Saturday, June 01, 2013
Jean Stapleton, R. I. P.
chicagotribune.com: Jean Stapleton, who played Archie Bunker’s long-suffering wife Edith in the long-running 1970s television series “All in the Family,” died Friday at her New York City home. She was 90.
Everyone Should Have a Worthy Goal
A cross-country burger journey: The Lindners have spent the better part of three years on a cross-country quest to visit each of the “51 Great Burger Joints” listed in an October 2010 USA Today article. The list included one place for each state, plus the District of Columbia, each recommended by a local foodie.
Dr. Dean Brooks, R. I. P.
NYTimes.com: Dr. Dean Brooks, the superintendent of the Oregon psychiatric hospital where the Oscar-winning picture “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest” was shot — and who had a small, well-received on-screen role as the fictional hospital’s superintendent — died on Thursday at his home in Salem, Ore. He was 96.
Hat tip to Jeff Meyerson.
Hat tip to Jeff Meyerson.
WINNERS for the Third Annual (2013) Peacemaker Awards
Western Fictioneers: Western Fictioneers (WF) is pleased to announce the WINNERS for the third annual (2013) Peacemaker Awards
Friday, May 31, 2013
Coming Later This Year and Highly Recommended!
STARK HOUSE PRESS: Paperback Confidential
978-1-933586-61-8
128 profiles of the men and women who wrote the books that became the backbone of the Pulp and Paperback Era from the 1930s through the 1960s. Here you will find information on the acknowledged masters like Dashiell Hammett, Raymond Chandler, James M. Cain and Cornell Woolrich... the rack mainstays like Gil Brewer, Brett Halliday, Day Keene, and Charles Williams... and the unjustly forgotten like Malcolm Braly, Elisabeth Sanxay Holding, Ennis Willie and Douglas Sanderson. Scheduled for September 2013.
Giant Pink Slugs WBAGNFARB
TreeHugger: High on the dew-dampened peak of Mount Kaputar, in New South Wales, Australia, there exists a world distinct unto itself, an alpine forest populated by organisms found nowhere else on the planet. There, in that isolated mountaintop ecosystem, only a lucky few have chanced upon its most colorful inhabitant -- this giant, fluorescent pink slug.
Criminal: The Books Behind the Notorious, Infamous and Scandalous
Criminal: The Books Behind the Notorious, Infamous and Scandalous on AbeBooks: It is among the darker facets of human nature that we are often unable to look away from a scandal. From the more innocuous fluff of celebrity gossip, to the darker fodder of murder, assault and kidnapping, we are often riveted.
Forgotten Books: The Secret Masters -- Gerald Kersh
Since this book was published in 1953, I must have read it that year or the next. I remembered next to nothing about it except that I thought it was great at the time. Reading it again now, I wonder how a kid of 12 or so managed to get through it at all. I suspect that no kid now would read more than a page. A lot of adults might not, either.
I'm almost 100% certain that no publisher would touch it in 2013. Why? First of all there's the writing style. I guarantee you that there are more semicolons per page in this book than you'll find in 100 thrillers written and published in the last decade. And dashes and, well, here's a sample sentence from page 46: The Greek laughed richly, opening a bottle of Mavrodaphne, and said that it was necessary only to sit down at such-and-such a table and take it easy; the bookkeeper would be coming down to lunch in a few minutes: a harmless old man, "but with the figures, a whiz" -- he kissed his hand in ecstasy.
It's the kind of book where characters speak for pages without interruption, scattering literary allusions from sources ancient and modern on every page, where paragraphs take up at least half a page and sometimes more, where there's considerably more telling than showing.
The plot? Well, it's timely enough. A bunch of super-rich men, known as the Sciocrats, plan to take over the world. Our Heroes might be able to stop them, but can they? Sure, but it's not easy. The last 1/4 of the book introduces the only real action in the story, and it's enough to make you think that Ian Fleming must have read the book and thought he could do something similar himself, but in a very different style.
