Pam’s Pictorama Post: As I sit today at my computer perch, words fail to describe the renovation chaos we are currently existing within here in our tiny abode. We kicked off the fun with a mandatory window replacement project requiring that the entire contents of the apartment shift to the interior most side and be covered against ages old flying plaster as the windows were taken from their frames. Brawny men used power tools to yank out the old and then sheer strength to bring in the new.

Kim somehow manages to continue working on some tracing as the windows get yanked out and then replaced. This taken from my spot at the computer – the only choice!
Cats spent the day huddled in the bathroom, the barricade buttressed additionally by our mattress and a chair or two. One and done – the windows were done in a day (a few terrible tense hours really) and the army of men moved onto the next apartment. We were number one – the very first in the building – and we are relieved as we watch their march continue through the building – progress pausing for the occasional very rainy or windy day. (If you missed it I posted about the pre-game packing of the apartment in a posts that you can read here and here.)

Cookie the morning of window removal – deeply uneasy and unsure why.
For one thing, I swear I had no idea how much stuff I had managed to cram into our tiny kitchen over the years. I honestly (utterly naively) thought it could be packed in two hours. Man, was I ever wrong! Boxes and boxes (and hours) later I realized that I had held onto dishes that had been given to me decades ago I had utterly forgotten about and that I had utensils (some obscure) that I last used in my professional cooking days – which are now a full two decades behind me.
Some of these (a particular crimper of pie crust comes to mind) were hard to source originally and much beloved in their day, but have remained unused for years now in response to my present pie-making-less life. (Sadly, to a large degree, calorie control means that I exist in a largely pie-free eating state as well.) I am reminded of a life I might have imagined for myself in my twenties – wine decanter and matching glasses anyone? Dessert plates? I will try to cull the herd on the unpacking side. Meanwhile, boxes filled with breakables teeter in piles on one side of our single room apartment.
Acknowledging how hurried the packing really was I now harbor a secret deep concern that I have destroyed our delicate eco-system and will never be able to return us to a normal life. I am reminded of why I waited so long to get this work done, the last real renovation having been done when I moved into this apartment more than twenty years ago now. (Kim and I are hovering on the brink of 25 years since we got together, about two weeks from today, and I moved into this apartment about six months after that.)
While I am not especially picky, peeling linoleum, aging counters, cabinet, and a chronic broken overhead light were demanding attention which seemed impractical to tackle one project at a time. In addition, despite my lack of pastry producing these days, we really do cook in our kitchen pretty much daily. (Unlike some of our fellow storied Manhattan denizens, we do not keep cashmere cardigans in our oven as storage.) Ovens and refrigerators have come and gone over time. However, job changing, helping my parents move followed by Dad’s illness and ultimate decline, have all meant that I have invested no time or energy in the apartment. It has come back to haunt me and I am paying the proverbial piper now.
We are approximately in the middle of the kitchen process – or at least I would like to think so. The stove disappears on Tuesday, as does the water. The fridge will (somehow) find its way into the living room for the duration. (That will be interesting.) I will batten down the remaining hatches and figure out a way to heat coffee and heat the occasional item over the coming week or so. Our devotion to smoothies like to take a hit in the near future as well. (I wrote about smoothies recently, opining on the absence of them when I travel. The post can be found here.) Like our cats, we get disoriented quickly without our routines and our nerves fray rapidly.

Kitchen dismantled and in progress. The floor is sporting its originally incarnation of linoleum here, recently uncovered.
In terms of our cats, Cookie has taken the process especially hard. She is a precise little creature and the ongoing disturbance is really taking a toll. Each night when I come home she and I sit on the couch and she meows the entire story out to me, insisting that I pet her and scratch her ears while she does. She meowed in outright alarm while I packed up the kitchen. I would say she is in a state of high nervousness that only a female house cat can achieve. Meanwhile, her brother Blackie, continues to nap on my spot on the bed, largely unconcerned. I won’t say he is entirely unaffected, but it is remarkable the difference in temperament.

Blackie curled up in bed, as usual.
And yes, for those of you who are Pictorama readers ongoing – all this with Kim’s new book Reincarnation Stories hitting the stands last week! (My two-part review of the new book can be found here and here.) A very nice review came in from NPR (with a shout out to Pam of Pictorama – in addition to the excerpt from the New Yorker online and some other previews. (Always promoting the family business here at Deitch Studio, those links are below.)
Next weekend, despite apartment woes, we will be in Brooklyn where Kim will sign books and have a public conversation with fellow cartoonist Nina Bunjevac. (Comice Arts Brooklyn at Pratt Institute – I think they go on at 5:00. Kim will be signing books and I will set up with some t-shirts and original art work for sale.) Things are hopping here at Deitch Studio all around. Stay tuned for the next installment and wish us luck!

Cookie this AM on her new favorite perch, two boxes of Reincarnation Stories.
Links to some early reviews for Reincarnation Stories:
NPR – Kim Deitch Spins His Yarns
Kitten on the Keys via the New Yorker
The Many Reincarnations of Kim Deitch
Info on the Comic Arts Brooklyn gig
I wish i could be in NY to share these amazing times with you. Highs and lows get all jumbled in our daily lives it seems. The only way to endure is to roll with it and know it has to happen. On 12/2 it will be a year since my mom passed and I basically moved into the folks apartment which is my inheritance now. My father, may he RIP, was too old/ill to realize that he had let the apt fall in to different states of repair needs and it’s all fallen to me. The kitchen has to be completely overhauled. Dishwasher, stove and fridge must all be replaced, floor re-tiled and wall behind sink redone. I don’t have animals, but I understand their reactions. But hearing about apt change is good for me and you will appreciate yer efforts in post days. I know u don’t know me, but I feel akin because of how deep Kim is in my psyche. And, if I had the capability, would be surrounded by a million toys (tchotchkies).
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What a nice note! I feel like I know all our online friends too! Sometimes we end up somewhere and are lucky enough to meet them. Gosh – it is a huge job, isn’t it? The renovating? I’ve been putting it off endlessly and when I really faced it this year I realized that I couldn’t really do it piecemeal as I had originally intended – just bit the bullet and found someone to do it all at once. I spared everyone the ENDLESS paperwork required by the building – and the fact that the first I don’t know how many contractors never got back to me even after repeated inquiry. On the other hand, it will be done in in a few weeks and will fade into an unpleasant memory! I will go back to my world of old toys and photos and Kim’s wonderful world of the unfolding next book…
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