I mean, seriously. Awww along with me.
Awww.
:)
For the new year, I've gotten lots of awesome book signing requests, so come see me at:
- Saturday, Jan. 2nd, 6-9pm at Apple Blossom Books (513 North Main Street, Oshkosh, WI) This will be part of the Downtown Gallery Walk (which is done the 1st Saturday of every month in lovely downtown Oshkosh.)
- Sunday, Jan. 24th, 2-3pm at Books & Co., (1039 Summit Ave., Oconomowoc, WI)
- Sunday, Jan. 31st, 5pm at Magers & Quinn (3038 Hennepin Ave. South, Minneapolis, MN) which is co-sponsored by the amazing Live Fast Die Young Tattoo (44 Lowry Ave NE, Minneapolis).
- Friday, Feb. 19th, 7pm, at Quimby's (1854 W. North Ave., Chicago, IL)
All in all this semester has been great! I have had a bit of a surprise ending to this year, but I always persevere! I am very happy with where I am in life. I have overcome some huge obstacles and I have endured painful heartbreaks, disappointments and bad judgment at times, but it all makes me the complex person I am. I am so thankful to have great friends in my life and a wonderful family, that even when they are difficult are still awesome!
Eve Veliz
Tim Minchin's Christmas song, White Wine In The Sun, is now available for single purchase on iTunes!
Give this a watch/listen, and then go buy it! The iTunes version has some very beautiful string accompaniment too.
My husband will get all huffy and say "not until the 21st!" but to me, once the temp dips 35F and below and snow/sleet/ice start blowing around, it's winter. My least favorite season (I'm not alone there, I know) because driving is stressful and just getting anything done or going anywhere is a big hassle. Not to mention it's fucking cold, and as I get older, cold hurts more. Why can't I convince my husband to give up this farming gig so we can go move someplace warm? I don't care if we're poor, we'll be warm!
Right, now I've got that whining out of the way - who's ready for Christmas? Another thing I'm grateful for as I get older - Christmas/Holidays is FAR less of a big deal than it used to be. I do enjoy buying gifts for people, but no longer am I all excited/concerned about what I'll be getting back. Some might say the loss of that excitement is a bad thing - to me it just means I'm more self-sufficient, and that's a good thing! (If I really want/need something, I just go buy it now. Anything extra is nice but nothing to get all worked up over!)
I also gave up (pretty much before I ever started) the stress of holiday cards, decorating, and all that extra jazz. I send cards to the people closest to me (and the in-laws because they'll get huffy if I don't!) but we don't bother with decorations or parties or anything like that anymore. YAY. True, I'm still forced to do the holiday parties at work, but even those are low key and require very little from me. I show up with food, and all is well.
Speaking of food - damn I do hate this section of the year because no matter how hard I try to keep it from happening, the pounds pile on. That's what New Year's is for though of course, and like billions of people I'll be making that resolution to "get back to a healthy weight". If only just so my pants fit comfortably again. I'm annoyed that my favorite trousers are currently all too tight!
Sooooo. There we go, that's my boring update. Hope your lives are all well.
In case you missed it this morning, I was interviewed by Dan Harmon about The Tattooed Lady on Milwaukee's local NPR station's Lake Effect show.
You can listen online: http://www.wuwm.com/programs/lake_effect/view_le.php?articleid=863 or download as a podcast via iTunes.
Not enough time for a long post, but SkyWalker had to talk at morning program this morning at school. The video for those of you logged in and in my neighborhood:
The nice folks over at Woodland Pattern are putting out lots of good words about my upcoming book signing...
Check out the current issue of the Riverwest Currents and the Express Milwaukee!
From Express Milwaukee:
Milwaukeean Amelia Klem Osterud is a tattooed
academic librarian, so no one should be surprised that her first manuscript is
called The Tattooed Lady: A History.
Yet while Osterud is indeed permanently inked, this publication is no autobiography.
She writes of a time when it was entirely unseemly for a woman to show off a
tattoo. The Tattooed Lady is a
momentous tale that chronicles the women behind the tattooed bodies, women who
traveled across America
on circus trains during a time when even to reveal an ankle was outrageous.
Osterud provides veritable accounts of these fearless females by bringing them
front and center out of the carnival tents and into real life. By combining
research with period photography, this local author explores women’s history
alongside the cultural movement of tattooing. Osterud will visit Woodland Pattern Book
Center as part of a new
prose series on Wednesday, Dec. 9, at 7 p.m.
See you all next week at Woodland Pattern!
