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Year: 2006

The Burma Road

Donovan Webster’s The Burma Road: The Epic Story of the China – Burma – India Theater in World War II is a gripping account of the enormous battles and personal sacrifice in what ultimately came to be (barely) remembered as something of a backwater in World War II.

In the beginning of the war between the Allies and Japan, the Allies pursued a two-prong strategy: island hopping in the Pacific on one front and on the other pushing in towards Japan from mainland China. The latter required the Allies to keep China in the war by supplying the nationalist army under the command of the apparently incompetent and corrupt Chiang Kai-shek.

The man responsible for pulling off this impossible task was American general Joseph Stilwell, whose main mission was to reopen the Burma Road that ran from India to China and which would allow the Allies to provide provisions to the Chinese.

Though Webster focuses on Stilwell’s efforts, both military and bureaucratic, to drive the Japanese out of Burma and away from India so that the road could be rebuilt and reopened, the book ranges widely, recounting the exploits of the British Chindit brigades, Merrill’s Marauders, the hump pilots who flew the airlift missions over the Himalayas into China, the Flying Tiger squadrons and the day-to-day lives of the men in the field. It’s a testament to Webster’s storytelling abilities that he is able to bring all of this together into a narrative that is both concise and detailed.

Webster’s greatest achievement here is his depiction of the terrible conditions under which men fought and died, often as much from starvation and disease as from combat. He moves nicely from battlefield heroics and tragedies to the tactical details of the military campaign, ultimately presenting a picture of the CBI Theater from multiple perspectives from soldiers on the ground to the lines of the generals’ maps.

The Burma Road is a well-researched and engaging work of popular history that is definitely worth the time of anyone wondering how China managed to stay in the war and how the Japanese were ultimately pushed out of south Asia.

Monday Movie Roundup

Danny Deckchair (2003, Jeff Balsmeyer)

Danny’s life as a cement worker leaves only one thing to look forward to: vacation. When his girlfriend cancels on him everything seems lost, and Danny falls into a tailspin of misery. In a bout of self-pity and frustration, he ties a bunch of helium balloons to a deckchair and rises into the air, leaving his life in suburban Sydney far behind.

When he finally comes down, it is in the small town of Clarence. Here he meets Glenda, the town’s one parking cop, who is stuck in the same kind of rut that Danny just escaped. While in Clarence, Danny discovers happiness and self-fulfillment and begins to live the kind of life he had only imagined. Meanwhile, he has become a fixation with the Sydney media as journalists try to track him down, and his old girlfriend enjoys her newfound celebrity.

Danny Deckchair is a well-crafted independent film that’s occasionally predictable, yet quirky enough to stay engaging and full of such a whimsical charm that you can’t help but smile through the whole thing. What could have been a routine romantic comedy turns out to be a ride as magical as the view from Danny’s deckchair as he drifts uncertainly over the Australian countryside. Three-and-a-half stars.

Weekend Hound Blogging: Teeth Glinting in the Moonlight

Readers of this blog who bother to read my greyhound posts (both of you) know that Daphne is the shy one. The one that never barks. The one that is afraid of… well, of everything. I think it’s why she only ever (willingly) goes outside at night. Unfortunately for me, she loves to go out at night. Almost every night. But it was on one particularly luminous night that I let her out and while sitting on the couch waiting for her to come back to the door, I heard barking. Not just any barking, but full-throated ferocious barking.

The neighbor’s dogs sometimes bark at Daphne and Phoebe, but usually my pups just ignore them. But this barking was different. I went to the window and squinted out into the unusually bright night to see what I could see and was stunned to see Daphne – Daphne! – running along the fence barking at the two neighbor dogs. I could see her teeth flashing in the glow of moonlight and her bark (which had previously only been heard six times in the past four years) was that of a big dog.

My sweet, gentle Daph was out there tearin’ shit up and trying to throw down with the neighborhood hounds. I was so proud.

Since that day, however, I’ve not heard a peep from her.

***

Want to make a fast friend by saving a greyhound in Central Texas? Check these pups out. Or go here to find a greyhound near you. You can also go here to find out why greyhounds are running for their lives.

If you have dogs who need proven leadership, go here to find a cat.

Driving All Night

I find that doing taxes and editing a video take up most of my blogging time. That’s why I’ve been posting old stuff lately.

Old to me anyway.