This probably sounds like a negative review, and I guess it is. Still, I got a kick out of the book. Nostalgia was part of that, but I also enjoyed the humor, much of which must have gone over my head when I was a kid, as did many of the literary allusions. Let me leave you with one paragraph that you might enjoy, tossed in when the police arrive on the scene:
Writers of crime fiction may have led you to assume that any detective worthy of the name must look like something else: he must live in dressing gowns, be slender, have a good nose for fine tobacco and a palate for good wine, know the difference between a drypoint and a mezzotint, have eccentricities, talk superior, and be able to distinguish a Dionysian tetradrachm by touch in the dark. If it happens to be a gluttonous orchid-fancier, a jaw-bopping three-bottle-of-rye man, a violin-playing cocaine addict, a marasmic dandy who clips his Engilsh and rolls his own cigarettes with Bull Durham which he carries loose in his waistcoat pocket -- so much the better. It is just as well if he happens to be a Belgian with funny mustaches, or a pimplish Greek with a temperamental wife, or a satanic blond man who has a superhuman capacity for bourbon and bullets and is reluctantly compelled to knock somebody's teeth down his throat in every other chapter. He may also be afflicted with locomotor ataxis, and play with bits of string in tea shops; or he may be a priest, a stupid-looking priest with dull gray eyes, of course, and a gampish umbrella. In peacetime, he may even be a Japanese who will clap the Nami-Juji on a felon five times his size before you could say "Jack Diamond, or a fat Chinese who quotes Confucius. Anything quiaint, anything out of character, anything but a policeman!
I'm almost 100% certain that no publisher would touch it in 2013. Why? First of all there's the writing style. I guarantee you that there are more semicolons per page in this book than you'll find in 100 thrillers written and published in the last decade. And dashes and, well, here's a sample sentence from page 46: The Greek laughed richly, opening a bottle of Mavrodaphne, and said that it was necessary only to sit down at such-and-such a table and take it easy; the bookkeeper would be coming down to lunch in a few minutes: a harmless old man, "but with the figures, a whiz" -- he kissed his hand in ecstasy.
It's the kind of book where characters speak for pages without interruption, scattering literary allusions from sources ancient and modern on every page, where paragraphs take up at least half a page and sometimes more, where there's considerably more telling than showing.
The plot? Well, it's timely enough. A bunch of super-rich men, known as the Sciocrats, plan to take over the world. Our Heroes might be able to stop them, but can they? Sure, but it's not easy. The last 1/4 of the book introduces the only real action in the story, and it's enough to make you think that Ian Fleming must have read the book and thought he could do something similar himself, but in a very different style.
This probably sounds like a negative review, and I guess it is. Still, I got a kick out of the book. Nostalgia was part of that, but I also enjoyed the humor, much of which must have gone over my head when I was a kid, as did many of the literary allusions. Let me leave you with one paragraph that you might enjoy, tossed in when the police arrive on the scene:
Writers of crime fiction may have led you to assume that any detective worthy of the name must look like something else: he must live in dressing gowns, be slender, have a good nose for fine tobacco and a palate for good wine, know the difference between a drypoint and a mezzotint, have eccentricities, talk superior, and be able to distinguish a Dionysian tetradrachm by touch in the dark. If it happens to be a gluttonous orchid-fancier, a jaw-bopping three-bottle-of-rye man, a violin-playing cocaine addict, a marasmic dandy who clips his Engilsh and rolls his own cigarettes with Bull Durham which he carries loose in his waistcoat pocket -- so much the better. It is just as well if he happens to be a Belgian with funny mustaches, or a pimplish Greek with a temperamental wife, or a satanic blond man who has a superhuman capacity for bourbon and bullets and is reluctantly compelled to knock somebody's teeth down his throat in every other chapter. He may also be afflicted with locomotor ataxis, and play with bits of string in tea shops; or he may be a priest, a stupid-looking priest with dull gray eyes, of course, and a gampish umbrella. In peacetime, he may even be a Japanese who will clap the Nami-Juji on a felon five times his size before you could say "Jack Diamond, or a fat Chinese who quotes Confucius. Anything quiaint, anything out of character, anything but a policeman!
Thursday, May 30, 2013
Robert J. Randisi Westerns on Sale at Amazon
Bob Randisi's publisher is having a big sale on Bob's westerns. If you're looking for some good reading, you might want to check out some of the titles. There are a lot!
The Pride of Livermore. . .
. . . and no, it's not Art Scott (though he certainly deserves that title).
