The Living Dead

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The days grow short and the nights colder, longer. October, Halloween and the Day of the Dead are upon us. For our annual Fall Literature issue, we present two morbid, but very much alive excerpts from the just released Eternal Frankenstein, a collection of 16 stories published by Petaluma’s Word Horde, publisher of horror and fantasy books. The stories use the enduring legacy and power of Mary Shelley’s nearly 200-year-old novel Frankenstein, or the Modern Prometheus as a point of literary departure.

“Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein is many things,” writes editor Ross E. Lockhart in the book’s introduction. “A first novel. A philosophical work. The origin of science fiction. It is a reaction to volcanic dust obscuring the sun, and the apocalyptic skies that distinguished the year without a summer. It is a novel marked by the loss of a child, and the desire to write something more enduring than the poetry of Lord Byron and Percy Shelley. It is a story of technology and magic and the desire to challenge god’s and nature’s laws. It is a tale of dreamlike geographies, shifting topographies and finding one’s place in the universe…. Frankenstein, like its monster, its creature, its wretch, has taken on a life of its own. It reflects us. It defines us. It shows us what it means to be human.”

In these pages, we offer an excerpt from David Templeton’s novella-length “Mary Shelley’s Body,” which reveals how Shelley’s life overlapped with that of the creature she created, and a section from Amber-Rose Reed’s short story “Torso, Head, Heart,” the backstory to each of the creature’s various body parts. Enjoy.

— Stett Holbrook

Mary Shelley’s Body

I cannot breathe.

O! God! I cannot breathe!

There is thunder in my lungs, a whirlwind in my throat, bolts of lighting stabbing at my heart, shredding my flesh, shredding my soul like paper. I feel as thin as paper. I am burning! I try to breathe, but all I sense in my chest are those buzzing arcs of light, spreading out like veins of fire through my skin. And still I cannot breathe.

I wonder . . . should I stop trying?

I stop. There is a faint faraway exhalation, as if from behind a dark wet door. I let myself hear it, the sound of it, evaporating. It is an empty sound, as shallow and void as my body, my poor, sick, wrecked, half-paralyzed, once desirable, once fearless, once unstoppable body.

Ah, I begin to understand. As suddenly and certainly as those flashes of light I still see somewhere beyond what used to be my eyes, I see the truth now.

I no longer need to breathe. I am done with breathing.

I am dead.

Well great God, that took long enough!

The doctors are no doubt relieved to be rid of me, the crazy lady from London, wasting away with no obvious cause. For months, for years, there has been only a sense that something was wrong in the spongy muscle of my brain, something vital added or taken away.

And, now my life, my little life, is over.

My hapless heart, so long deluged in bitterness, is finally still.

I feel so much better now.

My head no longer hurts, for one thing.

And that terrible burning smell, like wet feathers set ablaze, that is gone too. How long has it been since it all began, the smell, the headaches, the fainting spells, then the failure of half my body to obey the simplest task?

No matter. I am free of it now.

Free of my body.

Free of my life.

This then, I surmise, is my grave?

This slab of cold carved stone I sense before me, after years of loneliness, is my lonely gray tomb? I cannot see, but I do perceive shapes and structures all around. I cannot feel, but I detect words here, carved into the rock slab before which I stand.

How am I standing?

My body, what is left of it, lies there in the grave.

Yet here I am. Standing.

Kneeling, even. Speaking, if speaking this is.

Had I fingers with which to feel I would caress these carved words, trace out their meaning with my fingertips—and yet, somehow I can. Somehow I do.

I can read the meaning of these etched lines.

Here lies Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley.

Yes. That was I.

Mary.

A wife. A mother. An author.

Daughter of William and Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin.

Those were my parents, yes . . . though he too much so, and she—dead almost upon looking at me—only my mother in that she conceived me, bore me, and birthed me. And still, in so many ways, Mary Wollstonecraft—the writer, the radical, beloved and despised by so many—gave me more with her life and words than my father, with his calm and silent disapproval, ever gave me with his.

