I Know It Was You, Roku. You Broke My Heart.

So my beautiful wife and I watched a couple of Network+ Certification training videos on Thursday night.

She is accumulating a number of certification letter sets behind her name on LinkedIn, and she’s brushing up on her network skills which she is light on (she’s got lots of process stuff and actually taught a community college section of the A+ Certification preparation). Me, I got an A+ certification around the turn of the century, so old that it’s no longer recognized (the new program has requirements to do the continuing education thing and to recertify periodically, but I got mine in the olden days, before the certification-as-a-service and everything-is-a-rental-or-subscription world took hold. Since I’m between contracts, I’m thinking of maybe getting a couple of these low-level, inexpensive (only $400 for the exam–cheep!) so I can apply for starting cable-puller jobs and not get hired for those because I’m old. Or, mostly because I have the time and I’ve historically been a good test taker. The intro streaming classes we watched were under 10 minutes each and were kind of a review–when I got my A+ certification in 2000, I was taking community college classes of my own, scattered among hardware and networking and different programming languages.

So, to watch the videos: Apparently, we have free access to a Dion Training course hosted on Udemy because our library offers Udemy classes for free. So my wife could watch them on her iPad. And I pointed out we could stream them on the big television using the Roku and the iPad’s sharing (but you cannot do this with football games, gentle reader, as I learned several years ago). So she did a proof of concept a week ago, and on Thursday was a little flustered because she did not remember what nested-app-and-menu-path on the iPad and what nested-app-and-menu-path made this work. After only a few minutes but demonstrating the dread that it was not possible or she would never find it, we watched 40 minutes of intro to how the course (a $300 course on Udemy, I guess) and explanation of the exam (following this course and watching a couple hours of the day, I could be Network+ certified in thirty days–wow!).

Yesterday, on Facebook, I get:

An ad for the training company.

It was my wife’s iPad, my wife’s library account, and her free or subsidized login to Udemy, but the Roku account is in my name/email address. So I think I can know it was the Roku. Either parsing the content of the video or reading the metadata and selling it to Facebook to present me with those relevant ads.

But, ah, how used to it we are getting! How normal it seems!

And: I think I quipped somewhere, probably on Facebook, that it’s nice that Facebook shows us people’s birthdays on their birthdays, but we could really use some advance notice to buy cards or presents. Well! My Facebook feed is full of Chinese catchkes and t-shirts in the weeks leading up to my wife’s birthday. So, good? Although I’m unlikely to click through ads and buy from shops of unknown provenance these days. But they’re good for gift ideas: SHE LIKES CATS. Which is my knowledge which trained Facebook to give me this valuable insight.

Tech. Meh. I should maybe become a shepherd. I saw a house on one of my regular driving routes has new tight fences and baby goats. I wonder if they’re hiring.

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Wow, That Was Fast

In the past, it took several days to get my apps through the Microsoft Store process. This one went through in an hour.

It’s basically a little app to track your writing submissions to magazines and whatnot. After I transitioned from a notebook to an Excel spreadsheet in 2020, I’ve found it a little challenging to know what I have that’s available for submitting and to see where I’ve submitted things. This app makes it easy and warns you if you try to submit something to a place a second time, if you try to submit something that’s been published elsewhere, and if you try to submit something somewhere before it’s been accepted or rejected elsewhere.

Of course, now the trick will be to use it myself and to separate the database I use from a test database if I have to build and test it again.

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One of My Newspaper Subscriptions Cancelled Itself

Concerns over future of southwest Missouri newspapers, employees laid off:

It could be the end of an era for newspaper readers in Taney County, Barry County, Stone County and beyond.

Journalists from the Branson Tri-Lakes News, the Stone County Republican-Crane Chronicle and the Barry County Advertiser told Ozarks First that all employees from these newspapers were laid off today.

I used to take the Branson Tri-Lakes News, but it was one of the first I let go because it was $100 a year–but it was twice a week.

The Stone County Republican was one I renewed even now because it had a number of local columnists I liked, including a garden column by Susan Lamb which I shall miss.

We got the most recent issue in the mail this week, and I said, “Uh oh” to my wife because the front page had been in color but was in black and white. I guess it uh-ohed out.

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Lileks’ Main Streets: Been There

Whenever Lileks posts an entry Main Streets: Remnants of the American Downtown, I like to check to see if I’ve been there before.

