Showing posts with label Texas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Texas. Show all posts

Monday, October 07, 2013

Roadie: Space Center Houston

Saturn V at Rocket Park.--USA! USA! USA! (8/3/13)
After taking a brief hiatus from posting pictures from this past July/August's roadie south, I now present some photos from one of our last stops. One of the final touristy activities we took part in before returning home to New York in early August was to take the short drive from downtown, Houston, to Space Center Houston, the official visitors center for NASA's Johnson Space Center.

Space Shuttle Model. (8/3/13)

Apollo Lunar Module. (8/3/13)

A life size model of the real Enterprise's shuttle, Galileo. (8/3/13)

Astronaut space suit on display. (8/3/13)

SSME Propellant Flow. (8/3/13)

A model of the International Space Station. (8/3/13)

A very unassuming Mission Control building. (8/3/13)

Mission Control for the upcoming Mars Mission. (8/3/13)

Touring the grounds on the NASA Tram Tour. (8/3/13)

NASA Rocket Park. (8/3/13)

Saturn V Rocket Hall from the  NASA Tram Tour. (8/3/13)

Saturn V rocket detail. (8/3/13)
The Saturn V rocket on display is made up of the first stage from SA-514, the second stage from SA-515 and the third stage from SA-513 (replaced for flight by the Skylab workshop). With stages arriving between 1977 and 1979, this was displayed in the open until its 2005 restoration when a structure was built around it for protection.

Saturn V at Rocket Park. (8/3/13)

Saturn V at Rocket Park. (8/3/13)

Banners commemorating each space mission. (8/3/13)

Saturn V at Rocket Park. (8/3/13)

Saturn V rocket detail. (8/3/13)
Though I knew we had been busy (whirlwind-y, really), it's only now, a few months removed, that I'm realizing just how much my other, I and my brother had a chance to see of the Houston area in three short days!

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

'Nuff Read: The Last American Man

The most difficult aspect of my recent trip to Monterrey, Mexico, was finding good reading material in English during the time I was there. I came prepared with many books (Beowulf, Oh, Pioneer!, The Magdalena) for the trip, finished them more quickly than anticipated (a good thing), but was then stuck for seven days with little to read but old copies of Entertainment Weekly and The National Enquirer (normally not a bad thing--but seven days!?).

When we did make it back to Houston, Texas, I was able to reconnect with Barnes and Noble and pick up a couple books for the last few nights away from home as well as the flight back. While the purchase of Wendall Berry's latest collection of poetry was not a surprise, my selection of a book by the author of Eat, Pray, Love was. At least to me.

Displayed on the "Employee's Picks" shelf, the cover of The Last American Man by Elizabeth Gilbert consists of the author's name as well as that of the recognizable bestseller, the book's title, an image of a bearded, smiling man (who looks surprisingly like a member of the Duck Dynasty hillbilly brood), and a blurb of recommendation. It was the blurb that drew a deeper consideration for possible purchase as it compares this book very favorably to Jon Krakauer's Into the Wild, a book I both teach and greatly appreciate. Into the Wild also serves as a good (and accessible to many readers) object of comparison when reviewing The Last American Man.

As noted on the paperback edition's back cover, the book's subject Eustance Conway, "at the age of seventeen... left his suburban existence to live in the wild--thirty years later, he's still there." The Last American Man serves as both a biography of Constance as well as a vehicle for Gilbert to deconstruct and analyze just how her subject's experiences fit in with the changing archetype of the American male. Though that brief description sounds heady and academic, Gilbert's style is informal and entertaining as she employs a diction that is demotic and reflective of her subject's down-to-earth nature. Structurally, Gilbert's book, like Krakauer's, is tightly composed and each chapter is set up by a researched epigram or quote that sets the direction the chapter will take for the reader.

Unlike Krakauer as character and writer of Into the Wild, Gilbert addresses the impact of her subject's patriarchal family (Daddy) issues not as an insider, but as one who has clearly ascertained certain accepted understandings as to the impact father's have on their sons. Gilbert's feminine perspective is interesting as she is honest and surprisingly impartial--on some level her writing suggests that she knows Constance is himself a flawed masculine model. These psychological underpinnings do not however diminish the "manliness" of her subject and, in fact, in some ways simply add to his attractiveness as a man, model, and "character." American men are nothing if not delusional regarding their own significance, while being occasionally oblivious to their own roles in poor relationships with others.

I am glad to report that by nearly prejudging a book based upon my own preconceived notions of it (as a result of my dislike fro the Julia Roberts film adaptation of Gilbert's successful novel), I nearly missed out on a rather enjoyable reading experience. The Last American Man by Elizabeth Gilbert offers a welcome and accessible voice to a non-fiction sub genre exploring American masculinity that is welcome and above all entertaining.

Happy reading!

Thursday, August 15, 2013

Roadie: Houston's Discovery Green

Discovery Green from the tenth floor of the Hilton-Americas Hotel. (8/3/13)
Following eight days in Mexico, my mother and I began our journey back to upstate New York with a three-day intentional layover in Houston, Texas. While in Houston we stayed at the beautiful Hilton-Americas Hotel in downtown. Directly across the street from the hotel was Discovery Green, a public urban park in the heart of downtown. During the time we were at the Hilton-Americas, i took advantage of my mornings to walk around the city, always beginning and ending my excursions at Discovery Green. The pictures below capture just a small part of the park's offerings, as one can see from the official park map.

The Donor Walls at the Avenida De Las Americas entrance. (8/4/13).

The Grace Event Lawn. (8/3/13)

Two cats enjoy the park; apparently downtown Houston has a "feral cat issue." (8/3/13)

Synchronicity of Color, or the “art boxes,” by Margot Sawyer. (8/4/13)

One of two pieces which together comprise Doug Hollis' The Listening Vessels, which can be found
in the Wortham Foundation Gardens.  (8/3/13)

The Grace Event Lawn as viewed from The Transier Bandstand. (8/3/13)

One of the many special gardens; note The Listening Vessels to the left. (8/4/13)

Perspective shot of  Monument Au Fantome, Monument to the Phantom or
imaginary city in French, by French sculptor Jean Dubuffet. (8/4/13)

The Transier Bandstand backs up to a wild flower garden bed. (8/4/13)


Kinder Lake. (8/4/13)
Close-up of water lilies on Kinder Lake. (8/4/13)

Kinder Lake. (8/4/13)


Kinder Lake with Jones Lawn to the left. (8/4/13)

The park and city at night. (8/4/13)