Post # 2

Monday, August 14, 2017
Quote of the Day  "In the winter we shovel snow and in the summer we swat mosquitoes. During the spring and fall we rest up from swatting and shoveling." Peter Oikarinen's reply to the often-asked question of Yoopers, "What do you people do up there?" 1987



REVIEWS


100 Things To Do In The Upper Peninsula Before You Die 
by Kath Usitalo


A 100 things to do in the U.P. could add up to a might too many things to add to one's bucket list. But what should be on every Michiganians list, as well as anyone from around the Great Lakes, is at least one extensive trip to the "Land Above the Bridge." Kath Usitalo's book, 100 Things to Do in the Upper Peninsula Before You Die, will help you choose what interests you and what not to miss.

Michigan's northern peninsula contains a third of the state's landmass but only .3% of her population. And all it takes to see what a different world lies north of  Big Mac is to cross the Straits and drive. It becomes readily apparent within a few miles that the U.P. might not be a different state than below the bridge, but it certainly produces a different state of mind. It can be hours between billboard sightings or passing a Golden Arches. Virtually untouched natural beauty can be seen around almost every bend, and you can pass through several small towns before spotting a stop sign or stoplight. Hand lettered signs abound, and it seems half of them advertise homemade pasties or bait. The former is a Cornish pie stuffed with meat, potatoes, carrots, rutabagas, and anything else Cornish men and women can think of to stuff into a pocket of dough before sticking it in an oven.

The author warns the reader that in the U.P. many businesses are seasonal, cash is highly prized, and in many places credit cards won't get you the time of day. GPS systems don't always work in the U.P., cell phones are often useless, and many back roads are not passable by the family car unless its a 4-wheel SUV.

The author hits all of the do-not-miss sights from the Keweenaw Peninsula, and Pictured Rocks, to the Soo Locks, Mackinac Island, and Porcupine Mountains Wilderness State Park with its 60,000 acres, 90 miles of trails, great campground, spectacular views of Lake Superior, and abundant wildlife. But any guide book can lead you there.

The author also leads curious and intrepid travelers to singular roadside attractions the likes of which define the U.P. experience. Such as the Hilltop Bakery in L'Anse that is famous for its one pound cinnamon roll. Yes, a cinnamon roll the size of a small loaf of bread and so damn good they sell them all over the country via the internet at sweetroll.com. You can also get them as takeout but there is no way one can drive and eat this monster. Besides its best to sit down in Hilltop and let the smell of the rolls waft over you and then get one served right out of the oven when the butter, sugar, and cinnamon has become that delectable syrup within the roll and the sticky icing runs onto the plate until the huge roll looks like its swimming in the stuff.

The book pinpoints lighthouses that are B & B's and takes you to Whitefish Point and the oldest operating lighthouse on the Great Lakes which is within steps of the Great Lakes Shipwreck Museum. If that's not enough, you're standing on one of the best bird-watching sites in the state during the spring and fall.  At the other end of peninsula there's Fitzgerald's in Eagle River on the Keweenaw Penisula that specializes in southern BBQ and a world class collection of great whiskeys from around the globe.

The author makes it clear that if you're in the Keweenaw Peninsula  you must stop at the JamPot Bakery in Eagle Harbor. It's operated by the Society of St. John Monastery and the baked goods including jams, jellies, muffins, brownies, cookies, and breads are all heavenly. The JamPot and Washington D. C. are nearly of equal distance from downstate Michigan, but one trip to the JamPot and you would crawl through broken glass to return. And if you want to really get closer to heaven, altitude wise, take the black-topped Brockway Mountain Drive. At it's highest point, it is 700 feet above the big lake, and on a clear day one can just make out Isle Royale shimmering in the distant blue of Superior. It is the highest elevated road lying between the Rockies and the Appalachian Mountains.

Usitalo also finds winter fun for those who don't snowmobile or cross country ski. In February, St. Ignace hosts 200 teams from across the U.S. and Canada in a pond hockey tournament played on 30 rinks laid out on the bay. During the tournament, hockey players may out number villagers.