This Lightbulb Started Burning When McKinley Was President
This Lightbulb Started Burning When McKinley Was President
Andrew Greeley, R. I. P.
NYTimes.com: Andrew M. Greeley, a Roman Catholic priest and a prolific writer whose outpouring of sociological research, contemporary theology, controversial novels and no-holds-barred newspaper columns regularly challenged reigning assumptions about American Catholicism, was found dead on his Thursday at his home in Chicago. He was 85.
Hat tip to Jeff Meyerson.
Hat tip to Jeff Meyerson.
Marvin Junior, R. I. P.
EURweb - Part 1: *Word has come to EUR that Mr. Marvin Junior, the long time surviving lead singer extraordinaire of the mighty, mighty Dells went home to glory today (05-29-13). He was 77.
Junior died from kidney failure and had a weak heart, his son Marvin Junior Jr. told Chicago’s ABC7 TV. He says his father died surrounded by family in his home in Harvey around 3:15 pm on Wednesday afternoon.
Junior died from kidney failure and had a weak heart, his son Marvin Junior Jr. told Chicago’s ABC7 TV. He says his father died surrounded by family in his home in Harvey around 3:15 pm on Wednesday afternoon.
Dead Dudes Dig Dope
NBC News: Nearly two pounds of still-green plant material found in a 2,700-year-old grave in the Gobi Desert has just been identified as the world's oldest marijuana stash, according to a paper in the latest issue of the Journal of Experimental Botany.
Mosaic in Morocco: Inlaid Leather Bindings
Mosaic in Morocco: Inlaid Leather Bindings on AbeBooks: Leather has been a common and traditional material used in bookbinding for centuries and centuries. It's pliable, can be stretched and cut easily, absorbs dye, and adds to the beauty and aesthetic appeal of a volume. While not without its problems - susceptibility to extreme temperatures, moisture and humidity, light exposure and more - leather is still often the binder's choice for fine jobs, though synthetic equivalents are popular as well as various cloths.
Forgotten Music: "The Late Great Johnny Ace"
There's a Texas connection. You can read his story here: Music History #23: "The Late Great Johnny Ace"
Wednesday, May 29, 2013
Jack Vance
The death of Jack Vance wasn't surprising, given his age, but like anybody else who admired his books, I sort of hoped he'd just keep on going forever.
I never met Vance in person, but I've been reading his novels and stories since around 1955. The first novel of his I remember reading is Big Planet, in the Ace Double edition of 1958. I read a lot more of them after that, and I never read one I didn't like. In the early '70s, I ran across another Ace book, The Fox Valley Murders, by John Holbrook Vance. I knew that was Jack Vance's full name, so I grabbed the book and read it. It's about Joe Bain, a sheriff in a small county in California. I really liked it, and I don't doubt that there's something of Joe Bain in Sheriff Dan Rhodes.
A year or so ago, maybe a bit more, out of the blue, I got a phone call from Vance. I told him how much I loved his books, and he mentioned that he liked mine, too. What a great feeling that was. He told me that he could no longer write because of his near blindness, but that he could still make music. To prove it, he played me a number on the uke and kazoo. Fun stuff. He called again a couple of times, and each time was as much of a thrill for me as the last. He made a old guy feel like a fanboy again.
If you've never read anything by Vance, I hardly know where you should start. Maybe with The Dying Earth, a wonderful collection that influenced generations of fantasy writers. Or with just about anything. You can hardly go wrong with Vance, either for the story or the writing. What a stylist the guy was, one of the best ever. Even though he was 96, he left way too soon.
I never met Vance in person, but I've been reading his novels and stories since around 1955. The first novel of his I remember reading is Big Planet, in the Ace Double edition of 1958. I read a lot more of them after that, and I never read one I didn't like. In the early '70s, I ran across another Ace book, The Fox Valley Murders, by John Holbrook Vance. I knew that was Jack Vance's full name, so I grabbed the book and read it. It's about Joe Bain, a sheriff in a small county in California. I really liked it, and I don't doubt that there's something of Joe Bain in Sheriff Dan Rhodes.
A year or so ago, maybe a bit more, out of the blue, I got a phone call from Vance. I told him how much I loved his books, and he mentioned that he liked mine, too. What a great feeling that was. He told me that he could no longer write because of his near blindness, but that he could still make music. To prove it, he played me a number on the uke and kazoo. Fun stuff. He called again a couple of times, and each time was as much of a thrill for me as the last. He made a old guy feel like a fanboy again.
