Asia Trip 9: An Oasis of Calm in Bangkok

[You may notice I moved from Roman to Arabic numerals to number this series. I realized that at some point my brain or yours was going to melt trying to figure out the Roman numbering.]

JANUARY 5, 2010: On our first full day in Bangkok we headed off to Jim Thompson’s house museum. Thompson was an American ex-pat and former spy who created a Thai silk company that introduced Thai silk into the mainstream of the American textile market. He also disappeared in 1967 and no one has a clue what happened to him. But his house and his company live on.

The house is an oasis of calm in a very busy part of Bangkok.

Asia Trip VIII: Meeting the Corinthian Columnist in Bangkok

In early December I was all set to post an image of a painting by Sir John Raeburn for my Sunday Painting feature when I was over browsing at the great design blog, ArchitectDesign. While I was there I noticed that another blogger on AD’s blogroll, The Corinthian Column, had already posted that very same image. Thinking this was quite the coincidence I commented as such to the Corinthian Column.  As I was doing that I noticed that he lived in Bangkok, which was another big coincidence since we were going to be in Bangkok 20 days later. Well, this led to that and next thing you knew we were graciously invited to meet The Corinthian Column while we were in town.

JANUARY 4, 2010: So on our first evening in Bangkok my husband and I went to meet CC and his delightful partner at their lovely and spacious flat. British and a Japanese ex-pats respectively, they have retired from the world of finance and settled in Bangkok. Their flat is on the 33rd floor overlooking the city and is a treasure trove of beautiful furniture (some of CC’s own design), wonderful art, and fascinating objet d’art. After a few leisurely drinks for the other three (being abstemious for the moment, I drank only ice water) they took us to their favorite local for Thai food in the gay part of town. I was a little too jet lagged to notice much gay but I did enjoy the food and company.

This was my first time meeting a blogger who also happened to be a stranger. Thankfully none of the four of us ended up kidnapped or chopped into pieces and we got the inside scoop on what to check out while we were in Bangkok. We had a great time.

I thought it fitting that I get my picture taken with the eponymous Corinthian column candlesticks. It is a terrible picture of me, but I am letting it past my internal censors for the sake of documenting the event.

Simon Tagged Me: Ten Random Books

Simon over at Stuck In A Book tagged me on a meme to randomly choose 10 books from my collection and then blog about them. These were his rules:

1.) Go to your bookshelves…

2.) Close your eyes. If you’re feeling really committed, blindfold yourself.
3.) Select ten books at random. Use more than one bookcase, if you have them, or piles by the bed, or… basically, wherever you keep books.
4.) Use these books to tell us about yourself – where and when you got them, who got them for you, what the book says about you, etc. etc…..
5.) Have fun! Be imaginative. Doesn’t matter if you’ve read them or not – be creative. It might not seem easy to start off with, and the links might be a little tenuous, but I think this is a fun way to do this sort of meme.
6.) Feel free to cheat a bit, if you need to…

So here we go:
 

A Folio Society Edition of Nancy Mitford’s Love in a Cold Climate with illustrations by Ronald Pym. I bought it a few years ago at a used bookstore but I haven’t read it yet. Being an Anglophile, it just seemed like something I shouldn’t pass up.
I love Anita Brookner. I have read all but two of the 23 novels she has written since 1981 when she published her first fiction. They are all rather depressing tales of lonely people just waiting to die. That is a gross oversimplification of what Brookner covers in her novels, but is accurate nonetheless. I love, love, love these books. I like some better than others, but in the end, if you have read one you have kind of read them all.
I love planes. Got this on a bargain table at Borders just before Christmas.
This is my well thumbed copy of Whitman’s Leaves of Grass. I am not much of a poetry person but I love Whitman’s work. I really got to know it when I was getting my Masters in American Studies at the University of Hawaii in 1997. I have had some transcendent moments reading this book.
Love Trollope, but sometimes one needs a little help remembering who’s who.
One of the best Canadian novels you have never heard of. Set in dust-bowl era Skaskatchewan the rather quiet, uneventful outward action of the story belies the earth-shifting inner drama that takes place. This is the kind of book that Persephone or some other small press whould really reissue. I am not even sure it is still in print. My dear friend (and Canadian) Ron recommended this to me about 15 years ago. It still remains one of my all time favorite books.
The life of a used bookseller in Melbourne, Australia. Purchased on our trip to Australia back in 2007. Lots of fun for those who like books about books and bookselling.
This is Murdoch’s first novel, and the first Murdoch I ever read. Remains one of my favorites. This particular edition is the US First Edition that my husband gave to me on our third date. He had been travelling for work, was in a used book store, remembered that I was a fan of Murdoch and bought it for me. You might say literature sealed the deal. We have been together ever since.
Bought this in the gift shop at Sissinghurst I think. I haven’t read it yet. It appeals to the Urban Planner in me (which was Master’s degree number 2) and to the Anglophile of course.
The story of a char woman who saves up her money so she can go to Paris and buy a Christian Dior gown. A fantastically heart-warming and funny story, the title in the US is Mrs ‘Arris Goes to Paris.

Asia Trip II: Culture Shock in Cambodia

JANUARY 1, 2010: We arrived in Bangkok just before midnight and were astounded to find that it was 81 degrees Farenheit with lots of humidty. It felt like we had walked in on the middle of a DC summer. We spent the night at the airport hotel to catch our flight to Siem Reap early the next morning.

JANUARY 2, 2010: The weather in when we landed in Siem Reap was so much more pleasant than Bangkok. Much cooler and very little humidity. The first thing we did when we got to our our hotel in Siem Reap was to take a tuk-tuk ride out to the river to see the community that lives along the shores. Most of those who live on these boats are Vietnamese rather than Cambodian.

It was fascinating to see how folks live. And disheartening to see the poverty and evironmental degradation.

We saw another mother/child on a bike where the child was much younger than this one and she was only being held on the bike by the mother with one hand behind her back as she used the other to hold the handle bars.
This woman ran a floating restaurant/grocery store.
Drinking water plant funded in part by the United States.