The next line.

Widow of the late Percy Bysshe Shelley.

Shelley.

O, Shelley. My husband, my love, my savior, my only one!

I have no beating heart to ache with, no sense to feel with. How then does your name still stir me so? Almost thirty years have passed since you died, your soul set free beneath the waters of the Gulf of Spezia, your drowned body—with its speaking eyes and face unlike any other who ever walked Earth—burned to gray ashes on the shore. Since that day, O my love, I have missed you so, with only your memory to comfort me these many years.

That, and the singular divinity of your poems.

And, oh yes! I have had your heart.

It’s still in my desk.

Your friend Trelawney snatched it, charred and purple, from your funeral pyre. Your heart, dried and flattened, sits in my desk still, tucked way beneath my papers along with a lock of hair, one from each of our three dead children.

I wonder who will discover them, there in the drawer?

I suspect it will be our daughter-in-law, Jane.

It will give her a bit of a shock, that.

A final line.

Born August 30, 1797. Died February 1, 1851.

Odd. I feel as if I have only just died, but I am already buried. That was quickly done. I suspect it was Jane’s doing. Ever since she married my dear Percy Florence, that daughter-in-law of mine—whom I have loved with as much of my own heart as was left to love with—has proven nothing if not punctual. But then of course, she has had years to plan.

I have been dying for such a very long time.

And now I am dead.

I must be, for there is my name on this tomb.

Shelley used to joke that if I died before he, he would see to it that my marker proclaimed, “Here lies the body of Anonymous!”

It was a joke, but it came with a sting.

Anonymous was the word under which my first novel was published.

Afterwards followed years of ungenerous assumptions that another must have been the true author of my story, that I was not capable of it. Visitors to our house, when engaged in conversation with Shelley, oft interpreted my watchful silence as dullness, and whispered rumors that my husband likely wrote more of my prose than I. Shelley defended me. After that I saw to it that all of my subsequent works were published—if not always under my true name—then at least under a title which made my authorship clear.

For the rest of my days, all my published writing proclaimed, “By the author of Frankenstein.”

Frankenstein. My first great success, born of happier days, too briefly tasted.

Frankenstein.

My triumph . . . my curse . . . my hideous progeny.

— Excerpted from ‘Mary Shelley’s Body’ by David Templeton

Torso, Head, Heart

Left Arm, Right Arm

Your left arm blocks the swing; your right arm takes a swing of its own. Your knuckles crack against someone else’s nose. When you pull back your fist, you wiggle your fingers. Old Josef takes it as a slight and lets out a growl. He’s like a mutt going for a bone.

He charges again and you sidestep the cur. You didn’t start this fight, but he has a face fit for slapping and you’ve got fists made for hitting. He comes again. The tavern crowd around you buzzes and spits. The barmaid’s calling for someone to stop the brawling. You draw back your arm, ready to deliver a punch. It’ll be the last one you have to release tonight; sure thing, that.

Something crunches against the back of your head. Your vision goes black. You don’t feel any pain.

Torso

Your hammer hasn’t met the anvil yet when you hear the screaming. Women, mostly, and you pass the hammer to your apprentice and head out to the street to see what’s causing the noise. Down the way, a cart’s toppled over. You hear the screams as words as you get closer; there is a boy there, and the cart is crushing him.

The muck in the streets sucks at your feet as you rush over. You don’t trip. The crowd parts as you approach. There is none strong enough to help, save you.

The wood is splintered, but you find a grip. All you can see of the boy are his small child’s feet, shod in tattered shoes, and his legs, bare to the knee.

The muscles in your chest pull and twinge and you feel as though all of your upper self is on fire. But the cart gives way from the mud with a sucking sound, and as the boy slides from beneath the toppled vehicle, your eyes meet his. He has a strong gaze, blue eyes meeting yours.

