Weird_O Bill's Magically Real ADD Library (2)

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Weird_O Bill's Magically Real ADD Library (2)

1weird_O
Abr 1, 8:57 am


Books Read, as of March 31, 2024                 Books Read, as of February 20, 2024

2weird_O
Editado: mayo 10, 11:57 pm

Books I've read in Quarter Two, 2024

April 2024 (9 read)
32. Radiant: The Life and Line of Keith Haring, Brad Gooch. Finished 4/5/24.
33. The Singing Sands, Josephine Tey. Finished 4/9/24.
34. Shtum, Jem Lester. Finished 4/15/24.
35. How to Win an Information War, Peter Pomerantsev. Finished 4/16/24.
36. Eileen Gray: A House Under the Sun, Charlotte Malterre-Barthes & Zosia Dzierzawska. Finished 4/16/24.
37. Life: Classic Photographs: A Personal Interpretation, John Loengard. Finished 4/20/24.
38. Something Fresh, P. G. Wodehouse. Finished 4/22/24.
The Arrest, Jonathan Lethem.
39. Death From a Top Hat, Clayton Rawson. Finished 4/28/24.
40. This Is Water, David Wallace Foster. Finished 4/29.24.

May 2024 (2 read)
41. A Pound of Paper: Confessions of a Book Addict, John Baxter. Finished 5/4/24.
42. The Case of the Baker Street Irregulars, Anthony Boucher. Finished 5/10/24.

June 2024 (00 read)

3weird_O
Editado: Abr 1, 12:34 pm

Books I've Read in Quarter One, 2024

January 2024 (10 read)
1. About Alice, Calvin Trillin. Finished 1/1/24. 
2. Egon Schiele: 1890-1918: Desire and Decay, Wolfgang Georg Fischer. Finished 1/1/24. 
3. Time and Again, Jack Finney. Finished 1/7/24. 
4. Finna, Nino Cipri. Finished 1/15/24. 
5. Oranges, John McPhee. Finished 1/17/24. 
The Innocents Abroad, Mark Twain.
6. The Possessed: Adventures with Russian Books and the People Who Read Them, Elif Batuman. Finished 1/19/23. 
7. The Color of Magic, Terry Pratchett. Finished 1/26/24. 
8. Make Russia Great Again, Christopher Buckley. Finished 1/27/24. 
Snark, David Denby.
9. The Light Fantastic, Terry Pratchett. Finished 1/30/24, 
10. The Discworld Graphic Novels: The Colour of Magic & The Light Fantastic, Terry Pratchett. Finished 1/31/24. 

February 2024 (9 read)
11. The Book of Genesis Illustrated by R. Crumb, R. Crumb. Finished 2/4/24. 
12. Gun, with Occasional Music, Jonathan Lethem. Finished 2/8/24. 
13. Doisneau, Peter Hamilton. Finished 2/14/24. 
14. H. P. Lovecraft Tales of Horror*, H. P. Lovecraft. Finished 2/16/24. 
15. The Biggest Bear, Lynd Ward. Finished 2/18/24. 
16. Breakdowns: Portrait of the Artist as a Young %@&*!, Art Spiegelman. Finished 2/19/24. 
17. Redshirts: A Novel with Three Codas, John Scalzi. Finished 2/23/24. 
18. The Iron Man, Ted Hughes; illustrations by Chris Mould. Finished 2/24/24. 
19. Lethal White, Jo-Bob Rowling-Galbraith. Finished 2/29/24. 

* The Touchstone for this book is kinda sorta beyond normal (yes, and even abnormal) access. It won't supply you with any useful info, so why bother? Just one of LT's quirks.

March 2024 (11 read)
20. Martin Dressler: The Tale of an American Dreamer, Steven Millhauser. Finished 3/5/24. 
21. Answered Prayers, Truman Capote. Finished 3/11/24. not rated
22. A Commonplace Book of Pie, Kate Lebo; illustrations, Jessica Lynn Bonin. Finished 3/14/24. Tasty
23. Kafka, R. Crumb and David Zane Mairowitz. Finished 3/16/24. 
24. The Canary Trainer, Nicholas Meyer. Finished 3/17/24. 
25. More: A Memoir of Open Marriage, Molly Roden Winter. Finished 3/20/24. 
26. Judge This., Chip Kidd. Finished 3/21/24. 
27. Hench, Natalie Zina Walschots. Finished 3/25/2024. 
28. The Intuitionist, Colson Whitehead. Finished 3/27/24. 
29. Three Rocks: The Story of Ernie Bushmiller, the Man Who Created Nancy, Bill Griffith. Finished 3/28/24. 
30. Greenwich Village: A Guide to America's Legendary Left Bank, Judith Stonehill. Finished 3/29/24. SnackBook.
31. The Muses Are Heard, Truman Capote. Finished 3/31/24. 

