Wild geese fly overhead.  Raptors soar a level above, dots in the high sky, moving south.  The gardens give way to chrysanthemums, and it’s goodbye to tomatoes, wildflowers, roses.   Hello to orchards, gnarled apple trees heavy with fruit, slow bees drunk on nectar, dancing in figure-eights above bushels of Macouns. Whole flocks of dusky, crested, masked Cedar waxwings descend on the crabapple tree just outside my professor friend’s window.

The days grow shorter, and darkness comes early.  Sunsets are vivid and brilliant.  The stars and planets seem brighter without summer’s haze.   Night walks bring the smells of fallen leaves and sweet fruit.  The trees are bright with eyes: a raccoon family huddled on a high branch, a screech owl with its crazy call, a “backwards whinny” in the words of a poet friend.

Autumn turns the cats sleepy and cozy.  I buy stacks of books and read with cats all around me.  Fall makes me want to write letters.  Not emails or facebook messages: real letters on stationary, pages and pages.  The desire dates back to childhood’s summer’s end, when our beach friends would go back home for the winter, and nothing seemed more important than staying in touch—keeping the connection and closeness going.

New York City seems made for fall.   New exhibits open at museums and galleries.  Abstract Expressionism at MOMA includes paintings of one of my great favorites, Agnes Martin.  In November, another favorite, Linden Frederick, will have a show at the Forum Gallery.  The theater season begins, and I have a list of plays I want to see.

Walks in Central Park, my favorite haunts: the Ramble, Poets’ Walk, the North End, Pinetum.  The leaves change color, reflecting in the Reservoir, the Lake, Conservatory Water.  When they fall, the bare branches turn smoky black and you know Thanksgiving isn’t far off.

When I was a young New Yorker, the Halloween parade was a ragtag collection of incredibly creative, homemade spooky and hilarious costumes.  It took a different path, through the Village’s narrow side streets, rather than the highly publicized wide-swath it cuts down the Avenue today.

My favorite long-ago New York Halloween moment: standing on West Tenth Street, between Fifth and Sixth Avenues, watching the townhouses on the street’s south side.   Several brownstones share a single ornate wrought iron balcony.  Those years, the houses were occupied by young families.  The mothers and daughters put on a pageant that still gives me shivers when I think of it.

The mothers dressed up as mediums and fortune tellers, wearing jewel-colored long skirts, scarves, and turbans.  They’d stand on the balcony calling out to the spirits: “Summoning Miss Interpretation!” they’d intone, and a little girl fairy-child would come pirouetting out a door onto the balcony.  “I’m Miss Interpretation!” she’d sing.

The fortune teller-mothers would call “Miss Apprehension,” “Miss Understood,” “Miss Aligned,” and many more.  And one by one the little girls would come twirling out, trailing scarves, announcing her arrival.

Orchards, owls, bright eyes in the night, a bevy of spirits, the city coming back to life, the countryside vibrant with change.  Those are my autumn wishes for you.  And if you pick up a new book to read and tumble into a letter-writing binge, so much the better.

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  • http://brackenhedge.wordpress.com Patsy

    I can just see the sights and smell the smells.
    The Geese are long gone .I am upset as they stay here all year long.
    The Wild Turkeys are out but few this year. The Hawks are missing one of their mates and I have no clue about the two Ducks in the pond at school.
    The leaves are turning what is left of them and the beaches are closed for the season.
    I love the Fall. I love your Pumpkin picture. The smell of wood smoke and the crisp air. The apples and root veggies in the open air market. Yay !
    Thanksgiving on the way.
    Have a Happy Fall !
    XOXO

  • Judie Barbato

    Thank you so much for your “Autumn Note”. Fall is one of my favorite times of the year. I remember as a young girl riding with my parents on the back country roads in western Pennsylvania to see the beautiful colors of the leaves. Also walking home from school through the fallen leaves and smelling their pungent aroma was something I try to do even now at 56 years old.

    As a child, I always wanted to be an author and would write numerous little stories which my cousin who liked to draw would illustrate them. But over the years work, marriage and children occupied my time. I am glad to say that I am taking a class and the instructor is encouraging us to write and I actually started a story, so again thanks for your “Autumn Note”!

  • Kathy Sharp

    Here in the midwest the Fall brings high school football. All of the small towns are alive with poms and caramel corn apples, fifth graders running wild behind the end-zone and the screams of excited fans. I am sure NYC is beautiful in the fall, but nothing beats the football frenzy.

  • http://cmmagnini@hotmail.com CONSTANCE M. MAGNINI

    Hi! Luanne, I absolutely love your new “look”. I have read every one of your books, and check your website frequently, so that I don’t miss anything. Thank you for all the enjoyment I have received over the years from all of your beautiful stories…Your books are inspirational and uplifting. Fall is my favorite season and the beach is my favorite place. My family and I vacation on Long Beach Island, New Jersey in the summer. It has been a family tradition for nearly 40 years! I look forward to your new novel in April. Have a beautiful Fall Season! Sincerely, Connie Magnini

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