The Santa Ana winds are here again. I could feel it
before I turned on the TV last night and heard the meteorologist’s expert
prediction that: “It’s going to be hot, hot, hot and very, very dry. And windy.”
Behind her, the map of San Diego County behind her was splashed with red almost
to the coast. The temperatures were already rising last night—that unnatural,
arid heat was setting in. The wind hasn’t even started yet in earnest, but the
sun is already relentlessly bright and my head is pounding. The rage has set
in. Perhaps rage isn’t exactly the right word. It’s more like desperation,
anxiety, anger, a feeling of not being
able to take it for another second. Well, maybe rage is the right word,
after all. One wants to shave one’s head and rearrange one’s skin so that it
fits better over one’s body. Outside, it feels something like this scene from Total Recall which I’ve always felt sure was inspired by a particularly brutal Santa
Ana.
The Santa Ana winds have inspired some memorable
passages in fiction (even I took a crack at it in my novel, The Neighbors Are Watching), but none
are as succinct and spot-on as Raymond Chandler’s opening paragraph in “Red Wind.” It’s all there in those six sentences. The unease, anxiety, and desiccation.
Though there is work to be done in the kitchen
today, I am a bit concerned how it might turn out. The last time the Santa Ana
winds raged through these parts, I made this.
The knife is edible.
I think the edible knife is rather brilliant, actually. Something to be said for an artist suffering for their work.
ReplyDeleteWelcome to the blog-o-sphere! :)
Thank you so much, Merry!
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