4weird_O
Editado: Abr 1, 9:11 am

      

Porgy and Bess cast members often gathered a crowd. Before opening night, the entourage was taken to a movie. At intermission, there being no snack bar in the theater, Capote reported:

[M]ost of the “Porgy and Bess” company went to the Maryinsky’s café-salon, where refreshments were on sale—beer, liqueurs, raspberry soda, sandwiches, candy, and ice cream…Earl Bruce Jackson announced that he was starving. “But, man, that ice cream costs a dollar a lick,” he said. “And guess what they want for a little bitty piece of chocolate not as big as your toe? Five-fifty.” Ice cream, advertised by the Soviets as a delicacy of their own contriving, started to become a national passion in the U.S.S.R. in 1939, when American machinery was imported for making it.


5weird_O
Editado: Abr 1, 12:35 pm

I am going to post something magical...

But only if I am still content after my routine dental checkup. 

6karenmarie
Abr 1, 9:16 am

Hallo, Bill, and happy new thread.

>1 weird_O: and >3 weird_O: Lots of good books read here in Bill-land.

>5 weird_O: You’ve already posted 4 magical things. How’s that for sucking up?

7Owltherian
Abr 1, 9:17 am

Happy New Thread Bill!

8msf59
Abr 1, 9:42 am

Happy New Thread, Bill. Good luck at the dentist. How was your Easter? Quiet?

9quondame
Abr 1, 10:50 am

Happy new thread Bill!

10PaulCranswick
Abr 1, 11:11 am

Happy new thread, Bill

11mahsdad
Abr 1, 11:20 am

Happy New Thread!

12weird_O
Abr 1, 1:02 pm

>6 karenmarie: Thank you, Karen. I look at the stack from time to time and think, "There's an awful lot of SnackBook in there." Other times, I look at the list and ask myself, "Are you marking too hard?" I rue my self-doubt.

It's nice to get a pat on the back now and then.

13FAMeulstee
Abr 1, 6:32 pm

Happy new thread, Bill!

14drneutron
Abr 1, 7:47 pm

Happy new one, Bill!

15weird_O
Abr 6, 1:21 pm

Neglect. It's one of my special characteristics. I'm inordinately skilled at it. So my apologies to those of you who stopped by and found no one here. Specifically, to Karenmarie, Lily, Mark, Susan, Paul, Jeff, Anita, and Jim.

I'm being scattered, working a bunch of books, putzing with bookshelves, pretending I'm cleaning out the garage. I did have the lawn mower/tractor hauled away to be mechanically tuned up for the mowing season, which is edging closer and closer... All that stuff.

Books: I finished Radiant: The Life and Line of Keith Haring yesterday. It wasn't as satisfying as I had hoped. I was very conscious of names being dropped. Haring was relentlessly active, partying when he wasn't painting. But the bio is very short on visuals, so I've been switching between Radiant and Keith Haring, a colossal (9" x 10", 522 pages) picture book. Haven't read all the text in the latter book yet. I'll be counting them as reads for the April 2024 AAC. Of course.

x          

Turning away from Haring, I'm engaged in Shtum, a novel about coping with a profoundly autistic 10-year-old, an alcoholic father, an absent mother, and a cranky grandfather. Leavening that with Josephine Tey's last mystery, The Singing Sands.

16Berly
Abr 8, 4:57 pm

You did warn us that the April Fool's joke might be that there wasn't one...so well played!! Happy new one and I'm glad you're back. : )

17weird_O
Abr 8, 11:05 pm

I'm glad I was home, and even awake, this afternoon to witness the Great 2024 Eclipse. I was out on the deck at just the right time, and I caught some great photos. Here's one:

       

I'm looking forward to the next one, in 2044, just 20 years hence. Sneak it in before my 100th birthday. Yeehaaaa!

18Berly
Abr 8, 11:10 pm

Hey! My picture is just as good as yours!! LOL

19benitastrnad
Abr 9, 12:51 am

>17 weird_O:
You don't have to wait that long. The next solar eclipse is October 2, 2024. It will be visible in parts of South America, the Pacific Ocean, the Atlantic Ocean, and Antarctica. If you go to South America you might not even have to change time zones to see it.

After that the next full eclipse will be in 2026 and visible in Greenland, Iceland, Spain, and Russia.

If you want to see it from your back porch you will have to wait, but seeing a solar eclipse is not that hard to do because they occur about every 18 months.

20richardderus
Abr 9, 1:34 pm

>17 weird_O: I hope to goodness I'll be dead and gone by then myownself. You do you, though.

21msf59
Abr 9, 6:50 pm

Bummer, you got cloudy skies yesterday, Bill. Us folks in Illinois got lucky with mostly clear skies.

22weird_O
Abr 10, 11:06 pm

Got to do that happy dance today. A slot opened up, and I'll be seeing a hearing-aid magician in a couple of weeks, instead of mid-May. Hooray for me.

Wow! I can hear better already.

23lauralkeet
Abr 11, 6:35 am

>22 weird_O: Excellent news, Bill!

