Saturday, October 08, 2016
Bobby Breen, R. I. P.
Bobby Breen, child star: Bobby Breen , who has died aged 87, was a tousle-haired Canadian boy tenor sensation and one of a stable of child stars who began his career during the Great Depression.
Friday, October 07, 2016
Once Again Texas Leads the Way
abc13.com: When students at Alvin Junior High School heard their beloved choir teacher was in hospice, they wanted to do more than just send her their thoughts and prayers. They decided they wanted to let Mrs. Mariana Walker know in person how much she meant to them using a tool she always loved - their voices. More than a dozen students went Walker's home after school on Wednesday and sang Hillsong's "Oceans."
FFB: A digest magazine -- Fantastic Science Fiction, February, 1958
When I was a teen, I never missed an issue of Fantastic, so I'm sure I read this one. Reading it again, I came to the bleak realization that I had terrible taste. This is really bad stuff.
Henry Sleasar's story "Jewel of Ecstasy" gets the cover, and what a mess it is. The story, not the cover. The setting is pure '50s except for the interplanetery travel. There's this jewel, see, and anybody who looks at it becomes amoral and immortal. And it just gets goofier as it goes along. Yikes.
Sex sold in the '50s, and "Mr. Fenbley's Nudes" is about a female mannikin that comes alive when touched by a man with the right body chemistry. Hahahaha! What a great concept. The farce doesn't work in the least.
"I Married a Martian" has a guy getting a woman's bedtime and bathtime routines on his TV set. Saucer clubs! A real Martian wife! She sure can cook! Yuks galore!
"Code for Unbelievers" tells us that there's a Universal Unconscious Mind that we all share and that, well, we can become millionaires. Or something.
I can't go on, but the other stories are equally dire. Yet I ate this stuff up as a youngster. It's no wonder I'm a dunderhead. It's embarrassing. I should've been reading Jane Austen. Too late for me now, though.
ToC from the invaluable Galactic Central:
6 · Jewel of Ecstasy · Henry Slesar · nv
45 · Mr. Fenbley’s Nudes · Wilson Kane · ss
52 · I Married a Martian · E. K. Jarvis · ss
66 · A Code for Unbelievers · G. L. Vandenburg · ss
84 · Earth Specimen · Gerald Vance · ss
102 · Danger, Red! · O. H. Leslie · ss
116 · Appointment with Mr. Armstrong · Doris E. Kaye · ss
Thursday, October 06, 2016
Joan Marie Johnson Faust, R. I. P.
wwltv.com: Joan Marie Johnson Faust, one of the founding members of The Dixie Cups, the New Orleans singing group who reached the top of the national charts in the 1960s with “Chapel of Love” and “Iko Iko,” has died. She was 72.
Wednesday, October 05, 2016
Rod Temperton, R. I. P.
Rod Temperton, 'Thriller' songwriter, dead at 66: LONDON (AP) — Rod Temperton, a British-born musician and songwriter with a singular knack for pop-funk who wrote the Michael Jackson classics "Thriller," ''Rock With You" and many other hits, has died of cancer in London at 66.
The First Female Action Star
The First Female Action Star: Helen Holmes jumped from trains into open-air cars, almost burned alive, and was no damsel in distress needing a man to save her.
Lovely Hidden Paintings Adorned the Edges of Historic Books
Atlas Obscura: Fore-edge paintings. Just look at them!
Tuesday, October 04, 2016
Fields Where They Lay -- Timothy Hallinan
Fields Where They Lay is a Christmas mystery featuring Junior Bender, a professional thief of whom I'm a big fan. Junior has issues with Christmas, which is a problem, but so does his girlfriend, Ronnie, which is an even bigger problem. But that's not the main plot of the book. The main plot has to do with the fact that Junior is now not so much a thief as a guy who does favors for other thieves or lawbreakers. One to whom he owes a favor calls it in, and Junior finds himself working for a Russian thug who, with several other Russian thugs, owns a failing shopping mall. It seems that there's an unusual amount of shoplifting going on, and the thug, who calls himself Tip Poindexter (Junior calls him Vlad), wants to know who's doing it and why. Junior has to find out in two days. Or else.
There are two Christmas stories here, the one I just outlined in brief and one that a mall Santa (there are two of them) tells Junior. It's about the Santa's father in WWII, and it's about a real Christmas miracle. And it has a fine tie-in to the title of the book, as well. The title, of course, comes from a carol called "The First Noel," and there's a lot about Christmas music in the book. You may or may not find yourself agreeing with Junior about it.
The main plot works out just as well (or even better) than you hope it would, and the ending has Junior making a promise that's probably going to change the course of the series when he follows through, as he surely will.
Hallinan gives us plenty of great dialogue and great characters, terrific pacing, and a couple of highly satisfying Christmas stories. If you're looking for the perfect book to give someone for Christmas (and they already have all of my books), then this is the one to give. You can't go wrong.
There are two Christmas stories here, the one I just outlined in brief and one that a mall Santa (there are two of them) tells Junior. It's about the Santa's father in WWII, and it's about a real Christmas miracle. And it has a fine tie-in to the title of the book, as well. The title, of course, comes from a carol called "The First Noel," and there's a lot about Christmas music in the book. You may or may not find yourself agreeing with Junior about it.
The main plot works out just as well (or even better) than you hope it would, and the ending has Junior making a promise that's probably going to change the course of the series when he follows through, as he surely will.