If you've never read anything by Vance, I hardly know where you should start. Maybe with The Dying Earth, a wonderful collection that influenced generations of fantasy writers. Or with just about anything. You can hardly go wrong with Vance, either for the story or the writing. What a stylist the guy was, one of the best ever. Even though he was 96, he left way too soon.
Jack Vance, R. I. P.
Jack Vance Website - Home: Jack Vance passed away at home on the evening of Sunday May 26, 2013, ending a long, rich and productive life. Recognized most widely as an author, family and friends also knew a generous, large-hearted, rugged, congenial, hard-working, optimistic and unpretentious individual whose curiosity, sense of wonder and sheer love of life were an inspiration in themselves. Author, friend, father and grandfather – there will never be another like Jack Vance.
PimPage: An Occasional Feature in Which I Call Attention to Books of Interest
Listen to a podcast featuring Barry here.
Streets of Blood (Dead Man #18): Barry Napier, Lee Goldberg, William Rabkin: Amazon.com: Kindle Store: Matt Cahill was an ordinary man leading a simple life until a shocking accident changed everything. Now he can see a nightmarish netherworld that exists within our own. Now he's on a dangerous quest for the answers to who he is and what he has become...and engaged in an epic battle to save us, and his soul, from the clutches of pure evil.
An elderly, bed-ridden woman in a retirement home is having nightmares of a dark, devilish entity tormenting her and her childhood friends in a dreamscape that's as familiar to her as it is terrifying. She's not the only one having the dreams. Matt Cahill is, too, and when he arrives in town, he discovers a community torn apart by gruesome violence, its residents in the grip of an evil force unlike any Matt has encountered before...one that's even beyond the touch of Mr. Dark.
Uh-Oh
The Flintstones wrestle their way back to big screen: The Hanna-Barbera favourites are set for another film adventure, courtesy of World Wrestling Entertainment
Hat tip to Fred Zackel.
Hat tip to Fred Zackel.
It Was Handy When He Wanted to Jot Something Down
German clinic: Man had pencil in head for 15 years
Hat tip to Art Scott, who says, "Wasn't Pencil Head a Dick Tracy villain?"
Hat tip to Art Scott, who says, "Wasn't Pencil Head a Dick Tracy villain?"
Django Unchained
Okay, so I watched this one the other day, and I thought about some of the things I'd heard about its historical inaccuracies and such, and it occurred to me that they're not inaccuracies at all because the movie takes place in a parallel universe.
Right at the beginning we see writing on the screen that says the year is 1858 "two years before the beginning of the Civil War." Right away we know that we're in a parallel universe, since the Civil War in this universe started in 1861, three years after the time of the movie.
Also, Lubbock, Texas, is mentioned. Lubbock didn't exist in this universe in 1858 or for about 20 years after that date. So that's another clue.
And we learn that the opening scene is set somewhere in East Texas and that the closest town is 37 miles away. A wounded guy later asks to be taken to the doctor in El Paso, which is more like 837 miles away in our world. So, parallel universe.
Check out the weapons used in the movie by just about anybody. Did they exist in our world in 1858. Nope. Mandingo fighters? Same thing.
So this was one of the big SF movies of last year. I thought it was okay. I especially liked one scene, the one that was obviouslya direct steal from a homage to Joe Lansdale.
Right at the beginning we see writing on the screen that says the year is 1858 "two years before the beginning of the Civil War." Right away we know that we're in a parallel universe, since the Civil War in this universe started in 1861, three years after the time of the movie.
Also, Lubbock, Texas, is mentioned. Lubbock didn't exist in this universe in 1858 or for about 20 years after that date. So that's another clue.
And we learn that the opening scene is set somewhere in East Texas and that the closest town is 37 miles away. A wounded guy later asks to be taken to the doctor in El Paso, which is more like 837 miles away in our world. So, parallel universe.
Check out the weapons used in the movie by just about anybody. Did they exist in our world in 1858. Nope. Mandingo fighters? Same thing.