24Berly
Abr 11, 5:12 pm

>22 weird_O: Hurray!! That's good news. : )

25richardderus
Abr 11, 6:55 pm

>22 weird_O: Crossing my crossable parts that it will be a success.

26elorin
Abr 11, 7:00 pm

Best of wishes with the hearing aid.

27weird_O
Editado: Abr 12, 10:53 am

>19 benitastrnad: A world traveller I am not, Benita. I believe that the whirlwind tour of Copenhagen, Amsterdam, and Dublin I got to tag along on two years ago is likely to be the last. Not sufficiently adventurous to go to Central or South America. Iceland or Greenland or Spain, yes; Russia never.

>20 richardderus: I don't really envision me viewing that 2045 eclipse. TBH.

>21 msf59: Luck of climate change, Mark. Some acquaintances in my community did get glimpses of the eclipse through fleeting breaks in the cloud cover. I missed it, but I've experienced greater disappointments in my life.

>23 lauralkeet:, >24 Berly:, >25 richardderus:, >26 elorin:: Thankies for the good wishes. A friend demo'ed his hearing aids and phone apt. I couldn't hear any change as he tweaked the settings, but I'd bet that if the little gizmos were in MY ears, I would have. I am not at all adept with my cell, so I will have to see (or hear).

Working those income taxes.

Still reading Keith Haring, that pink colossus (see >15 weird_O:) which isn't a bedtime read, given its girth. About halfway through Shtum, an awfully melancholy story, and I have a firm beachhead in How to Win an Information War. To infinity...and BEYOND.

28benitastrnad
Abr 12, 1:42 pm

My sister has those wonderful hearing aids and loves them. She can even talk on her phone using the hearing aids. They have become sort of an all-purpose gizmo for her. Sort of like her phone. However, she has learned that she has to have a very expensive phone or the quality of her hearing goes down.

She is a school teacher and found that she was having trouble dealing with kids in class because she couldn't hear what direction the sound was coming from. Getting the hearing aids revived her career. She loves the hearing aids because she loves teaching 10th grade English.

29benitastrnad
Abr 12, 1:45 pm

>27 weird_O:
You might find that if you didn't do a whirlwind tour of three cities in Europe you would still like to travel. I would also bet that with the hearing aids you will love travel again. I find that I like to travel solo. I get to make all the decisions about when and where I go. I can go at my own speed, which is slower than it was. I take more time to really see things. Travel by your own self might be a better way to go.

Also, if you have the money for it, a friend recommended to me those wonderful boat tours available in parts of Europe. You can get on and off when you want to, and don't have to lug luggage around with you. Plus, she said that the food was great.

30PaulCranswick
Abr 13, 5:37 am

>27 weird_O: You will always be welcome to visit either Malaysia or the UK depending upon where I am at any given time, Bill. My place in Malaysia has four bedrooms and very rarely more than two of them occupied.

31weird_O
Abr 14, 11:49 am

Made it to Sunday, pretty much unscathed. The Fed Tax I have mailed, and the state tax is posted beside the door, for to be mailed today or tomorrow. The mower is back, all tuned and sharpened, but I'm holding out until May Day for the mowing to commence to begin. My next project is cued up.

The happy-proud news is that Classics Claire has chosen Stanford U. for graduate studies. She'll start in September.

I am reading still about life with an autistic adolescent (Shtum) and about propaganda (How to Win an Information War). With the library table cleared off (well, mostly cleared off), I'll be able to deal with that gargantuan Keith Haring art book. A self-reward, due to land on the porch Monday, is a package containing a graphic biography of Eileen Gray, a pioneering 20th century Irish-born architect; Double Fold: Libraries and the Assault on Paper by Nicholson Baker; and Something Fresh, a Wodehouse SnackBook.
---------------------
>23 lauralkeet:, >24 Berly:, >25 richardderus:, >26 elorin: >28 benitastrnad: Thanks to all. Your tips from your sister, Benita, give me pause regarding the phone ap. My phone is an elderly Google Pixel; I'll just hope it will be adequate, and cope if it is not.

>29 benitastrnad: >30 PaulCranswick: I do appreciate the offer, Paul. And the suggestions, Benita. But my travelling companion of 50 years is gone, and I'm not at all tempted by tours or cruises. I'm content to be a hermit.

32elorin
Abr 14, 12:35 pm

>31 weird_O: My wife was tested and qualifies for hearing aids but the quoted price is impossible. I have hope of better coverage with new insurance. I hope your experience is better and they improve your quality of life!

33bell7
Abr 14, 8:26 pm

Happy new thread, Bill!

34PaulCranswick
Abr 14, 8:32 pm

>31 weird_O: That is lovely, Bill, that you don't want to go without your much loved traveling companion of 30 years.

35weird_O
Editado: Abr 16, 12:22 pm

>34 PaulCranswick: ...traveling companion of 30 years Typo! 50 years. 50. Don't want to be cheated out of 20 of those years of traveling with my honey.