You let go the cart, and mud squelches beneath it. You straighten and take deep breaths, waiting for the feeling of fire to leave your chest. But it doesn’t. You clutch your right hand over your heart. It feels, suddenly, like you are the one being crushed.

— Excerpted from ‘Torso, Head, Heart’ by Amber-Rose Reed

Just Say ‘Slow’

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As an older teenager and a young adult who was a user of recreational marijuana, I remember that I always supported the legalization of marijuana. However, as a mature adult who has, hopefully, gained some wisdom over the years, I find my attitude toward legalization changing due to a few social and scientific realities.

First of all, what is pot? Pot is agriculture, and agriculture constitutes the number-one cause of water pollution due to three factors: sedimentation, nutrients and chemicals. And in the case of animal agriculture, add to that list pathogens. The difference between pot and most of the other vegetables used in agriculture is that most vegetables are used for nutrition to sustain human life. Marijuana agriculture is not necessary to sustain human life, in most cases.

We all are aware how money from the wine industry influences local politicians. We are also aware how the wine industry has hurt local biodiversity levels as well as the drain on the water supply and its effect on fish populations. If pot becomes legalized, the amount of money generated in the industry will help to spawn a whole new generation of lobbyists and the political prostitutes they so dearly love. Will all of the problems created by the wine industry be made worse by a bunch of money grubbing, nitrogen dumping, sediment creating, agricultural monstrosities likes Cargill, Archer Daniels Midland, Gallo, etc?

The term “unintended consequences” comes to mind when I ponder this subject. A recent study by the University of Mississippi concluded that legalization of marijuana in Colorado caused a substantial increase in housing prices. Is there any reason to think that wouldn’t happen here? Considering our already skyrocketing rents, how much will legalization exacerbate the problem?

As the (over)population of California approaches 40 million, voters need to be extra careful about what type of industry we permit to establish itself in a state already burdened by social and environmental problems. If there were only 4 million people in California, I might jump on the legalization train, but the infrastructure is already too strained. Let’s think of the big picture. Will we have to build a new desalination plant at Bodega Bay to support this industry? If we desire to be truly sustainable, at some point we have to stop making money the number one consideration. Perhaps this would be a good place to start.

Doug Haymaker is an environmental science student at Santa Rosa
Junior College and founder of the Clean Oceans Campaign.

Open mic is a weekly feature in the ‘The Bohemian.’ We welcome your
contribution. To have your topical essay of 350 words considered for
publication, write op*****@******an.com.

Mystic Circus Flies Into Santa Rosa

Inspired by the Coney Island sideshows, Mystic Circus is a show not to be missed. This adult variety show features a fire-breathing ringmaster in Rush Hicks, with sword swallowing, acrobatics and burlesque among other spectacles.

This week, the nationally touring troupe make their way to the North Bay with a show at Whiskey Tip in Santa Rosa on Thursday, Oct 13, as part of their latest “Fly or Die” tour. Sponsored by Lagunitas Brewing Company, this show will push multiple envelopes as it dazzles. As the circus says on their Facebook event page:

Come one come all….. wait…. Stay at home if you are conservative, close minded, easily offended or overly religious. We wouldn’t like to shake your delicate sensibilities. Do attend if you are fun, outgoing and don’t mind getting pull on stage to be a part of the fun.

With the North Bay already familiar with companies like North Bay Cabaret and Cabaret de Caliente, this show is sure to entertain. The mystery and magic come to town for one night only. For more details, click the event link, here.

Oct. 7: Heartfelt Art in Santa Rosa

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Sonoma County artist Potenza has a big heart. Inspired by an act of charity 24 years ago, she endeavored to create ‘The Hearts of the World,’ a massive art project that has finally come to completion and includes over 200 paintings, one for every nation on Earth. Each piece commemorates its adopted nation through that country’s colors, flag design or other recognizable symbol, designed to bring people together through a message of love. Potenza exhibits many of these works of art and shares the inspiring stories behind them with a reception on Friday, Oct. 7, at the Journey Center, 1601 Fourth St., Santa Rosa. 5pm. Free admission. 707.578.2121.

