laptop!”

    Our new roommate had a small backpack and two small plastic grocery bags that looked much used. Thin, with sunken cheeks and a thick wedge of hair. He spoke in a quiet, near-mumble, at least he did the only time I heard him speak, which was to ask the young businessman that the compartment door be kept open part way, because it was more comfortable. He did not make eye contact when he asked this. At some point in the evening, one of the attendants shut our compartment door for the night, and that was the end of that.

    He spent a lot of time outside the compartment sitting on one of the jump seats in the corridor. When he was in the compartment, for a long while he sat hunched in the corner, head bowed, forehead resting on hand, as though he’d been crushed by some terrible news. Actually, I think he was just dozing. He sat like this even when the lights were turned off and it was time to sleep. Finally, he did lie down, face down, arms and legs splayed out like a corpse. He never used his pillows or his quilt. Though the next day, he spent a good five minutes rubbing at a spot on one of the pillows with a wetted cloth.

    The next day, I wanted to offer him one of my bananas, but as mentioned, he wouldn’t meet my eyes. I thought maybe he was uncomfortable having a foreigner in the compartment, though he hadn’t spoken to the young businessman either, other than that initial request to leave the door open. He spent an hour or so making notes on a folded square of paper, crossing out characters and writing in new ones. I decided he was composing poetry, though I have absolutely no evidence of this.

    About three hours before we arrived in Guilin, his hand darted toward me with a square sweet neatly wrapped in cellophane — “Hao chi” he near-whispered, ducking his head and looking quickly away. Good to eat.

    I thanked him, offered him a banana, which he did not want, and ate the sweet — mochi and bean paste.

    Both of us dozed the final two hours of the ride. When we pulled into Guilin, he was still asleep, head the wrong way on the bunk, feet tucked under the pillows.



    Sinister Kitsch

    November 23rd, 2009

    Cartoon Police

    I’ve been traveling to China for a long time, but there are some things I will never claim to understand. The above is one of them.

    Okay, China has changed tremendously over the last few decades; citizens are pretty much free to lead their lives the way they want, as long as they don’t cross that invisible red line and get involved with politics or organizing.

    But we’re still dealing with an authoritarian state here. And portraying your police officers as refugees from the Cartoon Network does not really make them cuddly.

    Then there are things like this:

    Blue Gumby

    Behold, “Haibao,” which means, “Treasure of the Seas.” Or as I like to call him/her/it, “Blue Gumby.” Haibao is the official mascot of the World Expo 2010 Shanghai China. You cannot escape Haibao. Haibao is everywhere. Haibao does “hip-hop dances.” Haibao is just a little creepy.

    My all-time favorite, however, is this:

    Armed Star



    A random, ceaseless churning…

    November 22nd, 2009

    Greetings! I’m Lisa Brackmann, and this is my first post on the Soho blog. I’m currently traveling in China, the setting for my debut novel with Soho (ROCK PAPER TIGER, coming in June 2010).

    Mysterious paving stones...

    I’m staying near the Drum Tower, probably my favorite area in Beijing — in a city that’s become a massive monument to China’s massive global aspirations, it’s one of the few neighborhoods that’s still built to human scale. Even so, Gulou is still characterized by the same seemingly endless construction and remodeling that goes on throughout the capital.

    For example, the entire Drum Tower/Bell Tower plaza and surrounding hutongs (lanes) are totally torn up. The pavement has been jackhammered or pick-axed away, fresh asphalt laid in places though most of the lanes and plaza are still exposed, rutted dirt (making the efforts of huge tour busses trying to squeeze down tiny allies even more absurd and amusing than usual). There are stacks of gray paving stones everywhere. I have no idea what any of this is for, if it was needed or what the end result will be, though I expect I’ll see it before I leave in mid-December. Walking down Guloudong Dajie (Drum Tower East Road), I navigate similar obstacles of torn-up road and sidewalk and stacks of gray brick. Workers at all hours carry beams and wallboard in and out of little stores in the process of remodeling.

    There’s simply so much activity here, always, all the time, in a city with thousands of years of history that never stands still.

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