>32 elorin: I'm Medicare age, and I have Medicare advantage insurance. I know these miniscule items cost a bloody fortune, but another week will reveal to me what my OOP share will cost.

>33 bell7: Thanks, Mary.

-----------------------

Finished Shtum and hour or so ago. It was very good. Tough going, but I think it's a worthy read, especially if, like me, you have an autistic child in your family. In this story, three generations (actually, I guess, four) have multiple "carry-around" bags to unpack to achieve peace. Shtum means in Yiddish silent or mute.

I am more than halfway through How to Win an Information War by Peter Pomerantsev. Oh, and I have established a solid beachhead in that image-rich Keith Haring doorstop.

The Amazon emissary DID visit my house with my three-book award for being an amazing guy. (I don't know of a more deserving fellow.)

Double Fold: Libraries and the Assault on Paper, Nicholson Baker
Something Fresh, P. G. Wodehouse.
Eileen Gray: A House Under the Sun, Charlotte Malterre-Barthes & Zosia Dzierzawska.

Slainte!

36weird_O
Abr 24, 10:14 am

     

The view from the deck, April 23, 2024. Could it be Spring?

37msf59
Abr 24, 10:17 am

Howdy, Bill. Happy Wednesday! Love the deck view. That is perfect. Congrats on the hearing aids. I have been wearing them for more than a decade. How are those books treating you?

38ffortsa
Abr 24, 1:06 pm

That's a beautiful view of spring from your deck. Thanks for sharing it.

39lauralkeet
Abr 25, 6:44 am

>36 weird_O: very pretty, Bill. Looks like a nice spot to sit and read, too.

40weird_O
Abr 26, 12:26 am

>37 msf59:, >38 ffortsa:, >39 lauralkeet: It is a happy place, that deck.

Reading's kind of stalled. I got about 50 pages into Jonathan Lethem's odd novel called The Arrest and have called it quits. I'm disappointed. Vexed because I had two Lethems on the shelf. Choosing unwisely, I left The Feral Detective in favor of The Arrest. It's a

The other book I've been reading, Double Fold: Libraries and the Assault on Paper is depressing to me. The great libraries of the U. S. (and elsewhere) have methodically trashed their archives of newspapers in favor of microfilm of them.

So I'll reach out my hand and seize something off a shelf. Choose wisely, Hand, and pluck something worthy of my attention!

41vancouverdeb
Abr 26, 12:41 am

Great view, Bill! It looks like spring to me. I hope you find something worthy of your attention soon.

42klobrien2
Abr 26, 10:08 am

>36 weird_O: Beautiful shot of a lovely view! I bet you spend a fair amount of time out on the deck!

Hope you find some good reading soon to make up for your DNF.

Karen O

43richardderus
Abr 26, 10:26 am

>36 weird_O: What a peaceful, pleasant vista to walk out on whenever you like! That redbud's especially well-sited.

44m.belljackson
Abr 26, 11:47 am

Bill and Mark > what is the latest ballpark cost for decent hearing aids?

45weird_O
Editado: Abr 27, 12:23 pm

The damn things ain't cheap, Marianne. The pitchlady gave me a four-tier price list. The lowest price gadget is $2,000, per ear. Top of the line is $3,400, per ear. For me, getting the high end hearing aid would also entail buying a new cell phone, because adjustments are made via cell. It is a big expense for the likes of me—and I believe you are a few months older than me—because I just might pop off at any time. I'd prefer not to put down the BIG money, only to "expire" before getting much use out of the investment.

46weird_O
Abr 27, 12:29 pm

        

        Library expansion is underway. 4-23-24.

47quondame
Editado: Abr 27, 3:02 pm

>45 weird_O: Oh dear. Once you expire you won't care what the expense was. While you are able to hear, hearing well is worth what really works for you. Which may not be $3400 per ear, but if it won't shorten you life or make you live on peanut butter, go for what works the best for you!

That may be nothing, after all, who wants to hear what most people are yammering on about.

>46 weird_O: Wow! And so much room to expand. Paradise!

48weird_O
Abr 28, 11:59 am

>41 vancouverdeb: I have no worries about DNFing that Lethem book, Deborah, but I'm not giving up on Mr. Baker. I did pluck a 1938 murder mystery from the TBR. Death from a Top Hat by Clayton Rawson, rescued from retirement and republished in 2018 by Otto Penzler, proprietor of The Mysterious Bookstore in, where else, New York City. I passed the halfway point last night. I should finish it tomorrow, then we'll see what will follow.

>42 klobrien2: I should get an umbrella. The deck faces south, which means it basks in full sun most of the day. As I wrote to Deborah, it did pick murder mystery, and I'm halfway through it. Of course, that foreshadows another choice to be made tomorrow. :-) I have a "few" items in the TBR warehouse.

>43 richardderus: Thanks, Richard. I feel blessed to have this as my home. No redbuds here. The tree that's centered in the photo, at the bottom of the hill, is a maple.