Oct. 8: Musical Apex in Guerneville

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Formed in the Bay Area in 1996, female vocal ensemble Solstice have spent two decades performing a dynamic repertoire of passionate music. The six-women-strong group of singers regularly commissions and arranges classic works by everyone from Björk to Paul Simon, and composes original tunes, all of which can be found on their four original albums. This week, Solstice celebrate 20 years of transformative harmonies and award-winning music with a concert that features new works by musical compatriots Cortlandt Bender and Jim Hale, and a post-concert reception on Saturday, Oct. 8, at the Guerneville Community Church, 14520 Armstrong Woods Road, Guerneville. 8pm. $15–$25. solsticesings.com.

Oct 8 & 9: Rags to Revival in Sonoma & Napa

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Before jazz, before Dixieland, there was ragtime. This weekend, the Wine Country Ragtime Festival highlights many of today’s premier ragtime musicians with several events. The lineup includes nationally known ragtime master and musical director John Partridge, pianist and harpist Deborah Knapp, Russian-born and classically trained musician Larisa Migachyov and festival favorite the Flying Eagles Jazz Band. The all-star show happens on Saturday, Oct. 8, at 6pm at the First Congregational Church (252 W. Spain St., Sonoma; $20) and Sunday, Oct. 9, at 2pm at the First Presbyterian Church (1333 Third St., Napa; $10). winecountryragtimefestival.com.

Oct. 10: Hungry Eyes in St. Helena

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The delicatessen was born from Jewish immigrants in New York City, and today is known coast to coast as the lunchtime go-to spot we all depend on to get us through the work day. The delicious documentary ‘Deli Man’ profiles deli workers and examines the communal culture that comes from the eateries. This week, Cameo Cinema screens the film as part of its CinemaBites series, paring the visuals to food by the Restaurant at Meadowood’s chef Christopher Kostow and wine and beer. Special guest Evan Bloom, from Wise Sons Delicatessen in San Francisco, is also on hand Monday, Oct. 10, at Cameo Cinema, 1340 Main St.,
St Helena. 5pm. $45. cameocinema.com.

Big Mack

Bertolt Brecht’s 1928 “play with music,” The Threepenny Opera, is like an expensive dessert that’s so filled with flavor most people can’t quite figure out how to enjoy it. Brecht was never interested in entertaining his audiences. He wanted them to stay a bit uncomfortable, to remain just distant enough from their emotions to be always thinking about what the play actually means.

I’d say that, for most people, the only significant obstacle in 6th Street’s thoroughly effective and often delightful production of Threepenny Opera is that in the end, it’s still The Threepenny Opera, a fascinating choice for 6th Street, where its musicals have tended, of late, toward the safe and predictable.

Directed by Michael R. J. Campbell, Threepenny features thrilling singing voices, excellent musical direction by Janis Wilson, frequently brilliant staging, cooler-than-cool visual stylings and whimsically Brechtian touches. I loved those chalk-drawn signs, and that proscenium chalked over with the scrawled titles of all the songs.

The story is set in London in 1937, and plays like a Victorian version of The Rocky Horror Show. It’s gleefully sexy and aberrant, and joyously contemptuous of those too sensitive and proper to sit and watch a dark, twisted, tune-filled show about the seedy underbelly of society.

The show, based on John Gay’s 1728 play The Beggar’s Opera, is actually (if you pay attention) all about Europe’s wealthy class of bankers and businessman, who too often behave like crooks and murderers. In Threepenny Opera, we get crooks and murderers behaving like bankers and businessmen.