This is a must guide for enjoying all the strange, one-of-a-kind, and breathtakingly beautiful attractions of Michigan's real Up North. The descriptions are succinct, give all the pertinent information, and will have the readers itching to travel.



Usitalo, Kath. 100 Things to Do in the Upper Peninsula Before You Die, St. Louis:Reedy Press, 2017. $16



Black Detroit: A People's History of Self-Determination 
by Herb Boyd.

As the title suggests, this very readable narrative history of the Detroit Black experience does more than recount the abuses, discrimination, and outright violence visited on its Black citizens. It also records in fascinating detail the contributions in music, art, sports, Black culture, civil rights, and the slow but eventual gains in political power made by Detroit's Black inhabitants. 

The author makes this a very personal history by filling the book with stories of Detroiters and how they changed the city and the state. A few well-known names get a lot of  ink but there are many more whose stories will take even the well informed by surprise. Like Cora Mae Brown who came to Detroit during the Great Black Migration, attended Cass Technical High School, Fiske University, and then Wayne State Law School before entering politics. She became Michigan's and the nation's first Black state senator in 1952.

Then there is Norman "Turkey" Streans who starred for the Detroit Stars in the Negro National League. In 1926 he batted .352 for the season and an astounding .474 in the playoffs. In 1927 the team's spark plug hit .375 with 20 home runs. Streans also led the team in doubles, triples, and stolen bases. His stats equaled those of the Tiger's great Ty Cobb who vowed to never play ball against an African-American. Boyd also covers the Black leaders who used the UAW and the Civil Rights Movement as a training grounds for their political futures, and in doing so, changed the political landscape of Detroit and Michigan.

Reading Boyd's account of the 1943 Detroit Race Riot and its aftermath almost had me believing I was looking at an all too familiar blueprint or model for the race riots of the Sixties. There had been considerable friction and resentment among Detroit's Black population in 1943 due to second-hand jobs, housing, and overt racism. On June 20, 1943, 90-degree temperatures and suffocating humidity brought 100,000 Detroiters to Belle Isle seeking relief. The weather and the grievances made for short fuses, and fights broke out between Whites and Blacks. The fighting spread along the Belle Isle Bridge and into the city.  Blacks started breaking into white businesses, and police were ordered to shoot to kill. The uprising lasted two days, resulted in 34 deaths, and almost 2,000 arrests. Not a single White was convicted of any crime. Committees were created to get at the root cause of the riot but neglected to consider racism or discrimination in jobs and housing, and declared White citizens only became violent when defending themselves. It also found the police were without fault. The mayor's staff (oblivious to the irony) came up with its own "white paper" that also turned a blind eye to the real causes of the riot.

Herb Boyd has produced a powerful, eye-opening history of Black Detroit and the growth of the city's energetic and resilient Black Culture. The book is a testament to and a celebration of Black Detroit's love for their city.




Boyd, David. Black Detroit: A People's History of Self-Determination, NY: HarperCollins, 2017. $27.99

Beyond Streaming: A Sound Mural For Flint 
by Broad Museum, MSU

There have been quite a few books written about the Flint Water Crisis, and I'm sure there will be quite a few more.  But this little booklet that accompanied an exhibit on Flint's water catastrophe is, and will remain one of the best. Funded by the MSU Federal Credit Union Artist Studio Series, the exhibit (and this booklet) were the work of the Eli and Edythe Broad Art Museum and artist Jan Tichy while in an artist residence at the museum.

Ms. Tichy worked with students from Carmen-Ainsworth in Flint and Everett High School in Lansing to plan the exhibit and prepare its installation. Tichy paired Everett and Carmen-Ainsworth students together to dramatize through the exhibit and the booklet their feelings about the water crisis and how it has changed lives. The Flint students wrote poetry about what happened to their city and their lives, and the Lansing students drew pictures to compliment each poem. The exhibit has closed, but this booklet remains as a testament to the exhibit and to what the people of Flint have endured.