49weird_O
Abr 28, 12:26 pm

>47 quondame: Once you expire you won't care what the expense was. That's sensible, Susan. With better hearing, I'll be able to hear Death skulking about and make my escape. Yeah! That's the ticket.

Actually, the high end hearing aids can do (I think) everything earbuds do.

Yes, room to expand. I've got boxes and boxes of books that need a shelf under them. At this time, I have five "boxes" standing in place, taking up the wall space to within inches of the light switch.

50jessibud2
Abr 28, 12:41 pm

Bill, your view is wonderful, peaceful. An umbrella would be a great addition.

I have also been thinking about hearing aids. I don't think I need them yet but am beginning to wonder if they would only amplify the tinnitus I have lived with all my life. And if there is a way to find out, before shelling out the $$. Somehow, I don't quite believe the hearing aid people would tell me the truth if I suspect this could happen. That would impinge on a (big) sale, now, wouldn't it. So far, I'm holding out.

51ffortsa
Abr 28, 2:15 pm

>50 jessibud2: As it was explained to me, tinnitus is centered in the brain, not the ear mechanisms, so it's unlikely that hearing aids would make it worse. In fact, if you hear more and better, it might even lessen the brain's need to 'make up' sounds. But I'm just a lay person. Speak to an ENT about it, not the vendor.

52laytonwoman3rd
Editado: Abr 28, 3:14 pm

"Speak to an ENT about it, not the vendor." Excellent advice. My mother had tinnitus, and was deaf in one ear. She did a 30 day trial of a hearing aid in her one good ear, and nearly everything the vendor told her it would do for her, it did NOT. She was able to return them without cost, at the end of the trial. Naturally everyone's condition is individual, and this was probably 10 years ago now, so the technology is likely different now. My MIL is having very good results with tiny devices from HearUSA, for what that's worth.

53benitastrnad
Abr 28, 5:37 pm

I am a big advocate for hearing aids. They do cost alot, but the cost is coming down, thanks to the Biden Administrations pressure on the industry. The VA is also in the getting the cost down game. My mother had hearing aids, and my sister has had hearing aids for about 10 years. She got them in her late 50's. Both people said that hearing aids will change your life. My recommendation is getting them sooner rather than later is a good thing. People make much more sense if you can hear what they are saying and those around you will appreciate the lowering of the volume on all sorts of things - like the radio, the TV, and will appreciate the fact that they no longer have to yell to be heard. Good hearing relaxes so many things.

Oh - and managing them on your cell phone is easier than you think. You can even talk on the phone via your hearing aids! It is amazing what those little things can do.

54weird_O
Abr 30, 12:25 pm

Whoa! It's April 30 already. The reading month est fini. I didn't finish a lot of books, but what I did read was pretty choice. See the list:

Radiant: The Life and Line of Keith Haring, Brad Gooch.
The Singing Sands, Josephine Tey.
Shtum, Jem Lester.
How to Win an Information War, Peter Pomerantsev.
Eileen Gray: A House Under the Sun, Charlotte Malterre-Barthes & Zosia Dzierzawska.
Life: Classic Photographs: A Personal Interpretation, John Loengard.
Something Fresh, P. G. Wodehouse.
Death From a Top Hat, Clayton Rawson.
This Is Water, David Foster Wallace.

55weird_O
mayo 1, 11:30 am

I see that today is Joseph Heller's birthday. Born in 1923. Also Terry Southern (1924), Bobbie Ann Mason (1940), cartoonist Robert Mankoff (1944), and photographer Sally Mann (1951).

But I'm drifting. Heller's magnum opus is Catch-22, of course. Written in the late '50s and published in 1961. Yesterday I saw this very topical connection.

It was miraculous. It was almost no trick at all, he saw, to turn vice into virtue and slander into truth, impotence into abstinence, arrogance into humility, plunder into philanthropy, thievery into honor, blasphemy into wisdom, brutality into patriotism, and sadism into justice. Anybody could do it; it required no brains at all. It merely required no character.

            

56weird_O
Editado: mayo 3, 7:11 pm

I got two substantial books started yesterday. The larger is Up in the Old Hotel, a collection (in a mere 715 pages) of Joseph Mitchell's writings. His work was published in The New Yorker. A lot of it is archetypal of the magazine's stories, some nonfiction, some fiction, and some a mix. This book is for my enjoyment. but also for the May AAC honoree.

The second volume is A Pound of Paper: Confessions of a Book Addict by John Baxter. First published in 2002, it tops out at 417 pages. I think it travels the same terrain as A Gentle Madness: Bibliophiles, Bibliomanes, and the Eternal Passion for Books by Nicholas Basbanes, a book given to me by Songstream, my Christmas swappee. (Ha. When I unwrapped it, I was startled by its size; the text alone is 533 pages, with back matter boosting the page count of 638. I took various people's word it was excellent and added it to The WANT! List™, without regard for length.) I've read part of the first chapter, and I do intend to finish that chapter. And perhaps the other chapters as well.