And I have:

  • Berryville, Arkansas in 2021 and 2024–and remember to carry cash, because a couple of places on the square, including the book store, did not take credit cards into the 2020s
     
  • Sarcoxie, Missouri (which he posts about today). Sarcoxie is the exit you take off of I44 if you’re going to a middle school basketball game in Avilla, Missouri, which we did a couple of times. You can take US96 due west, or you can take I44 southwest and get off at Sarcoxie and then take US37 north. They take about the same amount of time due to the higher speeds but greater distance via I44. A couple times, though, when going the I44 route, we stopped in Sarcoxie. Sarcoxie is one of those pseudopod towns where the big highway runs outside of the existing town, so the town annexes land to reach out to an interstate interchange. We’ve eaten at the gas station Subway more than once. One time, we went south into town itself and could not find somewhere to eat, so we probably ended up at the gas station Subway again.

I definitely have better chances in southern Missouri than Wisconsin because I’ve had more time to wander in a car down here, but if he picks a distant suburb of Milwaukee, I might have a chance. Although many of them do not have the traditional downtowns because they’ve grown up later.

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Conspiracy Internet Counterpoint Theory

What if the political drive to ban data centers actually saves American businesses when the AI bubble bursts, and the capital expenditures to BUILD BUILD BUILD occurred more in other countries, leaving their economies even more shattered?

Is this glass half full? Is the glass half empty? Who cares? It’s somebody else’s glass.

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The Circular References Of What I’m “Reading”

As I might have mentioned, I’ve been reading some Alexander Pope recently (I read a 100-year-old textbook copy of The Rape of the Lock, and I later found another 100-year-old edition). After all of that hyperlinked living, I found another 100-year-old textbook copy of Alexander Pope, and I’ve been working through it because it contains “An Essay on Criticism” in it, I decided to read it and the other poems in it to count it for another book in the annual total plus a brief Alexander Pope schtick on the blog, and….

So I might have mentioned, I’ve been working on an audiocourse on ancient Egypt, which… mentions “The Rape of the Lock”. I don’t think that the professor quite got the point of “The Rape of the Lock” as he mentioned it as part of a lecture on Egyptians tearing their locks out in mourning, which is not the point of “The Rape of the Lock” at all, but anyway….

I picked up a fiction book to work through while reading the Pope (blocking because I’m lazy the other thick books on my chairside table which I should be reading), and it mentions Queen Nefertiti of Egypt. Aw, yeah, the main wife of the “heretical” Pharaoh Akhenaten. I know the difference between Nefertiti and Hatshepsut, brah. And, briefly (set to expire in December of this year), I can tell the difference between the 18th and 19th dynasties of Egypt.

But, ya know, dang. How learning reinforces learning.

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Suddenly, I Am 16 And In A School Assembly

Ed Driscoll at Instapundit posted a tweet by Kevin Sorbo indicating that people could be “radicalized” by watching commercials from the 1990s, and Driscoll posts this one:

Ah, gentle reader. A grainy little box on a computer screen is not the way I saw it.

I saw it projected on the wall of the Northwest High School gym at an all-school or more likely an all-school assembly parted into gym-sized groups of students.

At almost 3 minutes, the pseudo-music-video advertisement wasn’t for television, and it would have taken us several hours to download it from BBSes. No, this was designed just for that: To prepend Stay In School/Don’t Do Drugs mass meetings. And it, like Van Halen’s “Dreams” which I also saw for the first time at one of these assemblies, played upon a young man’s blood, for sure.

I, too, remember the before times.

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When Is A Book Report Not A Book Report?

Book coverI bought this book when I went to the Thursday night book signing for Garage Sale Vinyl by Christopher Jones. As you might remember, I have bought Samuel Rikard/Levi Samuel’s books at various LibraryCons in the Before Times (before the government spergout in 2020), and I’ve read Dammit Bre! (Samuel Rikard) and The Pandora Gambit (Levi Samuel)–which means I still have, what, five or six of his books around here to read, including a fantasy trilogy whose spines together make a picture (which I would say is why I haven’t picked them up–I don’t want to spoil the look on my bookshelves–but that’s not really it; I just don’t want to commit to a trilogy, and even C.S. Lewis could change my mind on that).

So I picked up this book because it never left my desk after I bought it, and it looked short, and…. It seemed rather familiar.