So this was one of the big SF movies of last year. I thought it was okay. I especially liked one scene, the one that was obviously
Tuesday, May 28, 2013
Give This Youngster a Listen
▶ Paige Shannon: Singer/Song writer, Paige Shannon is releasing her first EP titled, "13". Don't let her age fool you. The EP consists of incredible vocals, complimented by folk-style acoustic melodies.
First It Was the Thin Mints Melee . . .
NYTimes.com: The mayor of Rio de Janeiro, Eduardo Paes, punched a constituent in the face after being called the Portuguese equivalent of “excrement” in a dispute before stunned diners at a Japanese restaurant.
The Way We Live Now
Suspicious package found on Scottsdale tennis court posed no threat: Twenty firefighters responded to the scene.
Hazardous material technicians monitored the area and Scottsdale police had a K-9 sniff the suspicious item but nothing hazardous was found.
Authorities determined it was an empty U.S. Postal Service box that posed no hazard or threat.
Hazardous material technicians monitored the area and Scottsdale police had a K-9 sniff the suspicious item but nothing hazardous was found.
Authorities determined it was an empty U.S. Postal Service box that posed no hazard or threat.
Archaeology Update (Hairdo Edition)
Baltimore ‘hairdo archeologist’ cracks Roman hairdressing code: Janet Stephens likes to say she has a secret identity. By day she’s a mild-mannered hairdresser in Baltimore, Maryland. But a museum trip led her to become a “hairdo archeologist,” unraveling the secrets of the elaborate braided hairstyles favored by women in ancient Rome.
Edwardian First Editions
AbeBooks: Edwardian First Editions: The Edwardian era began with Queen Victoria’s death in 1901 and stretched until 1910 when Edward VII died. A mere nine years hardly constitutes anything worthwhile but it was a period of immense change and memorable literature.
First editions from this era are plentiful and easy to find. First editions, complete with dust jackets, from this era are scarce and more expensive.
First editions from this era are plentiful and easy to find. First editions, complete with dust jackets, from this era are scarce and more expensive.
Overlooked Movies -- Steamboat Round the Bend
I didn't think Steamboat Round the Bend was on DVD, but it turns out that it is, though it was made available only recently. Probably one reason it wasn't available is the last name on the poster at the left. Stepin Fetchit isn't exactly the most PC character in movies from this era, and this one's no exception. Still, he's featured in one significant scene that makes fun of the Old South in an unexpected way (especially in 1935, the year this movie was released).
Judy and I watched Steamboat Round the Bend on Public Television many years ago, and there are parts of it that we've never forgotten. We even quote it to each other now and then. One reason I enjoyed it was that I'd never seen Will Rogers in a movie before, and he was still remembered and talked about by a lot of people in my family as I was growing up. My father was a bit of an aviation buff as a boy, and a story he repeated often was about the time he met Wiley Post, the pilot of the plane in the crash that killed both him and Rogers in the same year this movie appeared.
The plot involves Rogers as a con man whose nephew is in real trouble. Rogers needs to raise some money to pay the nephew's legal fees, so he puts some wax dummies from a defunct museum in a steamboat and travels the Mississippi, pulling at small towns to exhibit his dummies and make a little money. Each stop leads to some (usually) humorous situation, but the laughs are not generally the slapstick kind. It's gentle humor, which is in keeping with Rogers' persona. Some of the other players get most of the laughs, in fact. The movie was directed by John Ford, so if you think it's going to be melodramatic and sentimental, you won't be disappointed.
Will Rogers wasn't a trained actor, or much of an actor at all, but he does just fine playing someone who's more or less himself. I was interested to see Irwin S. Cobb, who's better known (to me, anyway) as a writer than an actor. He's just fine, and so is the rest of the supporting cast. Most of them are better than good.
Steamboat Round the Bend is going on 80 years old now, so it's definitely old-fashioned. I can't imagine an audience of young people sitting still for it, but for an old guy like me, it's just fine. I love the look of the steamboats and the river, and it would be hard to get that look now, if not impossible. If you're up for a bit of nostalgia, check this one out.
Judy and I watched Steamboat Round the Bend on Public Television many years ago, and there are parts of it that we've never forgotten. We even quote it to each other now and then. One reason I enjoyed it was that I'd never seen Will Rogers in a movie before, and he was still remembered and talked about by a lot of people in my family as I was growing up. My father was a bit of an aviation buff as a boy, and a story he repeated often was about the time he met Wiley Post, the pilot of the plane in the crash that killed both him and Rogers in the same year this movie appeared.