I promised (who? I guess myself) that I'd mow today, May 1, for the first time in 2024. Gotta go.

57laytonwoman3rd
mayo 1, 11:55 am

>55 weird_O: I rarely pulled an all-nighter in college, but I did stay up 'til nearly 4 a.m. reading Catch-22, and it was not for a class.

58m.belljackson
mayo 1, 12:36 pm

>55 weird_O: How to inspire The Democratic Party to use those sentences...?

59weird_O
Editado: mayo 3, 7:13 pm

>55 weird_O: Since I have a regrettable penchant for inaccuracy, I spent time googling the quote ascribed to Catch-22. Took quite a while, but I finally tracked it down. In the 50th anniversary edition (paperback), it appears on page 363. It's attributed to an unnamed chaplain who has "mastered, in a moment of divine intuition, the handy technique of protective rationalization..." To avoid being assigned to duty in harm's way, he concocts a non-existent strain of shingles and negotiates an "understanding" with the medical corps. It's a lie and thus a sin. But he is exhilarated.

Protective rationalization. I think it is embraced by an awful lot of us, not just you-know-who.

I checked my records and found that the last time I read Catch-22 was in January 2012. Am I due?

60alcottacre
mayo 3, 4:33 pm

>36 weird_O: What a beautiful view!

>46 weird_O: My library expansion is pretty much my entire house - and I cannot afford another one. Good luck with yours!

>56 weird_O: I love A Gentle Madness so, of course, I hope you do too.

>59 weird_O: I just finished a book the other day that I last read in 2007. You could wait 5 more years if you want, right?

Have a wonderful weekend, Bill!

61benitastrnad
mayo 3, 5:32 pm

>59 weird_O:
I think that Catch-22 is one of those books that you can read over and over and find new things in it each time.

I rarely reread books but I did this last week. I reread a book that I picked up at the library. When I went to enter into LT that I had started it, I discovered that I had read it in September 2021. I don't remember ever reading that book. So, I read it again. I enjoyed it. I hope that I remember it this time. There is going to be a sequel to it that will be published in March 2025. It makes me wonder where my brain was in September 2021.

62msf59
mayo 3, 7:02 pm

Happy Friday, Bill. Hooray for the library expansion. I am sure you will fill it immediately. 😁

>55 weird_O: Love it! Perfect.

63weird_O
Editado: mayo 4, 6:58 pm

Benita: Here's a history of the efforts to ban The Chocolate War from schools and libraries. I recall your vigorous defence of the book. From the NYTimes. The biggest ruckus was in Panama City in Florida's panhandle. This is a gift link, so anyone can click on the link and read the entire piece.

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/05/01/books/booksupdate/book-ban-chocolate-war-corm...

        

64richardderus
mayo 4, 7:05 pm

>63 weird_O: Many thousands of years ago I was the production manager of Delacorte BFYR, Cormier's publisher. Every so often, even then, rumbles would be heard about this book. Ordering reprints was sometimes...fraught. The haters have been hatin' for, like, ever. Good article, thank you!

65benitastrnad
mayo 4, 8:03 pm

I love the Chocolate War and its sequels and have, and will, defend its presence in school and public libraries. It is a very good book with an important message.

A few months ago my neighbor in little Munden, Kansas showed up at my door. He was selling chocolates for his school. I asked him why he was selling chocolates. He explained in great detail for a Kindergartener, what the money raised was going to be used for. (field trips and classroom materials) I told him that I didn't think I was going to buy the chocolates because I had paid my taxes already. I went on to tell him that he should "disturb the universe" and tell his teachers that rather than sell chocolates they should ask that taxes be raised. The poor kid was puzzled by this and asked me why. I told him that when Kindergarteners are told to sell chocolates to support the school that is an indication that our taxes are too low and we should be ashamed of ourselves as a country that we ask children to shill for the schools and us. I told him that he should disturb the universe and refuse to sell the chocolates. He gave me a quizzical look and asked me why I kept saying that. I then explained to him about the book The Chocolate War and told him that when he was a little older he and I would read the book together because it was about some important truths about selling chocolates and disturbing the universe.

It is not a cheery book, but it is an important book for kids and should be on our school and public libraries book shelves for many many years.

Thank you for making the NY Times story available to me. UA has recently announced that the NY Times will be available in the digital format to all UA faculty, staff, and students with an active account. I am going to try to find out if I, as a retiree, qualify for that perk.

66laytonwoman3rd
mayo 5, 11:20 am

>63 weird_O: Thanks for sharing that link, Bill. This should be EVERYBODY's fight. People who are in favor of banning books don't realize they are digging their own graves, perhaps literally. I just checked and our library system has multiple copies of The Chocolate War in several formats. I put in a hold request, to give it a circulation boost (I have no idea whether that's needed, but it can't hurt). I might even read it again.

