2021 Editions

2021 Editions

Cleveland’s Neil Giraldo: From Benatar to Bourbon

Setting life goals and achieving your dreams involve many elements: talent, ambition, determination and, let’s face it, a good amount of luck. For Parma High grad Neil Giraldo (Class of ‘74), it was a harmonic convergence. From his earliest days playing local bars with his band, Lover’s Lane, to working with the legendary Rick Derringer and then his decades-long personal and professional relationship with his wife, Pat Benatar, Giraldo has achieved goals that few dream of.  ...
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Local Researchers Combat Alzheimer’s

Alzheimer’s Disease research is taking place in Northeast Ohio with The Cleveland Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center (CADRC) funded by National Institute on Aging. It’s one of 31 Alzheimer’s Disease Research Centers (ADRC) in the country. The CADRC helps accelerate research across everything from diagnosis to treatment to basic understanding of what’s happening with the disease, thanks to participating volunteers. ...
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Drawing Conclusions as an R. Crumb Fan

 

 

Okay, I’m going to step in a minefield here. I’ve always been a fan of… Robert Crumb! There, I said it. 

He’s better known as R. Crumb, the former American Greetings artist who moved from Cleveland to San Francisco, did the cover for Big Brother and the Holding Company’s “Cheap Thrills” LP and became a pioneer in the underground comics scene.

His earliest sketches, including a drawing of WEWS-TV’s Dorothy Fuldheim, have been collected into high-priced hardback collections. But his work over the years has gone far beyond comic strips, with something to impress or offend just about anyone.  

Crumb is a complex character. He seems fascinated with the 1930s, has produced an illustrated version of the Bible’s Book of Genesis, but also has illustrated stories with titles that can’t be repeated in polite company. 

Crumb cannot only deeply impress, but also disgust and horrify in just a few panels. He asks for and certainly deserves his privacy, but his work offers many opportunities for study.

A Life, Examined
So, how many people are dissecting Crumb and his work? Plenty, and two new books from the University Press of Mississippi are a good indication of that. They include a series of thoughtful essays covering everything from the artist’s takes on Kafka, old blues musicians, religion, social satire, Bulgaria and more. David Stephen Calonne edited “R.Crumb – Literature, Autobiography, and the Quest for Self.”

Calonne told me that Crumb has created characters that may or may not be extensions of his own personality.  

“There must be 40-60-100 different characters he’s created. The ‘Bearsie Wearsies;’  ‘Flakey Foont;’ ‘Mr. Natural.’ They’re just wonderful. He’s really creating his own little world, but who is he? He’s Flakey Foont because he’s searching for answers, and he makes fun of his own hippie-type search for meaning.

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Summer Book Recommendations

The only thing better than breezy afternoons and twilight-drenched evenings is throwing a good book into the mix. The staff at the Kirtland Public Library has recommended these picks for your summer reading list. ...
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Our Perceptions About Aging Impact Our Quality of Life

Over the past century, much of our society has evolved attitudes and language related to aging that emphasize loss and decline rather than growth and possibility. That is tragic. But it’s also not my problem.  What is my problem is the set of personal attitudes I develop about my own potential — despite my age — and the actions that I take to make the very most of each and every day of my life.  How do I look beyond the limitations to see the possibilities? Am I in it for life — all of it? ...
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Outdoor Music Returns…Mostly

Like a lot of things about this year, the outdoor concert landscape is a good news/not-as-bad news situation. Here’s what we mean: some of the mainstays are back, although in different formats and with limits on seating, spacing and the usual pandemic-driven precautions. Some are virtual while others are simply canceled. ...
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Slow and Steady: Second Marriages

Before couples remarry, they should have a realistic plan for dealing with elderly parents, adult children, friend groups, and how and where to spend their holidays. You don’t want the comment, "I didn't know you felt that way" to surface later. ...
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Yours, Mine & Ours: From Two Homes to One Love Nest

The first decision to navigate is where to live. Mine, yours or ours? Is it best to sell both homes and purchase one together? Of course, the financials need a deep dive, and having a financial planner involved is a vital piece to the puzzle.  ...
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