I’m also trying to plan a bit of a vacation which has me thinking about trips taken in the past. Oftentimes, I had no film (it was expensive!) so I just tried to capture my experiences in short snippets of free poetry, and so with thoughts of Kris Kristofferson singing, “nuthin’ ain’t worth nuthin’ but it’s free,” I give you this, hopefully worth more than nuthin’, but still free…

Some Highway Somewhere

driving all night

three twenty eight a.m.,
they were all asleep;
i stopped the jeep on the roadside,
stepped into the desert dream of night alone;
i sought peace from the thundering snores
of bodies stuffed under blankets
and the moldy smell of a taco bell dinner
bought in wichita falls.

all new mexico’s stars spilled out,
diamonds across the milky way;
i shivered in the crystal air;
i spotted shooting stars and satellites;
i longed for a coyote’s howl to complete my cliché,
but coltrane’s notes were just as good,
drifting like ghosts from the cracked window;
i smiled when elvin jones’ drum solo kicked in
on summertime.

by morning, to sleepy to care,
we argued about who would drive next,
and we rested in the garden of the gods.

©1995, James Brush

ACL Fests, Past and Future

My lovely wife emailed me today to tell me that ACL Fest tickets are on sale and that she got ours. The schedule hasn’t been released yet, but it’s always worth it to buy the tickets early before the prices shoot up when the schedule is made public.

This will be our fourth ACL Fest. It seems it’s become something of a tradition for us and our friends. We all take four days off and hit the festival on Friday afternoon and use Monday to recover. Friends come up from the coast (last year evacuated was a more appropriate word) and we listen to music and eat out and just enjoy living in Austin.

The best thing about the festival is discovering so much great music. Half the artists I see, I’ve never heard of before, but I often go out and buy their CDs after the shows. Plus, I love that it’s so civilized as far as big outdoor festivals go. The food is great, most of it provided by Austin’s local restaurants. The facilities are clean. The people are not obnoxious. And of course Zilker Park is just a nice place to be. Sometimes the heat can be miserable. 108F on Sunday last year, for instance. But by Spetember most people around here are kind of used to that. Besides it can be nice in September.

Anyways, the main purpose of this entry is just as a place for me to record the bands I saw in previous years since part of the reason for this blog is to help me remember things, and I wasn’t blogging back then, but if you want an idea of who’s been there in the past, check it out. That’s what’s below the fold. I’ll be adding to the lists if I remember anything.

Miles (Never Once Imagined)

Leftovers from a road trip in the early ’90s…

Cars near Meteor Crater

Miles (Never Once Imagined)

And we drove for miles—
And we saw those miles—
Drifting out toward space
Layers of desert air so far beyond the mountains
I saw the miles quicken,
Rising up like a beast from the steam of the engine
Outside Albuquerque
Again near Palm Springs
Jeep racing without roof, without doors
Away from Vegas with just eighteen dollars
from one-armed bandits
Leftover pizza hut and half a cup of jingling quarters
There were miles more to go
And others to go them with
So we only stayed in LA for three hours
In the desert that night we both finally saw
The miles to the stars
Humbled to behold and freezing
In the imagined terror of a Mojave midnight
I never could have imagined all the miles still to come
Nor the people with whom I would travel them
Just then
Just there
Everything was right
We had mountains to climb and never once imagined
We would change our minds

Weekend in Houston

Last weekend we went to Houston for the Periwinkle Foundation’s fundraising gala. Periwinkle provides a free summer camp for childhood cancer patients and their siblings and is truly instrumental in helping kids survive cancer. I’ve been involved with Periwinkle for seventeen years so we decided to chip in with some friends from camp and purchase a table at the gala. It was also a nice break from editing their video, which I am still working on.

The weekend started on Friday night with a private dinner party at Mark’s American Cuisine. Mark’s is a very nice restaurant and had just been named the best restaurant in Houston by Zagat a few days earlier. It’s one of the places where the executive chef (Mark) is a true artist whose medium is food. He comes to camp every year to work with the kids and teach them a bit about cooking, and he ususally cooks something up for us as well. The Friday party was hosted by the camp director and her husband, a pair of Houston physicians whose generosity knows no bounds.

The meal consisted of four courses of some of the most exquisite and delicious food I’ve ever eaten. Most memorable was the dessert my wife ordered (and kindly shared): a perfectly made frosted cake donut sliced into layers and smothered with fresh berries and whipped cream. It’s like Homer Simpson once said: “Donuts. Is there anything they can’t do?”

The Bridge

I wrote this in 2001 after returning to Rhode Island for the first time in eleven years. It was published by Good Gosh Almighty! back in 2003. – JB

The Bridge

Naragansett. Aquidneck. Conanicut. Sakonnet. Quonsett. Just words, yet loaded with a rhythm and meaning nearly forgotten and replaced by the Spanish proper nouns of central Texas. These words decorate the maps of a sliver of America obscured, like a planet too close to some sun, by Massachusetts and Connecticut. That tiny scrap of land, two-thirds water, is Rhode Island.