The show’s best-known song (“The Ballad of Mack the Knife”) is presented in a gothy prelude by an accordion-playing street singer (a first-rate Shawna Eiermann), after which the plot-heavy story introduces Mr. and Mrs. Peachum (Robert Rogers and Eileen Morris, both excellent). The Peachums oversee a network of robbers and thugs, rivaled only by the vicious, knife-wielding Macheath (a wonderful Jerry Lee, singing beautifully while looking like a cross between Charlie Chaplin and Gomez Addams).

When Mack secretly marries the Peachums’ daughter, Polly (Molly Larsen, adding yet another excellent voice to the cast), things get complicated. For adventurous audiences willing to take their tea with a bit of arsenic, this energetic anti-capitalist fable is served with enough style to keep you smiling, even as it sends you out of the theater thinking hard—and perhaps just a little unsettled.

Rating (out of 5): ★★★★

Vision Quest

No one could predict that the internet and social media would turn the spotlight on niche magazines and indie presses. And yet, according to market reports and sources like TheMediaBriefing.com, there’s never been a better time to be a quality publisher. Some say it’s the golden age of small, independent presses and publishing houses that push boundaries while their established colleagues compete for the next big series or bestseller.

Alternative magazines, following in the footsteps of Kinfolk and Lucky Peach, are also blossoming. Sometimes funded by crowdsourcing sites like Kickstarter, and often artfully designed, they provide an alternative to the media cycle, in which “recycling” is a key word. Unlike nationally circulating lifestyle brands, each independent magazine carries a sense of the place, atmosphere and area in which it was created. No wonder niche magazines are increasingly being called “time capsules.”

This is very much the case with the Inverness Almanac, a biannual print publication from West Marin, a region abundant with past niche publications, such as the well-loved Floating Island and Estero journals. With only four volumes since its inception around two years ago, Inverness Almanac managed to set a certain tone. Each cover features an image from nature. Inside, local poetry, art, naturalist essays and inspirational ideas fill the pages.

This past month, the team behind the publication put it to rest to focus on their next venture, Mount Vision Press, without really leaving the niche category. The group consists of Jordan Atanat, 34, a woodworker from Point Reyes Station; Katie Eberle, 30, a radio host, DJ and designer from Marshall; Ben Livingston, 28, a farmer and musician from Inverness; Jeremy Harris, 30, a musician from Inverness; and Nina Pick, 33, a poet and editor who travels all over.

The five came together united by their love of West Marin and creativity, and married their individual skills. “We were inspired both by the beauty of West Marin, as well as the rich community of artists, writers and naturalists who live here,” Harris says. “West Marin also has a tradition of local publications such as Floating Island, Tomales Bay Times, Pacific Plate, West Marin Review. Basically, the Inverness Almanac is the publication that we wished to exist. It didn’t, so we decided to create it.”

Ben Livingston remembers the exact conversation that encouraged him to join. “The idea was brought forth around a campfire in Bolinas. Jordan Atanat told me about his vision for a local publication, and I was immediately on board. It was a perfect venue for sharing my experience of the landscape I had grown up in, as well as embarking on a larger creative project than I ever had before.”

While “the dreaming phase flowed pretty easy,” according to Livingston, the practical part was educational, to say the least. The Almanac was printed in Minnesota and Wisconsin, to avoid the high costs of the Bay Area, Harris says.

There were other obstacles, too. “There is the actual making of the book, and then there is interfacing with printers, figuring out business structures, promoting the book, selling the book, planning release parties, on and on,” Livingston says. “Dealing with the business side of things is probably the most difficult for me.”

The first issue came together with help from the local community of artists, writers and artisans. “We put the word out that we’d be collecting submissions to form a publication about our landscape—the place, the people who live here and what gets made here,” Harris says, and submissions poured in. By the fourth volume, which will be released this month, the team “received many more attractive submissions than we had space to include.”

Embodying the West Marin spirit, the Inverness Almanac has been sold in some of the best boutiques and decor stores in the Bay Area and beyond.

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“The spirit of the Almanac communicates universally to anyone who appreciates the natural world and the many ways humans artistically respond to it,” Harris says. “Whether you enjoy the richness of what it tells you or the way it looks on your coffee table, it can satisfy the consumer desire on levels of both function and form.”