The poems are heart-felt and raw. They speak of how young people reacted to a world suddenly gone wrong and with dire results for their long term health. Who in this state or any state in the nation expects to turn on a faucet and drink, bathe, and cook in water so corrosive it tarnished metal, and so tainted with lead it will have lasting effects on children's cognitive development. The poems and drawings are emotional gut reactions to when the water as well as local and state government all turned on the citizens of Flint. These are powerful poems that speak of loss, fear, sickness, bewilderment, and a striking sense of betrayal. The booklet is not for sale but you can write for one, while they last, at Board Art Museum MSU, 547 East Circle Dr., East Lansing, MI 48824. Better yet you can read and/or download the booklet by clicking here.  Thank you to The Broad Museum and Carmen-Ainsworth student Allison Clark for allowing the following poem to be quoted.

Cold
by Allsion Clark

Water is a life necessity
So why do people treat 
It like an accessory,
Life is dependent on
This steady supply
but that supply has been tainted, 
How can we prosper when we cannot grow
How can we forgive with no one to blame
How can we blame with no one taking responsibility
How can the world, 
a city,
a government, 
a person
be so cold?



New Books Coming in September

Carney-Coston, Barbara. To the Copper Country, WayneState Univ. Presss, 2017. $14.99
    An11-year-old Croatian girl's trip to and living in Keweenaw Copper Country in the1880s. A               novel based on a true story.

Chengelis, Angelique. Michigan Man: Jim Harbaugh & the Rebirth of Wolverine Football, Triumph Books, 9-15-2017. $25.95
 
Milan, Jon. Iconic Restaurants of Ann Arbor, Arcadia Pub., 2017.  Paperback  edition. $22.95

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Post #1

Tuesday, August 1, 2017
This is the first post for "Michigan in Books." Depending on your interest and my stamina it will be the first of many. If you enjoy it, let me know. If you have suggestions for making it better, I'd like to hear them. I'm also counting on readers, authors, and publishers to let me know of any forthcoming books on the state and the Great Lakes.  Tom Powers


Quote of the Day: "...the whole state is an economic garage sale with everyone buying each others used mitre boxes, chain saw, and hunting boots, Robert Hall sportcoats, plastic dinnerware and legless dolls." Jim Harrison. Just Before Dark. 1980.



Reviews


The Goat Fish and the Lover's Knot
By Jack Driscoll



It is a humbling experience for a writer to read Jack Driscoll. He constructs sentences like a stonemason builds a mortarless stone fence. In a dry stonewall or fence, the mason has to find the right stone that fits perfectly within its space if the wall is to run true and remain standing for generations. And although man made, there is an inherent natural beauty about the wall that leaves one with the feeling it not only belongs there but is simply another piece of the landscape. This may be the first time a stonewall has been used to compliment someone's prose but for me that's the precise, solid, economy (there is not a wasted word), and beauty of Driscoll's writing.

Most of the stories in this collection are set in the northern lower peninsula or the U.P. but you will not find Shanty Creek, Bay View, Sleeping Bear Dunes, Interlochen, or any million dollar homes strung along some of the most expensive real estate in Michigan here. This is an Up North tourists don't see or want to. Here is one of Driscoll's characters describing his hometown. "Population just under 1,400, a boomtown that never did, as my old man like to say, and where even the richest among us was at least another half-dozen lifetimes away from banking that first million, and the next actual town with bowling alley and movie theaters and without its name painted across a water tower was almost sixty miles distant."

Broken homes, hard luck folks, dysfunctional families, and troubled teenagers with little guidance and even less future people these stories. These may be hard lives Driscoll authentically and compassionately portrays but no one quits trying, turns their back on hope, or gives up on love. And some even get lucky. For most of us, Michigan's rural poor are out of sight and out of mind. Driscoll brings them in out of the shadows in this fast, short, totally absorbing, and memorable literary feat. The book was named to the list of 2017 Michigan Notable Books.



