Weekend Getaway


Below is the text of one of my more popular travel essays, published first on Hackwriters. Think of it as a recommendation for a weekend getaway. We liked it so much we were married there.

The Old Riverton Inn

My girlfriend Amy and I spent a sunny March day sightseeing in northern Connecticut. We had taken numerous photographs of remarkable trees, such as the famous Pinchot sycamore, and visited Ender’s Falls in the pine forests of the Tunxis hills. Then, after a day of exploring, we were ready to relax. Amy had put up all day with my stubborn refusal to mark our destination.

"Are you going to tell me where we’re going?"

"Guess."

She rattled through a list and hit the jackpot: an inn. Earlier, she had guessed a bed and breakfast, which I denied. They are different planets as far as I’m concerned. A bed and breakfast is simply someone’s open house, but an Inn is a lodging tradition, a living museum, a gathering of people and their history.

This was Amy’s first inn. I had lodged at inns in Europe, but never in America. They were rare here, like otters or elm trees. Even bed and breakfasts were not common, and those that were scattered across the expansive American landscape cost three times what they did in England, a haven for only the nostalgic wealthy. The rest of us can always drive farther now, staying to the superhighways and convenient hundred-room hotels. And what really makes the inn different than a "hotel?" If you have to ask, you’ve never been to an inn. You could adopt an inn, staying on as a permanent resident, and it would feel like home. "Inns are scarcely public places in the sense that railway stations, Town halls, and museums are public places. They are semi-private. We know that they are commercial undertakings; yet in a good inn we have, and should have, the feeling of making one at the home of a family who are keeping open house in the manner of the old squire on feast days," Thomas Burke tells us in The English Inn. No hotel can claim this distinction, cramped by the same dependence on time that we ourselves feel.

At an old crossroads on the scenic Route 20, a bridge led to the front door of the Old Riverton Inn, proclaimed by a sign secured to the roof of the three-story building. In the times before automobiles, stage drivers would stop at their favorite inns, bringing travelers and business. There were several rival stage companies that operated between New Hartford and Riverton in Connecticut, part of a larger network of the Hartford to Albany post route. The gray-sided Riverton Inn, built in 1796, is the only survivor of this lodging-path. A bay window in the tavern downstairs occupiedthe place where a front door would have stood in former times. Huge pines shaded the colonial inn and thickened up the river valley’s flanks. A friendly sign hung from a branch of one of these old trees above the innyard carpark, telling us "Hospitality for the hungry, thirsty, and sleepy."

Inside, the thick-beamed dining room spread out past the grandfather clock foyer. The muraled Hobby Horse Bar, with floors of Vermont flagstone, extended to the back of the inn. Saddles balanced on kegs, which remained from an earlier age to serve as bar stools. To the north an enclosed grindstone terrace appeared closed for the season. Each room brimmed with antiques and tasteful novelties, which in another setting might be considered tacky. As The English Inn tells us: "Old fireplaces, beautiful windows, carven doorways, staircases, king-posts, moulded ceilings – indeed, all those interests that you can only otherwise indulge at a museum can be indulged at the old inn. The stuff is there in situ."

Our room perched above the restaurant, directly above the table we would dine at later. The liberal windows granted views of the west branch of the Farmington River and the old Hitchcock chair factory. The centerpiece was a generous king-sized Hitchcock bed with antique headboard. A long green chaise lounge angled in the corner for daybed lollygagging. Floral wallpaper, an antique spinning wheel turned into a planter, and an old fireplace completed the nostalgic tableau. A step up into the bathroom led to white towels on mahogany racks and the exposed pipes of an ancient sink. And as a surprise I had prepared for Amy, on the chest of drawers near the door a bottle of champagne rested on ice next to a wrapped box of fine chocolates. The living, timeless romance of the inn leant itself greatly to this more common form, solidifying and enhancing an act that might in other places be considered trite and over-sentimental.

A candlelight dinner for two was also on my romantic menu that night. At a corner table by the roaring fire, we sipped a fine cabernet. For an appetizer we shared mushrooms with gorgonzola. For the main course, Amy chose the porkloin and I had the duck. Desserts, wine, everything was perfect and ordered, linking us to the long history of satisfied patrons. Time drew out and lingered, burning as slowly as the great fire that warmed the March rooms. We stumbled back upstairs to a full night’s rest, feeling the complete effects of hospitality.

A place outside of time, a gathering of people and history, stability and permanence in our time-scattered lives…the inn was all this and more. Restored by its love, Amy and I enjoyed a country breakfast in the morning before heading off to hike the snowy People’s State Forest. As we left the innyard, another car pulled in, another story ready to happen, leaving no break in the romance of continuity.

Book Recommendation

The Worst Journey in the World by Aspley Cherry-Garrard

“If you march your Winter Journeys you will have your reward, so long
as all you want is a penguin’s egg.” This tragic book is nearly universally acknowledged as one of the classics of adventure writing, definitely considered the unparalleled apex of polar exploration, and certainly does not need my approbation. Aspley Cherry-Garrard’s writing style beautifully brings both the singular characters and the Antarctic environment to life. In fact, this perfectly controlled story of a disaster approaches not just great travel writing, but great literature.
Cherry-Garrard makes us feel the unfathomable cold of the polar winter, as well as the lengths humans go for the smallest of gains. But he also tells a gripping tale, an easy thing to do with a triumph, but not with a disaster.