Since emerging on the scene, the Almanac has served as part magazine, part calendar, with seasonally based literature and recipes, illustrations, art, a calendar with information regarding tide charts specific to Tomales Bay, solar and lunar cycles and notifications of natural events: plants blooming, birds migrating, ocean currents changing. Now the team is hoping to bring the same natural and cultural sensibilities to publishing.

“Mount Vision Press started as a way to continue and broaden the work of the Almanac,” Livingston says. “We have gotten to know so many talented writers and artists while working on this project, and being able to give their work more space—say, a book—is very exciting.”

According to Livingston, the press, like the Almanac, will gently balance on the local-global scale. “It won’t necessarily focus on West Marin work, but it is a fertile starting ground,” he says. “We intend to publish work that is honest, grounded and contributes to the larger conversation of making sense of life in these times.”

The main reason for discontinuing work on the Almanac, Harris explains, came from a desire to move on to publishing other books, like the first forthcoming Mount Vision Press title Journeywork, a collection of poetry by David Bailey.

“In the Almanac‘s format, we can only showcase so much of someone’s work,” he says. “Being able to give some of the work a book’s worth of space is really valuable.”

Both Livingston and Harris are naturally huge fans of print and limited editions, despite “using computers and the internet every day.” They must be. Why else would a group of young people, with startups and endless app entrepreneurs in close proximity, decide to print something as intricate as the Inverness Almanac or a poetry book? In the fourth and last volume, for example, the readers can find a partial lexicon of Miwok, “an ancient language that was spoken here way before us,” Livingston says. Not your average bit of information, but that seems to be the point.

“The internet has [spawned] the rise of attention-span-deprived, ephemeral media consumption,” Harris says. “What’s popular or interesting one day is forgotten the next. We think smaller publications are trying to resist the tide of everything moving to the internet, to create something meaningful and lasting, something you can hold in your hands and have a relationship with.”

Physical location, in the case of this literary project, has something to do with it. “Marin is in a special position of being in the liminal zone of urban and rural,” Livingston says. “The wilderness of Point Reyes and the influence of a global city nearby can coalesce into something both rooted in the local forest but looking outward into the world at large.”

“There might be a bit of an anticorporate sentiment expressed by some more overtly than others,” Harris adds. “We’re interested in real things made by real people. Also, the Inverness Almanac doesn’t require a battery, doesn’t hit you with blue light before bed and doesn’t advertise to you, which are all very nice things.”

And unlike many technological grand schemes of Silicon Valley, sustaining a publication like the Almanac, aside from the hardships of figuring out Tomales Bay tides and layout, sounds pretty easy. “All it takes is a tiny room and a lot of Pu-erh tea,” Harris says.

“With [Mount Vision Press], as with the Almanac, we’re not as interested in capitalizing on the moment as we are in making things we’ll want to enjoy for, hopefully, decades,” Harris says.

BoBnB, Anyone?

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On a bluff in Bolinas there’s a single mother who lives with her young daughter in an apartment with a billion-dollar ocean view.

The mom is able to pay the rent because the homeowner has an affinity for single mothers, and for helping the town save itself from the worst effects of the online, short-term vacation-rental economy.

Could this ethic offer a model for reforming the short-term rental market in Bolinas and beyond?

While there are numerous for-profit competitors to the dominant players—VRBO and Airbnb—there are no sites that aim to corral a locality’s power to manage demand by creating a local platform administered locally and with buy-in from the residents and homeowners themselves. That would require a devotion to “ethical real estate” that may strike some as inherently oxymoronic, but there is an opportunity, perhaps, for Bolinas to build a better mousetrap to preserve the character of the town, a destination for artists and writers and musicians and freaks of all persuasions for decades.

BoBnB, anyone?