Apparently with the repseudonyming from Rikard to Samuel, Rikard/Samuel renamed this book to The Pandora Gambit. Perhaps so that he could have thematic names for the sequels–but, no, his Web site indicates the series is Miami Knights. I dunno. Maybe he thought The Pandora Gambit was a better title. I suppose it is.

I thought about re-reading the book, which often happens here when I pull something from the stacks where I’ve picked up a duplicate copy, but the second night, I thought, geez, I have thousands of things in my stacks to read that I don’t know I’ve read before (or that I’ve restocked because I explicitly wanted to read it again). So I’ll put it on the read shelves and in the 26-year-old books database, creaking atop its Microsoft Access backend and Visual Basic type-ahead feature, but I will not count it on my annual total.

So if “Levi Samuel” ever reaches his goal of being one of the greatest fantasy writers of our era, I will have a real collectible here.

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Book Report: The Law of Gun Barrel City by O.C. Marler (2004)

Book coverAfter finishing The Space Trilogy after a year of working on it, I wanted something quick and easy to read to pad my annual reading total before diving into the other long-term and lengthy tomes on my chairside table. And, boy, mister, was this book quick and easy.

It weighs in at 137 pages of large print, double-spacing, and pages with chapter titles and blank pages before each chapter. So it’s really more novella length and young adult in tone and depth; it has a good plot, sparse and moving prose, but not a lot of umami; the main character is good, the people who help him are good, and here are the events/set pieces for the plot. Better, but shorter, than the worst of men’s adventure paperbacks (including Westerns) and probably heavily influenced by television and movie tropes.

So: After recovering from a long bout of pneumonia, the main character, “Red” Weathers, goes hunting for the people who stole his herd of 35 cattle and his really good horse while he was will. He watched them do it, but when he tried to make an effort to stop them, he passed out from the effort before leaving his house. His first stop is a town up the way where he learns that the thieves sold the horse to the local hardman or bad rancher, so he goes to buy his stolen horse from said rancher–who immmediately goes to the gun, and some of the rancher’s gun hands get shot–and Red frees a squaw, the wife of an Indian he has met, from captivity. The rancher gets his friend the sheriff on the case, and Red, the Indian, and the town blacksmith, goes on the run, sets a trap, and kills some of the other gunhands but get captured. After a trial that turns from corrupt to fair–and where Red is freed and the bad rancher is booked, Red goes on to gather his horses from a crooked gambler and to settle scores with those who have wronged him before a happy epilogue where he’s back to ranching and living with a new wife.

So: Well-written, but not very deep. The author is/was a Pentecostal professor/speaker, and a list of his other books includes what looks to be a number of other westerns plus some nonfiction, Christian, motivational, and/or memoirs. I won’t seek the author out, but if I see some of his other books in the wild, I might pick them up.

I bought this book at the Sparta branch of the Christian County Library in 2024. In years past, I’ve kinda gamified hitting all four of the Friends of the Christian County Library book sales in a year at the rotating libraries (Ozark, Clever, Nixa, and Sparta). This year, though, I’ve missed the Ozark sale and the Clever Sale (I could not parse the markings on the calendar for a while, and when I figured it out, somehow I managed to forget what Saturday it was even though it was, semi-scrutibly, upon the calendar). That leaves Nixa’s three day sale in August and Sparta’s one-day bag sale in the autumn. Will I go? I dunno. I seem to be making slight progress on my stacks, or at least my chairside table, so I don’t want to maybe overfill them. HOWEVER, on an autumn day, with a $3 bag (or two) in my hand, who knows to what levels of gluttony I might descend.

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Good Book Hunting, July 10, 2026: The Corner Coffee Shop in Houston, Missouri

On Facebook, I saw that Joshua Chase/Dodge Merrin was going to have a five-hour-long book signing at a coffee and ice cream shop in Houston, Missouri, home of the Houston Herald which I no longer receive because I’m between contracts. But being between contracts means I can take off on a Friday morning for a two hour drive to a distant town to get books from an author I haven’t seen in person in almost a decade. But I did tell him, probably at LibraryCon 2019, that I would buy his later books when I read the first three (Triumphant Empire, Revolution, and Total War). I had kinda planned this to be an excursion to yank my youngest away from video games, but he already had plans to go to the waterpark with a friend, so I made the journey alone with my audiocourse on ancient Egypt.

So I met the author again:

And I got his four latest books.