The plot involves Rogers as a con man whose nephew is in real trouble. Rogers needs to raise some money to pay the nephew's legal fees, so he puts some wax dummies from a defunct museum in a steamboat and travels the Mississippi, pulling at small towns to exhibit his dummies and make a little money. Each stop leads to some (usually) humorous situation, but the laughs are not generally the slapstick kind. It's gentle humor, which is in keeping with Rogers' persona. Some of the other players get most of the laughs, in fact. The movie was directed by John Ford, so if you think it's going to be melodramatic and sentimental, you won't be disappointed.
Will Rogers wasn't a trained actor, or much of an actor at all, but he does just fine playing someone who's more or less himself. I was interested to see Irwin S. Cobb, who's better known (to me, anyway) as a writer than an actor. He's just fine, and so is the rest of the supporting cast. Most of them are better than good.
Steamboat Round the Bend is going on 80 years old now, so it's definitely old-fashioned. I can't imagine an audience of young people sitting still for it, but for an old guy like me, it's just fine. I love the look of the steamboats and the river, and it would be hard to get that look now, if not impossible. If you're up for a bit of nostalgia, check this one out.
Marshall Lytle, R. I. P.
Marshall Lytle, bass player for Comets and Jodimars, dies at 79: When rock ’n’ roll pioneer Bill Haley refused to give three members of his Comets band $50-a-week raises in 1955, he opened the door for those talented musicians to walk out and create what became a Las Vegas lounge act legend — the Jodimars.
Monday, May 27, 2013
PimPage: An Occasional Feature in Which I Call Attention to Books of Interest
Amazon.com: Get Hit, Hit Back (Fight Card) eBook: Jack Tunney, John Kenyon, Paul Bishop, Mel Odom: Kindle Store: Ottumwa, Iowa 1954
Griffin McCann's small-town world is rocked when the bank where he works as a guard is robbed. He chases the robbers out of the bank and into a gun battle, leaving one hood dead and one on the lam. Left alone with a dead robber and a bag full of cash, McCann makes a rash decision ...
Knowing he’s made a bad mistake, McCann wants to return the money, but life is never that simple. He needs a plan, so he turns to the one thing he knows best – boxing. Now, his moment of weakness has put him in the ring against a deadly opponent who wants to destroy him.
But McCann remembers the most important thing Father Tim, the battling priest, taught him back at St. Vincent’s Asylum For Boys in Chicago: When you get hit, hit back ...
Griffin McCann's small-town world is rocked when the bank where he works as a guard is robbed. He chases the robbers out of the bank and into a gun battle, leaving one hood dead and one on the lam. Left alone with a dead robber and a bag full of cash, McCann makes a rash decision ...
Knowing he’s made a bad mistake, McCann wants to return the money, but life is never that simple. He needs a plan, so he turns to the one thing he knows best – boxing. Now, his moment of weakness has put him in the ring against a deadly opponent who wants to destroy him.
But McCann remembers the most important thing Father Tim, the battling priest, taught him back at St. Vincent’s Asylum For Boys in Chicago: When you get hit, hit back ...
Morris Renek, R. I. P.
NYTimes.com: Morris Renek, a critically admired New York novelist who wrote comic tales about historical criminals and modern urban life but never achieved the commercial success many thought he deserved, died on May 10 in Manhattan. He was 88.
Australia Update
WSJ.com: A fading mining boom may be taking the gloss off Australia's resource-rich economy but the country has retained the title of happiest industrialized nation in the world.
First It Was the Thin Mints Melee . . .
Rice ruckus lands PSL woman in sticky situation: An apparent flap over rice between sisters erupted into a battle involving an iron, a pot and a broomstick, according to statements in a recently released arrest affidavit.
Hat tip to Jeff Meyerson.
Hat tip to Jeff Meyerson.
And Keep Off His Lawn!
Outnumbered by the girls, he's the last man standing: With the death in Barbados on Thursday of James Emmanuel ''Doc'' Sisnett, at the age of 113 years and 90 days, Jiroemon Kimura, of Japan, has become the last man alive to have been born in the 19th century.
