On Thanksgiving morning, Julie Lobbia died at age 43.
She was the wife of TSG reporter Joe Jesselli and, for
the other three guys who run this site, Julie was our
editor, friend, colleague, confidante, and sister.
All four of us met her at The Village Voice, where
Julie worked as an editor and reporter. She wrote
about poverty and homelessness, and was our city's
best housing reporter (and was regularly honored for
her distinguished work). I had the great privilege of
working with her for a decade. She initially edited my
copy, a previously joyless process that quickly became
one of the highlights of my work week.
When Julie shifted to writing full time, we'd exchange
tips, story ideas, reporting advice, or just plain
office gossip. Our daily skull sessions occurred in
Julie's office, which was forever cluttered with her
beloved bicycle, files, newspapers, and whatever it
was that she had picked up off the street that morning
(she probably would have been a dumpster diver, but at
five feet tall, Julie would have needed to tote around
a step ladder). When she would hold up her latest find
for inspection--a fallen bolt from the Manhattan
Bridge, for example--Julie would ask, "Isn't this
fabulous?" "That it is, sister," I'd say.
These were found objects from the municipal timeline
of her second city--Julie was born and raised on
Chicago's South Side--and she heartily embraced them.
In fact, we like to think of Joe as another of those
odd curios that Julie had the good sense to scoop up.
She had a powerful curiosity about New York (and most
everything else), one that propelled her, on bike or
by foot, to all corners of our great city.
When she told me about some planned trek to the
hinterlands of Queens--where I was born and
raised--I provincially explained that there really
wasn't much to see outside of Shea Stadium, the Lemon
Ice King of Corona, and John Gotti's Bergin Hunt &
Fish Club. Of course, she'd return in a few days with
a marvelous story of discovery, having wheeled out to
where the concrete turns into marshland. She even
enjoyed bicycling to Brooklyn's Gowanus Canal, an
often fetid body of water (sure, it would have been
easier to pedal along a pleasant Hudson River path,
but that wasn't Julie's thing).
Last month, while recuperating from surgery, she
called with a rundown of a rollicking visit that
afternoon by my wife and nearly 2-year-old child. She
was delighted to recount how my son bounced around her
apartment fiddling with volume controls, assorted
electronic devices, and generally pawing and gumming
everything in sight. For me, it was a delicious
image--my two favorite small bundles of energy trapped
together in a Manhattan studio apartment.
So we're still in shock that this electric presence in
our lives is gone, stunned by the rapidity with which
the cancer consumed Julie's body. At her wake and
funeral in Chicago earlier this week, friends and
family were overwhelmed by grief, a sad testament to
the love and depth of feeling we had for Julie. That
anguish was only tempered by the bittersweet
remembrances offered by Julie's friends and family,
including her 83-year-old mother. Julia Lobbia, a
luminous wonder, spoke of how grateful she was that
God allowed her to have Julie Anne, the youngest of
her four children, for 43 glorious years. Joe, too,
noted how lucky he was to have been married to Julie
for seven wonderful years.
On the wallet-sized memorial card that was given to
those attending Julie's wake, there's a small black
and white photo of her flashing a big smile.
Underneath the inscription "Julie Anne Lobbia
1958-2001," is something a gravely ill Julie told a
friend as she lay in her hospital bed days before her
death. "Life is full of wonder and joy," she said.
We'll deeply miss her.
--William Bastone