I got:

  • Brink of Extinction, the fourth book in the series formerly known as “The S.T.A.R. Chronicles” but now renamed “Embers of Hope” and Embers in the Dark which is a collection of short stories in the same series, some prequels.
  • Rising Shadows, an urban fantasy book where the cats are the good guys.
  • Quiet Valor which an omnibus edition of his two fantasy novels Humble Glory and Gentle Fury. It’s a hardback, and it’s the first he sold.

Undoubtedly, I will put them in the Nogglestead stacks and lose them for several years. But I might actually lose them together, so when I rediscover them, I can read them in proper order. I did tell him about ABC Books, though, and if he has a book signing there sometime, I might see him before another near-decade elapses. So maybe I should read these first. But I have started another novel, well, the same novel with a different title by a local author with a newer pseudonym, but I guess I will tell you about that by-and-by.

As to the trip to Houston, I took I-44 to US 38 in Marshfield–the same route to the Independence Day parade, but then rolled east on 38 through rolling hills and hay fields through Hartville (although north of the White Hart Renaissance Festival) and into Houston which is not quite as big as some of the Springfield suburbs but is not exactly a small town. On the way home, I rode down US 63 which is a bigger road that runs through Cabool and down to West Plains, although I got onto US 60 (the Stepmother Road according to the current Citizens Bank of Rogersville radio ads I hear whilst cutting the grass).

So, suddenly, this summer, I have the urge to drive around the area like I did in 2012 when I dragged one or more of my then-very-young children on trips to little towns around the area. I guess I do have time in between all the martial arts classes I’m taking (or dodging on alternating weeks) until I get a new contract. I guess that’s my new plan: Have so much fun this summer that actual income would be a bummer.

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On The Son of Zorn (2016)

Book coverIn the old DVRing days, I recorded this show and my beautiful wife and I watched, what, the first two episodes? I thought it was in the pre-children days, but apparently this series aired in 2016, so it would have been in a period when we were watching television together regularly–Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., Jessica Jones, Cage, Downton Abbey, Almost Human, Human Target, and Sleepy Hollow, and The Blacklist come to mind–we made it through all of many of them, but I gave up on Sleepy Hollow and The Blacklist after a while, and our shared television watching petered out.

But last summer, for some reason, I though of this show, and so I ordered the DVDs on Amazon. And it took us about this long to get through the two discs half hour episodes (13, I think Wikipedia or IMDB said).

So, the premise is that a He-Man/Thundarresque cartoon barbarian comes to Orange County, California, to connect with his teenaged son. He, the teenaged son, named Alangulon, lives with Zorn’s ex-wife and her fiance, Craig, a squishy therapist played by Tim Meadows. The series mixes cartoons with live action, where Zorn and people from Zephyria (his homeland, an island somewhere) are cartoons and the other characters in Orange County are live actors. So, yeah, the whole schtick is a barbarian fitting into the modern world and how that intersects with modern sitcom tropes such as workplace intrigue and parenting struggles.

My wife did not enjoy it as much as I did, but she was amused at various moments. The series features cartoon gore, and although in many cases the out-of-touch father figure plays a part, it’s more because Zorn is different than because he’s dumb. The young people are not overly precocious or more knowledgeable than their parents, so it really does seem to be a throwback to older sitcoms. Although I guess I’m not one to talk; the latest sitcom I have seen was Whitney which was, what, 2011? Or whenever I got around to it on the DVR. Whatever I’ve sampled has been crass, but Son of Zorn is not exactly that, but some of the gags are based on how a barbarian would take on a modern problem. Inappropriately.

So it was a fun little bit, and it has Tim Meadows in it. Man, I remember him mostly from Saturday Night Live, but that was over a quarter century ago. But I’m going to keep my eyes out for a copy of The Ladies Man because I haven’t seen that in that time span after I took my poor beleagured wife to yet another SNL-skit-turned-into-a-movie (she has maybe forgiven me for, or just forgotten The Ladies Man, but never MacGruber).

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Seems Legit

Interesting looking job on LinkedIn; self-hosted application, though, is non-descript and does not mention the job title or function. And step two is:

Sign up for a paid monthly subscription and put some money, as little as $5, in it?

Erm, no. NO harder than job applications with subsidiary third-party applications of unknown provenance to determine whether the employer would get a tax credit for hiring me, applications which require my social security number right out of the gate.

You know, I “meet” a lot of my clients just via the Internet, and I always have some trepidation before I receive my first payment. But making a payment to apply? Yeah, no. I still avoid, for the most part, submission fees and entrance fees for writing submissions (which puts me out of the running for a lot of target outlets).

