- Blind to the Bone - GREAT ATMOSPHERE!!
- I Should Have Stayed Home- Worst Travel Stories from Harare to Eternity - Title says it all
- Without Fail - By Lee Child
- A Widow's Curse - not yet started, but it sure looks good
A collection of what strikes me as worth noting.
if you have the item when you need it, your gratification is immediately met, with no "gap time" in which to grasp the difficulty you might face NOT having it.
But if it takes you a minute to retrieve what you desire - from a store you already have, the satisfaction is immense.
I figure if everyone was given the simple pleasure of knowing something would be there when he/she needed it, fear and panic and outrage and most wars in general could be diminished, because I feel evil - other than pyschopathic evil - comes from not knowing if there'll be enough for you, so you'll working unethically to tip the scales in your favor. Knowledge that "you'll be okay" could be a great pacifier.
Time spent in Africa really hones this sense of satisfaction - when it is experienced, because it is there that foresight can make the difference between a thirsty night and a comfortable one, or pain or the absence thereof. It takes experience to gain enough foresight to avert the simplest of discomforts in Africa - so listen to those who've gone before you! According to Mary Kingsley - Always, always boil/filter your water.


As stated on the radio the other day, "The people of America are more concerned with maintaining Law and Order than with nuances of the doctrine of "Separation of Powers". The fact that evidence is stored in a Congressional office, as opposed, say, to a home freezer, should not render it immune from seizure as evidence. When many people point out "there has been no precedent set for a warranted search of a Congressional office", it just means that we've been letting some likely criminals get away with too much in the last 219 years.
As for William Jefferson's assertion that he is not guilty, after $90,000 worth of the marked $100 bills were found wrapped in alumium foil in his home freezer - well, that man just gives lying a bad name.
The book, which I saw reviewed today is : The Dead Beat: Lost Souls, Lucky Stiffs and the Perverse Pleasures of Obituaries by Marilyn Johnson. She notes "We're living in the Golden Age of the Obituary, when the craft of obit-writing has reached its apex." Americans tend to reveal the extra-ordinary in the ordinary person, like the two entries I've cited above, while the British, Johnson notes, delight in producing vivid, historically rich, gossipy and sometimes downright nasty obits about the famous or high-born. Example: From the London Daily Telegraph: Jeaneet Schmid, the professional whistler who has died in Vienna, aged 80, performed with Frank Sinatra, Edith Piaf, and Marlene Dietrich; she had been born a man and had fought in Hitler's Wehrmacht before undergoing a sex change in Cairo.
Anyone read any good obits lately? What would yours say?