In a way, this book reads a lot like Moby Dick - both detailed and realistic, giving total access to Captain Scott’s failed expedition. But it also plumbs the icy depths of the polar sea for meaning and awareness. Aspley Cherry-Garrard is a man who has done what all travelers hope to - live through an extraordinary adventure and not only survive, but understand it.


First published in Hackwriters: The International Writers Journal.

Fairfield Borders



Saturday I had my first 'book signing' at Fairfield Borders, which was a lot different than giving my usual presentation and signing afterwards. Instead I was set up in the center of the store and sat there patiently, talking to the occasional pedestrian. It was a slightly bizarre experience.



On the plus side, Diane invited me to be part of a round table discussion on November 18 (6:45 pm) about "history." I'm really looking forward to it!

Live on WPKN

Amy and I were guests of WPKN last Monday night, from 10 pm to midnight. We enjoyed talking about our books, Bridgeport, and our lives. Amy read a few poems and I told stories of old Bridgeport to amuse and entertain our listeners. Here we are in the studio.



And our host, JF! He is hilarious. We also met Doug Echols, and hope to work more with both of these WPKN favorites again soon.



As soon as I figure out how to chop up and post the audio from the evening, I will have clips to listen to.

Bridgeport Historical Society



My presentation at the North Branch of the Bridgeport Public Library last night drew 75 people, most members of the Bridgeport Historical Society. We had a great time discussing the ins and outs of Bridgeport history, and I certainly learned a few things myself.



I also met Charles from the Stratford Public Library and will be doing a presentation with them on October 4 (2 pm). And more immediately I met J.F. from WPKN and my wife Amy and I were guests on his show last night. I'll post about that fascinating experience shortly! Maybe I'll even figure out how to post audio clips.

Book Recommendation

Originally published on Hackwriters.

The Wind in the Willows by Kenneth Grahame

I came to this masterpiece quite late in life. I’m not sure why, because I had seen it on library shelves since my childhood. But then one of my other favorites, Peter Mathiessen’s The Snow Leopard, referred to the famous “Piper at the Gates of Dawn” chapter and so I found an ancient hardbound edition with the original drawings. I carefully read it one Saturday afternoon in my easy chair, with soft music playing and a cup of Earl Grey steaming next to me. I was enchanted. The adventures of Mole, Rat, Badger and Toad are timeless and fun, something I was prepared for from a children’s classic. But I was not prepared for the wisdom, harmony, and depth of the more reflective chapters.

The Wind in the Willows burns with the warm hearthfires of fellowship and compassion. It concerns home and travel and the balance we must strike between them. And so on a driving tour, two friends and I read it out loud to each other, finishing on the last stretch of highway heading for home. One of my life-memories will be reading a chapter from this treasured tome on the windy top of Mount Mitchell in North Carolina.

This is unquestionably a book for a certain kind of explorer - those of us who explore our homes: the little fields and streams, the groves and reed ponds, the paths and villages. And at the end of the day, we enjoy sliding back into our easy chairs, boiling a cup of tea, and wrapping up in a comfortable blanket. We may never discover a hidden city or make the first ascent of a mountain, but you can be sure we still hear the wind in the willows.

Milford Barnes and Noble

Had a lovely time speaking at the Milford Barnes and Noble this Saturday. Perhaps more importantly, I got to see my book actually in a bookstore, and hear from a manager that it was "doing very well." Here are some photos...



Me giving my spiel...



...Signing...



And most exciting for me, my book featured on an endcap!



And here it is in the nearby Borders!

Reading at the BPL

I gave a nice little reading and presentation at the Bridgeport Public Library on Saturday. Mary Witkowski has been so helpful to me and I am not pleased to hear that the Historical Collections have had their hours cut. I'm not sure the library understands the amazing resource they have - ten times as large and rich and strange as any other library historical collection I've ever seen.

Amy loves this first shot of me waiting for the presentation to begin.



These next two shots were taken by a former student and freelance photographer, Uriela. Check out some of her work here.



Here's me with my favorite prop, a genuine Frisbie pie plate. Snagged that on ebay a few months back...

Reading at the Barnum Museum

It was a dark and stormy night...

Seriously, I have rarely felt wind like that and certainly not in Bridgeport. Nevertheless, a large crowd showed up for my inaugural reading at the Barnum Museum.



Action photo of me pointing out one of Tom Thumb's hilarious outfits.



Answering questions...



And my "press conference" photo.



Finally, here is me signing books. I lifted this photo from Lori Golias' blog over at News 12. She has a nice report on the event.

Camels and Elephants



I'm featured at the Bridgeport News as of Friday.

“I took narratives of people and wove history into that,” Lehman said of his writing style. “I wanted to make it real.”

Did I really say that? It's amazing how fast interviews go by. You can also find a mention of my book at the Connecticut Post. However, the article at the Bridgeport News is likely to be my best for now.

I'm still waiting for the first 'review' of the book, though!