67weird_O
Editado: mayo 10, 11:59 pm

I can tell you this: I don't know what to tell you. Hmmm.

Been absent too long. I've been in a scattered phase. Yesterday, I plunged into updating my 2024 reading records. Minor mixups. I neglected to record This Is Water: Some Thoughts Delivered on a Significant Occasion, about Living a Compassionate Life by David Foster Wallace, which was the last "book" I read in April. Number 40, if you're keeping score. Book is in quotes there, because This Is Water is the commencement remarks of Foster at the 2005 Kenyon College graduation. Puffed up into a tiny book by putting a single sentence on a page. A single sentence like "Never feel you have enough" (page 104) and "It's the truth" (page 105). Not every page, not every sentence, mind you, but often. It's like endowing each sentence with significance, whispering in the pause "Let that sink in."1 (I should have listened to the audio version.)

           

Okay.

Then... I recorded A Pound of Paper: Confessions of a Book Addict as book number 41 for the year and as the first read of May.

What the next book to go on the list is depends upon what I finish next. I'm rotating amongst Keith Haring (on page 292 of 522), Up in the Old Hotel (on page 152 of 718 pages), and The Case of the Baker Street Irregulars (page 51 of 310). I suggest you put your money on the last of the three.

1 Since this is DWF, I must have at least one footnote. Here: Though I'm snarking about inflating (overinflating?) a brief talk into a BOOK, I'm nonetheless counting it as a BOOK in my reading stats. Purity.

68weird_O
mayo 12, 2:11 pm

I've been sorting lately. Setting down a list of chores, checking various lists of books, pondering the meaning of life…skrawch%@&ding-ding-ding. Ok, not that last thing. Monty Python settled that!

I did complete The Case of the Baker Street Irregulars by Anthony Boucher (pronounced to rhyme with voucher), which was published on the cusp of WWII, passed out-of-print, then was returned to print in 2020, thanks to Otto Penzler. What a hoot for those reasonably familiar with Conan Doyle's original stories.

I'm still working through Keith Haring (now on page 308 of 522) and Up in the Old Hotel (page 164 of 718). Double Fold by Nicholson Baker is still in play, but not too actively (page 48 of 370). Coincidentally, I've come across mention of at least two other Baker books that I didn't know about, and of course I don't remember. the titles. (WHAT do you expect from me!!! That guy in the space suit pulled out all those…Drifting away again. Sorry.)

Among the lists I'm typing (into the great void):

• The New York Times Annual "Editor's Choice" Books since 2000.
• The tour books of David Damrosch's Around the World in 80 Books.
• Update (and perhaps consolidate) various crime/mystery/sleuthing book lists. I have several of those.
• Nobel Laureates (with some representative book titles)
• Pulitzer Winners (in various categories)


Getting back to the library expansion is atop the "chores list". I got stymied by *%$@^* electrical outlets that exist and that I want to have access to. In a previous library project, I made a mess of it, and, by golly, I'm still mess-prone.

Well, that's enough. I was counseled by an art director I worked with for decades: Don't make your to-do list too detailed. Otherwise, it will prevent you from doing anything.

69quondame
mayo 12, 2:26 pm

>68 weird_O: I thought that was Douglas Adams.

70weird_O
mayo 13, 11:08 am

>69 quondame: Well, yeah. He's another one

I expect I should reply. I have always tended to neglect obligations when I get off on a tear. Like, I just found out that there's a book sale Wednesday. I've skipped these sales so far this year; don't want to miss another.

71richardderus
mayo 13, 11:50 am

>68 weird_O: Certainly excellent reading going on! Hope it keeps up.

72weird_O
mayo 13, 7:36 pm

>71 richardderus: Hope it keeps up. Yeah, me too.

73weird_O
Editado: Hoy, 11:17 am

Leaving soon for The Book Sale. See what I find on offer. I have let this sale control my doings for the last few days. Will I find some compelling read that will bring focus and joy to my reading? Well, I don't want to get into some book that's substandard, because, you know, that really good book is waiting for me—I think I hear it calling (and only I can hear it)—down there in the sale room.

What crap! :-) I'll go and see what's there, then get back to some fun book I already have. I'm almost done with Keith Haring.

Back to reality.

74msf59
mayo 15, 9:39 am

Happy Wednesday, Bill. Good luck at the book sale. I wonder if we will see a bit of restraint this time, although that is probably very unlikely. 😁

75richardderus
mayo 15, 1:05 pm

>73 weird_O: *popcorn bowl*

Can't wait to see what you're coming home with.

76Berly
mayo 15, 1:15 pm

Bill--Love your spring trees blooming / Intrigued by The Chocolate Wars / Good luck on the library expansion / I just can't stand to see rump's face - ever / and hurray for a book sale!! Happy Wednesday.