Bolinas put itself on the map by taking itself off the map through the removal of street signs and, yes, there are residents whose suggested reform for short-term vacationers is a bristling “Get out.” It’s a town where the enjoyment of beauty and living a life of communal anonymity is now met with an anonymity that’s outside the control of long-term residents: Who did the absentee neighbor with the otherwise-vacant house rent to this weekend? The obnoxious bachelor party with midnight vomiters retching under a full moon? The ayahuasca vision-seekers driving Benzes from San Francisco and shrieking about the Jesus gargoyle on a Sunday afternoon?

Bolinas is not unlike towns all over the North Bay as it has dealt with the advent of the short-term online rental platform and its deleterious impact on local housing stocks and the character of the community. Healdsburg is putting forward a measure in November that would add a local transient occupation tax (TOT) to a renter’s fee. Municipalities that have tried to pass restrictive short-term-rental laws, or pushed to ban the online platforms altogether, have faced legal opposition and challenges and blowback from residents. That’s been the case in San Francisco, Santa Monica, Laguna Beach and elsewhere. Sausalito banned short-term rentals, but there are numerous listings on Airbnb despite that. Nearby Tiburon banned short-term rentals last year, but VRBO’s got a listing up there right now.

Lawmakers have taken note of the growing downsides to an under-regulated online-rental industry. U.S. Sen. Diane Feinstein asked the Federal Trade Commission in July to do a deep-dive on the implications of the industry; at the state level, state Sen. Mike McGuire offered a bill last year designed, among other things, to put local decisions about short-term rentals squarely in the domain of the localities themselves.

“I think that any time a local jurisdiction can take control of their housing stock, it’s a win-win for homeowners and residents of a community,” he says. “Local control is always the best option,” McGuire adds as he notes his “concern about the proliferation of short-term rentals in small coastal communities and the way their culture has changed because of the number of homes that have become second-home vacation homes. Small coastal communities have been overrun by vacation rentals.”

There’s an oceanfront home in Bolinas that’s for rent for $1,200 a night and it’s tricked out like a five-star hotel. Meanwhile, stories of how long-term tenants and residents are being squeezed out by short-term rental money are, well, a dime a dozen. On any given weekend, visitors are greeted with signs around Bolinas that single out Airbnb for gutting the town of housing that might otherwise be affordable and available to residents.

But there is hope that some of the spirit that originally inspired the creation of Bolinas as an idea and not just a town is still lingering around. A fairly common story that’s not unique to Bolinas is the plight of the longtime and aging homeowner with a mortgage, maybe some out-of-pocket health expenses that are crippling them, and a long-term tenant who is paying a humane amount of rent and has been for years. According to residents I spoke to, there already are homes in Bolinas where a tenant voluntarily exits the premises once in a while so the owner can cash in with Airbnb and pay some hideously large bill. It’s inconvenient, but it beats getting evicted. Could that sort of ad hoc approach to preserving housing be blown out on a community-wide scale?

Bolinas may be uniquely poised to create its own path forward, and one resident, a veteran community leader who asked to remain anonymous because of his high profile in town, says the time is ripe for such an idea. He sees no value in trying to ban Airbnb or in publicly shaming people who rent their homes to vacationers.

“We need to come up with something new, something else,” he says. He believes in an “If you can’t beat ’em, join ’em” approach to the short-term rental dilemma that is at once creative and noncoercive, and that doesn’t emphasize banning, shaming or otherwise alienating homeowners who participate in the short-term rental economy. He raises a core issue: How do you manage and curate demand in a way that would serve to preserve and enhance the community-driven spirit of the place?

There is a countywide push, driven by the Marin County Board of Supervisors and the Community Development Agency, to try and solve the affordable-housing problem in Marin, where rents average $2,500 a month and the median price of a home has eclipsed $1 million. In February, the county pledged that it was “working with local landlords to provide incentives to keep apartments affordable, promoting development of second units, acquire existing rental housing for preservation of and conversion to affordable homes, and encourage multifamily housing.” But the county also relies on TOT income from West Marin to pay for services in the unincorporated parts of the county, where much of the short-term-rental action takes place.