Rhode Island is miniscule, especially by Texas standards. Driving into the Ocean State two summers ago, getting off 95 in Usequepaug, I realized how much my map had grown. It once seemed a long drive across the state, but within forty minutes, driving at Rhode Island’s tiny 35mph speed limit we reached the Jamestown Bridge, which spanned the Narragansett Bay from the mainland to Conanicut Island.

The thing that struck me hardest was how foreign it all seemed after thirteen years roasting in the big sky heat of the Texas hill country. Quaint little New England farmhouses looking as if they had been set up to make it look more like New England gave way to small towns with used bookstores and refurbished bed-and-breakfasts. White churches with sharp steeples surrounded by headstones hundreds of years older than anything in Texas beckoned to have their pictures taken. Stone fences constructed from the words of Robert Frost marked off fields and lined the roadways that twisted endlessly through large trees beneath a little sky.

At any given stop we were asked, “all set?” by native employees. I used to say it too in my service sector days in Rhode Island, but it was gone now along with quahog, cabinet, bubbler and lav, replaced by y’all, which in Texas does not refer to a two-masted sailing vessel. Now it all just sounded weird. Those who I once considered my people seemed chilly, distant. Summer was still young and perhaps the guards of winter had not yet retreated from the collective soul. “They don’t seem mean,” Rachel observed, refuting the Texas-bred stereotype of the Yankee. “They just aren’t very friendly.”

Coming back after thirteen years forced me to think hard about my birthplace. For years, in Texas, I referred to Rhode Island (pronounced Rho Die-lan) as home. I yearned for its bitter, harsh winters and rejuvenating spring flowers that exploded in wild release to herald the return of birds. I longed for cool autumn evenings filled with the mystery of early dark and large moons hung low over October trees, the strange whisper of winter coming that blew around in piles of fallen leaves.

I was born there, and I went to high school there. It was my first taste of American life after six years spent on overseas naval bases. Driving through in June 2001, however, it didn’t feel like home anymore. I had become used to those Spanish nouns, the interminable yet oddly cleansing heat, wearing shorts in January, not owning more than one coat. I had become used to the ready smiles and open demeanor of Texans. I realized that I loved the wide sky, the rocky canyons, the cedar breaks of the hill country, and even the sight of limitless desert cleaved by that one thin line of highway racing away to Los Angeles or Louisiana with seemingly nothing in between.

We crossed thin Conanicut Island in about five minutes, and coming around the bend, we saw the twin towers of the Newport Bridge. As the bridge came into view, everything changed because on the other side of this graceful suspension lay Aquidneck Island. We paid the two-dollar toll and started onto the bridge, up the slope, peering between the support cables as they raced past us.

Higher we climbed. I held my breath as the rush of familiar sights greeted me. The prim brick Naval War College Buildings of Coaster’s Harbor Island, the white hulls and billowing sails of countless boats dotting the harbors of Jamestown behind us and Newport ahead. Out on the Atlantic, cargo ships drifted ghostlike along the horizon. Dotting the cold blue water of Narragansett Bay far below, we spied boats – hundreds of them – drifting around the lesser islands: Goat, Gould, Prudence, Patience.

Between the spires, on the apex of the arc, we rolled down the windows to drink in the thrilling tang of the cool salt air of summer evening. We listened to the harsh cries of the gulls piercing the drone of our engine and the throbbing sound of the pylons breaking the automobile wind. I wonder if I have ever been so moved by beauty and excitement as when I crossed over the Newport Bridge with my wife next to me and thirteen years of Texas in my soul. I realized I had forgotten much: the tranquil beauty of the bay, the quiet summer nights on Newport’s cobblestone streets, the sound of waves breaking on rocky crags, and the distant buoy bells clanging in the nighttime breeze.

We descended the bridge into Newport, and I realized that this was no ordinary bridge. It was magical, a portal from the rest of the world to the strange sepia-toned photograph reality that goes by one simple word: home.

Texas is where I live, and Austin has a grip on my heart and soul as strong as the ones Newport and Portsmouth once had. I am a Texan and this is home now, but Newport is that special place that answers old yearnings for home, back then, back in the day, old school, hometown, this is where I grew up. I will go back and visit again. Rachel loved Newport at first sight, and I am now reminded of how breathtaking Rhode Island is in all of its tiny grandeur. I do hope, though, that I will always have that same sense of wonder as if seeing Heaven from afar whenever I next cross that bridge from here to a very special there.

© 2001, James Brush