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Key West in January: Books & Boats (also Poetry, Prose & Parties)
For literary landlubbers and regatta enthusiasts
By Lucy Komisar
Come January, there’s no better place to be than Key West.
If the stars are right, you might arrive there as I did early this year, first
to bask in the intellectual lights of the Key West Literary Seminar and then to
revel in the glories of the annual Key West international regatta.
The
seminar was about adventure, travel and discovery. If you were there, you would
have heard Kate Wheeler, who trained as a Buddhist nun in Burma and wrote the
novel, “When Mountains Walked,” about foreigners adrift in exotic cultures. Or
maybe you’d have chatted with her at the champagne party the seminar throws
every year at the Key West Museum of Art and History at the historic red brick
Custom House. (That is Kate second from the right at the 2006 party.)
If you were there, you might have taken the opportunity to
walk around the museum, which always has some extraordinary exhibits you will
not see elsewhere. Cuba, so near but yet so far, of course is a favorite topic.
Here’s a painting of one of the readers – lectors -- who kept workers
entertained at cigar factories.
On another day at the seminar you might have heard Rosalind
Brackenbury, a Brit who now lives in Key West and has published eleven novels.
“The Circus at the End of the World,” set in Australia, is about a boy searching
for his mother, who is a circus performer. “Seas Outside the Reef” is a love
story set in Key West which bridges the political divide of the US and Cuba. Her
most recent novel is “The House in Morocco.”
And
Ana Menéndez, the Los Angeles born daughter of Cuban exiles who also writes
novels, including “Loving Che.” She has been a journalist at The Miami Herald,
where she covered Little Havana, and in South Asia, where she reported out of
Afghanistan and Kashmir.
Or, even better, maybe you might – as I did -- have shared
a table with them at the casual Sunday afternoon conch chowder lunch at the Key
West Library’s Palm Garden.
After
the books come the boats, quite appropriate as a real-life expression of
adventure, travel and discovery. Every third week of January, sailors come from
around the world for Key West’s international regatta. Usually around 300 boats
show up for five days of competition that, especially to a neophyte like me, is
visually stunning.
The coming January racing dates, right on the heels of the
seminar, are January 15 to 19. Sometimes you can see the regatta from the shore,
but I was lucky enough to hitch a ride on a fishing boat. Well, not a commercial
fishing boat, but one skippered by Perry, a doctor who lives for winters on the
island.
Now,
let’s be practical. With Key West a mecca in January, where can you stay? A good
bet is to choose one of the town’s charming bed & breakfasts. I can recommend
L’Habitation, a Key West Conch House with Victorian and Bahamian accents right
in the middle of town and a few blocks from the San Carlos Center where most
Literary Festival events occur. I stayed in a room that was clean and
comfortable, found breakfast on the rooftop a friendly place to nibble
croissants and meet other guests, and enjoyed the relaxing garden.
The 25th year of the seminar, January 11 to 14, 2007, the
topic is mystery, intrigue and psychological drama, featuring novelists Margaret
Atwood, Joyce Carol Oats, Amy Tan and others. And in 2008, the focus is new
writers. But you need to sign up months in advance, because the seminar sells
out fast. Repeat visitors arrive from all over the country; there are lots of
teachers and librarians as well as budding writers. Because of the collegial
nature of the event, people feel quite comfortable coming alone. In addition to
the seminar, there’s a week of writers’ workshops.
Key West Literary Seminar: (888) 293-9291.
mail@keywestliteraryseminar.org.
http://www.kwls.org/. $450.00 for seminar. $450.00 for workshop. $850 for
both. (The 2007 seminar is sold out.)
Key West Regatta:
http://www.premiere-racing.com/keywest07/pages/KW07_index.htm.
L’Habitation, 408 Eaton Street, Key West, FL 33040; (800)
697-1766.
http://www.lhabitation.com. Dec. 16 - May 31, $119.00 - $159.00 double
occupancy.
Photos by Lucy Komisar.
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