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AI-Driven Facebook Posts Do Not Credit MfBJN

For some reason, Facebook thought I would be interested in this post:

Perhaps because I posted in 2020 Know Your Frenches which was about the difference between Mr. French and Victor French that included Merlin Olsen.

Yeah, that should increase my engagement more than showing me updates from the same four accounts at a 1:20 ratio with slop. Especially since it’s showing me ultra-conservative acquaintances from decades past and mixing those in with Democratic attempted meme slop.

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Someone Is Telling Pop Pop To Get A Will

So my new BJJ school is a couple of doors down from the Nixa branch of the Ozarks Elder Law branch.

Last Thursday, I stopped at the Republic License Office to get tags for the car, and it is a couple of doors down from the Republic branch of Ozarks Elder Law.

As part of my tour of bill-paying errands, I ended up at the pool store in Nixa, and on the counter, I found…. business cards for one of the attorneys at Ozarks Elder Law. “Someone is telling me I need to make a will,” I said to the pool store employees, explaining the situation.

“You’d better take a card, then,” one of them said, and I did.

And, on Saturday, we sat on a curb in Marshfield for the parade….

….right across the street from Marshfield’s branch of Ozarks Elder Law.

I’ve seen a lot of billboards for them, too, with Lori Crook front and center (that’s a story for another day), but to find myself Thursday, Friday, and Saturday outside three different locations of the law offices…. Well, that’s detecting a pattern in something.

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Reflecting on Fireworks

So yesterday, I mused about parades I’d been to since I went to a rather large parade this year. This year, we also had a bit of a fireworks show, of sorts: For the second year in a row, my adult children had some friends over, and they lit off some fireworks. My beautiful wife and I did not watch the show–she because she feared for their safety and me because, like Renaissance festivals, just don’t enchant me any more. Although I’m not sure if fireworks shows ever did; they were just family and communal things we did.

When I was a kid, Smith Park, the terminus of the parade that passed by my grandparents’ house, had a small fireworks show, and we attended it all the time more than once, enough to think it was an annual tradition, but I have no idea how annual it was. Maybe most of my life up until I was seven years old. As I recall, everyone brought blankets, and across the field, the “professionals” lit the fireworks. But it couldn’t have been every year to that point.

Because my father was, for a couple years, one of those “professionals” who had been drinking all day and then went to light fireworks shows over a couple of beers in the night time. He brought us to the shows, the whole family, but instead of us watching on a blanket with the other spectators, we got to watch the show from inside the car by where the “professionals” were. It meant the fireworks were right over us, but this was in the late 1970s, man. I watched parts of more than one show sitting the wrong way on a Chevy Impala bench seat, dangling my head into the foot well. Which was not comfortable even then.

I remember July 4, 1980, though. My mother was at an inpatient rehab facility, so my father took my brother, me, and Rosemary to a job site to watch the Milwaukee lakefront fireworks. Rosemary was or had been married to Bill, the first of my father’s circle to get divorced (and my father lived in Bill’s basement immediately after getting kicked out by my mother in 1981 for being the philandering sort–oh, yeah, now I get it). At any rate, the spot must have been a great view: It was on a sloping roof three floors up. Just the place to take an eight-year-old and a six-year-old for fireworks (although I guess it was not us he was trying to impress). Do I remember anything of the fireworks? No, but I do remember being terrified of falling off the roof.

In Missouri, after the move, we really didn’t go to fireworks shows–my mother was not one to go out after work–but in the trailer park, we managed to get some firecrackers, bottle rockets, ladyfingers, jumping jacks, and other spinning ground things, so that was our fireworks shows in the trailer years.

I went to the lakefront fireworks show once or twice in high school or college, but after college, I’m not sure I have gone to see fireworks since.

After we moved to Nogglestead, we had a clear view of the Battlefield city fireworks, except the ground effects, for a couple of years until the untended fence line across the road turned into an untended row of trees. For a couple of years, neighbors on the next farm road to our west put on shows, maybe even competing against one another, so we got a really nice display there.

In 2019, we spent the night in Poplar Bluff, and my nephew and nephew-by-marriage-by marriage (my brother’s wife’s daughter’s husband) drank, doped, lit off fireworks, and set a bad example for my boys.