For-profit platforms charge up to 15 percent as a service fee for using the site, money that goes to a company with no interest in developing affordable housing in Bolinas, or anywhere else for that matter. And yet the Bolinas Community Land Trust is an entity with a commitment to preserving and developing affordable housing in the town, and its efforts to some extent mirror the county’s February push on affordable housing. The organization says it is always interested in new ideas to solve a vexing long-term problem. McGuire says he’d be open to exploring a pilot program at the state level.

“If there is a nonprofit that can step in and keep investments local while also preserving housing stock, I would be interested in exploring this issue further, absolutely,” he says.

The Living Dead

The days grow short and the nights colder, longer. October, Halloween and the Day of the Dead are upon us. For our annual Fall Literature issue, we present two morbid, but very much alive excerpts from the just released Eternal Frankenstein, a collection of 16 stories published by Petaluma's Word Horde, publisher of horror and fantasy books. The stories...

Just Say ‘Slow’

As an older teenager and a young adult who was a user of recreational marijuana, I remember that I always supported the legalization of marijuana. However, as a mature adult who has, hopefully, gained some wisdom over the years, I find my attitude toward legalization changing due to a few social and scientific realities. First of all, what is pot?...

Mystic Circus Flies Into Santa Rosa

Touring sideshow troupe takes the stage on Oct 13 at Whiskey Tip.

Oct. 7: Heartfelt Art in Santa Rosa

Sonoma County artist Potenza has a big heart. Inspired by an act of charity 24 years ago, she endeavored to create ‘The Hearts of the World,’ a massive art project that has finally come to completion and includes over 200 paintings, one for every nation on Earth. Each piece commemorates its adopted nation through that country’s colors, flag design...

Oct. 8: Musical Apex in Guerneville

Formed in the Bay Area in 1996, female vocal ensemble Solstice have spent two decades performing a dynamic repertoire of passionate music. The six-women-strong group of singers regularly commissions and arranges classic works by everyone from Björk to Paul Simon, and composes original tunes, all of which can be found on their four original albums. This week, Solstice celebrate...

Oct 8 & 9: Rags to Revival in Sonoma & Napa

Before jazz, before Dixieland, there was ragtime. This weekend, the Wine Country Ragtime Festival highlights many of today’s premier ragtime musicians with several events. The lineup includes nationally known ragtime master and musical director John Partridge, pianist and harpist Deborah Knapp, Russian-born and classically trained musician Larisa Migachyov and festival favorite the Flying Eagles Jazz Band. The all-star show...

Oct. 10: Hungry Eyes in St. Helena

The delicatessen was born from Jewish immigrants in New York City, and today is known coast to coast as the lunchtime go-to spot we all depend on to get us through the work day. The delicious documentary ‘Deli Man’ profiles deli workers and examines the communal culture that comes from the eateries. This week, Cameo Cinema screens the film...

Big Mack

Bertolt Brecht's 1928 "play with music," The Threepenny Opera, is like an expensive dessert that's so filled with flavor most people can't quite figure out how to enjoy it. Brecht was never interested in entertaining his audiences. He wanted them to stay a bit uncomfortable, to remain just distant enough from their emotions to be always thinking about what...

Vision Quest

No one could predict that the internet and social media would turn the spotlight on niche magazines and indie presses. And yet, according to market reports and sources like TheMediaBriefing.com, there's never been a better time to be a quality publisher. Some say it's the golden age of small, independent presses and publishing houses that push boundaries while their...

BoBnB, Anyone?

On a bluff in Bolinas there's a single mother who lives with her young daughter in an apartment with a billion-dollar ocean view. The mom is able to pay the rent because the homeowner has an affinity for single mothers, and for helping the town save itself from the worst effects of the online, short-term vacation-rental economy. Could this ethic offer...
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