Cave Art Update
Ancient cave art unearthed in Mexico: In the mountains of northeastern Mexico, archaeologists have unearthed thousands of ancient paintings on the walls of caves and ravines from a time before Spanish rule.
I Miss the Old Days
Paris Hilton plunders the '70s for fashion inspiration as she jets out of LAX in floppy hat and maxi dress
Hat tip to fashion maven Jeff Meyerson.
Hat tip to fashion maven Jeff Meyerson.
Memorial Day
Memorial Day History: Memorial Day, originally called Decoration Day, is a day of remembrance for those who have died in our nation's service. There are many stories as to its actual beginnings, with over two dozen cities and towns laying claim to being the birthplace of Memorial Day. There is also evidence that organized women's groups in the South were decorating graves before the end of the Civil War: a hymn published in 1867, "Kneel Where Our Loves are Sleeping" by Nella L. Sweet carried the dedication "To The Ladies of the South who are Decorating the Graves of the Confederate Dead" (Source: Duke University's Historic American Sheet Music, 1850-1920). While Waterloo N.Y. was officially declared the birthplace of Memorial Day by President Lyndon Johnson in May 1966, it's difficult to prove conclusively the origins of the day. It is more likely that it had many separate beginnings; each of those towns and every planned or spontaneous gathering of people to honor the war dead in the 1860's tapped into the general human need to honor our dead, each contributed honorably to the growing movement that culminated in Gen Logan giving his official proclamation in 1868. It is not important who was the very first, what is important is that Memorial Day was established. Memorial Day is not about division. It is about reconciliation; it is about coming together to honor those who gave their all.
Sunday, May 26, 2013
Here's the Plot for Your Next Con Man Thriller
Fake cop scams seniors out of nearly half a million dollars with faux ‘sting operations’ | The Raw Story: Police in Washington state are searching for a man who they say has scammed seniors out of nearly a half a million dollars by pretending to be a police officer, recruiting unsuspecting victims for faux “sting operations” involving large cash transfers.
It begins as a phone scam, police told The Seattle Post Intelligencer. Introducing himself as either Sgt. Drumbowski or Capt. Jack Truska, the conman preys mainly on elderly women with claims of a counterfeit money investigation that he needs help with.
It begins as a phone scam, police told The Seattle Post Intelligencer. Introducing himself as either Sgt. Drumbowski or Capt. Jack Truska, the conman preys mainly on elderly women with claims of a counterfeit money investigation that he needs help with.
Ed Shaughnessy, R. I. P.
'Tonight Show' Drummer Ed Shaughnessy Dies at 84 - The Hollywood Reporter: Ed Shaughnessy, a longtime drummer for The Tonight Show band, died at age 84 of a heart attack while at home Friday in Calabasas, Calif., the Los Angeles Times reports.
The jazz drummer played in Doc Severinsen's band from 1963 to 1992. Shaughnessy performed drums for artists as varied as Aretha Franklin, Johnny Cash, and Oscar Peterson, the Percussive Arts Society noted in a hall of fame profile.
Hat tip to Doc Quatermass.
The jazz drummer played in Doc Severinsen's band from 1963 to 1992. Shaughnessy performed drums for artists as varied as Aretha Franklin, Johnny Cash, and Oscar Peterson, the Percussive Arts Society noted in a hall of fame profile.
Hat tip to Doc Quatermass.
Illuminated Manuscripts on AbeBooks
Illuminated Manuscripts on AbeBooks: The word manuscript comes from the Latin manu scriptum, which translates literally to "written with hands". It typically refers to any document produced manually, through handwriting, chiseling or other method, without the use of machines.
An illuminated manuscript is any manuscript whose text is accompanied by decoration. It originally referred only to silver or gilt adornments, but came to be acceptable terminology for any manuscript with drawings, paintings or decorations such as ornate initials, borders, floral accoutrements and the like. Often the illuminations would depict a historical or rural/pastoral scene.
An illuminated manuscript is any manuscript whose text is accompanied by decoration. It originally referred only to silver or gilt adornments, but came to be acceptable terminology for any manuscript with drawings, paintings or decorations such as ornate initials, borders, floral accoutrements and the like. Often the illuminations would depict a historical or rural/pastoral scene.
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