Driscoll, Jack.The Goat Fish and the Lover's Knot. Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 2017. $18.99


Things I Do in Detroit:  A Guidebook to the Coolest Places 
By Nain Rouge

For the uninitiated, Nain Rouge is a legendary red dwarf who supposedly has resided in and haunted Detroit since Cadillac founded it. The imp has long been the city's scapegoat and been blamed for nearly every bad thing that ever befell the motor city. Photographer and writer Dave Krieger, whose work has appeared in Rolling Stone and Harper's Bazaar among other publications, aims to resurrect Nain Rouge's reputation and turn him into the town's #1 citizen and promoter.

With Dave Krieger's help and his colorful, eye-catching, sometimes stunning, and often amusing  photographs, Nain Rouge leads the curious and those looking to experience  an under appreciated city to and through its many wonders. The red imp has an astonishingly eclectic taste in everything from food and art, to architecture, sport and music; whether high brow, low brow, or no brow. The essence of each attraction is captured in Krieger's vibrant photographs and a half-dozen or less sentences that give the history and importance of the event or site. Nain Rouge's own singular comments follow Krieger's in which the gnome tells the attractions unique qualities, the feel of the place, and his view of why the site is "cool" and contributes to Detroit's history and culture. And one must add, as is evident throughout the book, Nain Rouge seems to have an irrepressible need to be in almost every photograph or to photo bomb every shutter click.

The book is a wonderful mixture of  the sublime, the curious, and one-of-a-kind attractions.  Elmwood Cemetery, the Masonic Temple, the Dossin Great Lakes Museum, the Michigan Opera Theater, and dozens of other high profile attractions are covered, but it is the unexpected that delights and knocks you back on your heels like including the Rouge River among the "cool" things in Detroit.

Hamtramck Disneyland is a bursting-at-its-seams folk art installation begun by Dmytro Szlak, a GM line worker, in 1992. Sprawling through two garages, across a backyard, and down an alley, Szlak's exuberant and playful sculptures are made from industrial scrap, weird junk, signs, plastic horses, whirligigs, and only heaven knows what else. Szlak's little, out-of-the-way corner of Hamtramck became a folk art sensation. After Mr. Szlak's death a local arts collective has taken on the job of preserving both the collection and grounds.

John K. King Used & Rare Books' main building is four stories tall and houses a million books, give or take a few hundred, in its bizarre  maze of shelving. It's been called "one of the strangest collections of [books] in North America." Nain Rouge suggests book lovers set-a-side a half day for browsing, and the rare books room is not to be missed.

A Vietnam vet purchased the Old Miami Bar on Cass so vets would have a place to gather. Over the years Vietnam vets have left so much military service memorabilia at the bar it fills every niche in the place and turned the Old Miami into an impromptu, and one-of-a-kind Vietnam memorial created over the years by those who served there. Nain Rouge calls it, "... a true Detroit bar: kinda dirty, kinda rough, in the heart of the Cass Corridor, and populated with a bunch of eccentric regulars."

Raven Lodge is one of the city's last legendary Blues bars. Barry Gordy used to sell Polaroids to the clientele and the likes of Jackie Wilson, Aretha Franklin, Smokey Robinson, and Martha Reeves all performed here. Local blues men continue to rock the house every weekend.

And it would be a crime not to mention a sport unique to Detroit - Fowling. Several years ago a group of Detroiters tailgating at the Indianapolis 500 set up a mini bowling alley while waiting for the 500 to begin.  They then lost interest and began tossing a football around. A  poorly thrown pass knocked over a bunch of pins and a new sport was born. Fowling is a combination of bowling pins set up in the usual  manner and instead of a bowling ball a football is thrown to knock them down. The tailgaters really liked the new game and the game's popularity spread as the creators began holding increasingly well-attended tournaments. In 2014 an old warehouse at 3901 Christopher St. was turned into the first and only Fowling Club. As Nain Rouge observes, Detroiters are, "driven to compete in almost anything."

Although this wonderfully strange, amusing, and fascinating book hardly fits the criteria of a normal guide book it is an ever fascinating guide to the famous and not so famous sights, sounds, and attractions of Detroit. It can not fail to pique your interest.



Krieger, Dave. Things I Do in Detroit: A Guidebook to the Coolest Places by Nain Rouge, New York: KMW Studio, 2017. $39.95.
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