Hallinan gives us plenty of great dialogue and great characters, terrific pacing, and a couple of highly satisfying Christmas stories. If you're looking for the perfect book to give someone for Christmas (and they already have all of my books), then this is the one to give. You can't go wrong.
Croc Update (Flip-Flop Edition)
Woman scared off dangerous giant crocodile with her slippers in terrifying encounter
Hat tip to Jeff Meyerson.
Warning: Auto-start video.
Hat tip to Jeff Meyerson.
Warning: Auto-start video.
Gloria Naylor, R. I. P.
The New York Times: Gloria Naylor, whose debut novel, “The Women of Brewster Place,” won a National Book Award and was adapted into an acclaimed mini-series that starred and was produced by Oprah Winfrey, died on Wednesday near her home in Christiansted, V.I. She was 66.
Hat tip to Jeff Meyerson.
Hat tip to Jeff Meyerson.
Overlooked Movies: Riders in the Sky
I saw this movie when I was eight or nine years old, and when I watched it again not long ago, I was surprised by how much of it I remembered. I was highly impressed as a kid because I already loved "Ghost Riders in the Sky" and thought it was about the greatest song ever. And I thought the scene in the movie when Gene sang the song to a dying man was about the coolest thing ever. That's why I included the song and the scene below instead of the trailer that I usually post.
The movie's not bad either. It's told in flashback, and it involves a romance between Gene and a real estate agent whose father's been framed for murder, along with that great old standard, the water rights to a ranch. There is, of course, a crooked salon owner, and a lot of shootin', hard ridin', and fightin'. In fact one of the fights is a comedy scene that works well, coming as it does right after Gene has cheated a cheater in a card game. It was fun to see this one again, and the very last scene got to me just as much as it did when I was but a lad. I'm really glad I took the time to watch this one for old times' sake.
The movie's not bad either. It's told in flashback, and it involves a romance between Gene and a real estate agent whose father's been framed for murder, along with that great old standard, the water rights to a ranch. There is, of course, a crooked salon owner, and a lot of shootin', hard ridin', and fightin'. In fact one of the fights is a comedy scene that works well, coming as it does right after Gene has cheated a cheater in a card game. It was fun to see this one again, and the very last scene got to me just as much as it did when I was but a lad. I'm really glad I took the time to watch this one for old times' sake.
Monday, October 03, 2016
Quarry in the Black -- Max Allan Collins
The latest Quarry novel from Max Allan Collins is set in 1972 at election time. It's McGovern vs. Nixon, and there's some wonderful stuff about the time period in general and that election in particular here, with Collins drawing on his personal memories at some points. Not that it matters to the story he's telling.
This time the Broker sends Quarry to Missouri to kill a local politician, a black man who's risen to a position of some power, the reverend Raymond Wesley Lloyd, who's campaigning for McGovern. Quarry doesn't do political assassinations, but the Broker convinces him that Lloyd isn't being killed for political reasons. He's dirty in other ways. The pay and the Broker's assurances persuade Quarry to take on the job.
Things go wrong almost from the start, and Quarry becomes more and more certain that there is indeed a political aspect to what he's been sent to do. Not only that, but someone's hired another hit man to do the same job. (Trust Collins to make a relevant tie-in to the present day with this.) Soon Quarry finds himself tangling with the Klan, not to mention redneck tough guys. And beautiful women. Things are not, of course, as they seem, but Quarry's tough, resourceful, and smart. Anybody who tangles with him is in big trouble.
Like his protagonist, Collins is tough, resourceful, and smart, and he knows how to tell a cracking story with heart and humor even in the midst of the violence and treachery. And even a killer like Quarry can do something good if he gets the chance. This one's another winner in this great series. Check it out.
This time the Broker sends Quarry to Missouri to kill a local politician, a black man who's risen to a position of some power, the reverend Raymond Wesley Lloyd, who's campaigning for McGovern. Quarry doesn't do political assassinations, but the Broker convinces him that Lloyd isn't being killed for political reasons. He's dirty in other ways. The pay and the Broker's assurances persuade Quarry to take on the job.
Things go wrong almost from the start, and Quarry becomes more and more certain that there is indeed a political aspect to what he's been sent to do. Not only that, but someone's hired another hit man to do the same job. (Trust Collins to make a relevant tie-in to the present day with this.) Soon Quarry finds himself tangling with the Klan, not to mention redneck tough guys. And beautiful women. Things are not, of course, as they seem, but Quarry's tough, resourceful, and smart. Anybody who tangles with him is in big trouble.
Like his protagonist, Collins is tough, resourceful, and smart, and he knows how to tell a cracking story with heart and humor even in the midst of the violence and treachery. And even a killer like Quarry can do something good if he gets the chance. This one's another winner in this great series. Check it out.
The Sweet History of PEZ
Do You Remember?: PEZ, even though they’re still around today there’s something about these chalky Austrian candies and their adorable/mechanical pocket dispensers that bring you back to your earliest days of childhood. Whether it was the an addiction to a certain flavor (my favorite was grape!) or simple NEED to complete your favorite set of PEZ characters most people can remember the sweet memories these little candy bricks bring.
The world’s largest truck stop
Iowa 80 Truck Stop – Walcott, Iowa: The world’s largest truck stop includes a barber shop, chiropractor, and a huge museum with antique trucks.
Sunday, October 02, 2016
Colma, The Town of The Dead
Colma, The Town of The Dead: South of San Francisco, near Daly City, lies the small town of Colma where the dead outnumbers the living by a thousand to one. It’s less than 2 square miles in size, but crammed within it are as many as 17 centuries where rest the bodies of more than 1.5 million souls.
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