77weird_O
mayo 16, 4:45 am

Without further ado, I give to you a list and photo of my proceeds from yesterday's used-book shopping:

May 15, 2024: Bethlehem Area Public Library book sale


Mr. Stone and the Knight's Companion, V. S. Naipaul (mmp)
The Mimic Men, V. S. Naipaul (mmp)
The Siberian Dilemma, Martin Cruz Smith (pbk)
The Return of the Pharaoh, Nicholas Meyer (pbk)
John Barleycorn, Jack London (pbk)
The Man Who Loved Books Too Much, Allison Hoover Bartlett (pbk)
All the Colors We Will See, Patrice Gopo (pbk)
A Dog's Journey, W. Bruce Cameron (pbk)
We Are Never Meeting in Real Life: Essays, Samantha Irby (pbk)
The Afterlife and other stories, John Updike (hc)
Build: An Unorthodox Guide to Making Things Worth Making, Tony Fadell (hc no
jacket)
Fairy Tales of New York, J. P. Donleavy (hc)
Hallowe'en Party, Agatha Christie (hc)
Slightly Chipped: Footnotes in Booklore, Lawrence & Nancy Goldstone (hc)
Big Sky, Kate Atkinson (hc)
I Must Be Dreaming, Roz Chast (hc)
Vincent and Theo: The Van Gogh Brother, Deborah Heiligman (hc)
Being Henry: The Fonz…and Beyond, Henry Winkler (hc)
Tom Lake, Ann Patchett (hc)
Dissident Gardens, Jonathan Lethem (hc)
The Lost Painting: The Quest for a Caravaggio Masterpiece, Jonathan Harr (hc)
The Covenant of Water, Abraham Verghese (hc)
Advocate: A Graphic Memoir of Family, Community, and the Fight for Environmental Justice, Eddie Ahn (hc)
The Marriage Portrait, Maggie O'Farrell (hc)
René Magritte, David Sylvester (hc, A⸱D⸱P)
In the Shadow of No Towers, Art Spiegelman (hc, A⸱D⸱P, oversize)
A Photographer's Life: 1990-2005, Annie Liebovitz (hc, A⸱D⸱P, oversize)
Our America: A Photographic History, Ken Burns (hc, A⸱D⸱P, oversize)



78weird_O
mayo 16, 4:58 am

Bonus! My shopping companion was culling her holdings. (Pfft! Why her husband won't expand their library's shelving is incomprehensible to me.)

May 15, 2024: Gig's Deaccession Give-away, Schnecksville


Home: American Writers Remember Rooms of Their Own, edited by Sharon Sloan
Fiffer and Stevve Fiffer (pbk)
War on Peace: The End of Diplomacy and the Decline of American Influence, Ronan Farrow (hc)
Russian Roulette: The Inside Story of Putin's War on America and the Election of Donald Trump, Michael Isikoff and David Corn (hc)
Apeirogon, Colum McCann (hc)
Lady Macbeth, Susan Fraser King (hc)

         

79richardderus
mayo 16, 10:26 am

>78 weird_O: Your hauls, epic, lovely, envy-inducing; your musings on Gig's husband's pusillanimity, generous to a fault.

Hooray for you on this very interesting collection.

80m.belljackson
Editado: mayo 16, 12:59 pm

Weird_0 - Your bargain shopping is a true inspiration for those of us living on Social Security or Pensions

who save the LT New Book Reviews for Abe.com, Book, and Garage Sales!

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

I've read A Dog's Journey (on save shelf), Covenant of Water (it's not Quequeg at the mast end of Moby-dick), Vincent and Theo (similar book), and The Fonz (odd fun).

81benitastrnad
Ayer, 11:02 pm

>77 weird_O:
I really liked Vincent and Theo. It is a YA biography but it was very well done. Thorough and honest about both men and the lives they led. I think you will like this one and hopefully hand it off to another reader who will like it.

82Whisper1
Ayer, 11:26 pm

Your thread is filled with wonderful books -- those you read, those you purchased, those you hope to read -- what an incredible thread!

83weird_O
Hoy, 11:39 am

>74 msf59:, >75 richardderus:, >76 Berly: Thank you for the good wishes and support. I must say that I'm happy with the books I rescued. Already they've disrupted the daily discord. Shopping from a list is virtually impossible, and I'm comfortable plucking books that catch my eye and trigger something in my brain. Sometimes you're lucky, sometimes not.

Of course I experience some disenchantment if I check the LT reviews. For example, Agatha Christie's Hallowe'en Party revealed disappointed LT reviewers, demonstrating why I hadn't heard of it.

84weird_O
Hoy, 12:04 pm

>79 richardderus: Thank you, Richard.

>80 m.belljackson: Your bargain shopping is a true inspiration for those of us living on Social Security or Pensions. That would be me, living on SS and a modest but defined benefit pension. I do what I can, viz. the four books you mention.

>81 benitastrnad: Re: Vincent and Theo. I didn't know it was tagged YA; so be it. It was one of those desired books that wasn't formalized by inclusion on The WANT! List™.

>82 Whisper1: Shucks, Linda. Thank you.