One year, I bought some fireworks–the kind I bought in the trailer years–and I realized those are fireworks that are fun to shoot off, but not fun to watch. The next year, I got some of the rockets that burst and whatnot. Eventually, I let my sons light some fireworks themselves once they were teenagers–and they had a blast, literally, even though I made them wear safety glasses. And, in the years since, they’ve taken over their own fireworking. They did it on their own two years ago. Last year, a couple friends from their Lutheran school days came over, and it was the same this year. Enough for them to think every year when it will have been only a couple of times.

But I got to see a couple of the fireworks from the deck, directly overhead. And when my youngest came into the house to secure soft drinks for everyone, I was pleased to see he was wearing safety glasses.

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We Have Both Kinds of Music

On a recent three hour tour of the Nogglestead lawn, the local country and western station provided a point/counterpoint over the course of the afternoon.

Starting with Eli Young Band, “Love Ain’t”:

With its chorus:

Love ain’t you on a sidewalk in your new dress all alone
Love ain’t you callin’ me ’cause he ain’t pickin’ up his phone
The way you’re talkin’, sounds like he’s somebody you should hate
I may not know what love is, girl
But I know what love ain’t

That is, the poet/narrator admits not knowing what love is.

Later, we had Clay Walker singing “What’s It To You”:

With its revelation:

Love is the rhythm of two hearts beating
Poundin’ out a message steady and true
Talk to me baby, tell me what you’re feelin’
I know what love is, what’s it to you?

That is, the poet/narrator knows what love is.

Cue the Foreigner, I guess (“I Want To Know What Love Is”), but….

Is it just me, or is there a whole new subgenre of bro country where the poet/narrator exhorts a woman in a relationship to leave her partner (or maybe Old Dominion’s “Break Up With Him” is just in heavy rotation on a “classic” country station. I suppose it’s catnip to young ladies on the prowl who like to think their options are always open, but it kind of offends me.

At any rate, stay tuned for another rousing edition of “What song came on the (sixteen year old? already?) WorkTunes while Brian J. was mowing the lawn?” Because we’ve had rain in July, so I have at least one more mowing this summer–each time I mow in July, I think Is this the mowing that will turn the lawn brown? So far, it has not, but it’s going to get dry here sometime soon.

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Book Report: The Space Trilogy by C.S. Lewis (1938, 1944, 1946, 2011)

Book coverI got this book last year for Father’s Day. At a May potluck, I spotted some friends’ son reading some C.S. Lewis, and I asked if it was the Space Trilogy–maybe Perelandra? But it was not. I admitted then that I’d read Out of the Silent Planet in middle school–maybe it was on Mrs. Pickering’s paperback rack with When Worlds Collide (I recounted that when I later read the sequel After Worlds Collide), but that I’d not read the others. So my beautiful wife ordered a used copy for me, and I started reading it right away. Last June.

In Out of the Silent Planet, we’ve got an almost rocket jockey story, but it’s British and it’s Lewis, so it’s setting a Christian allegory. A university professor, Ransom, is kidnapped by two men who have built a rocket to go to Mars, where they plan to sacrifice him to some martians. He escapes with the help of the Martian life forms who live in the valleys and gorges where air remains. It’s 158 pages. Rocket jockey-sized. Also, Ransom learns about the powerful beings who rule the planets and angel-like creatures who exist, but Earth’s equivalent has been quarantined because he’s turned bad.

In Paralandra, Ransom is later summoned to Venus (called Paralandra by the extraterrestrial powers) where he finds a beautiful, but green, woman who is looking for her King, and they’re going to start a humanish race on Venus. One of the kidnappers from Out of the Silent Planet shows up, possessed by demonic forces, and Ransom must do battle with him to prevent him from tempting the Queen from violating the one rule she has–not to avoid eating an apple, but to avoid sleeping overnight on dry land (sorry, dry land is Waterworld) fixed land (most of Venus, er, Paralandra is covered in floating islands). He does, but at personal cost: A wound on his heel which does not heal. He then returns to earth. Paralandra weighs in at 190 pages–a little longer, and a bit talkier–so much of the early part of it is just lush descriptions of the strange world with not much happening.

I have mentioned in book reports over the last year that I was having trouble digging into That Hideous Strength. It weighs in at 380 pages, and not rocket jockey stuff. It’s like a British Christian Ayn Rand novel with a guest appearance by Gandalf. In it, a Scientific Organization moves in on a bucolic college and its town, first offering to buy an undeveloped wood and then muscling into the town with its private police force. The book focuses, as much as it does on any characters, on a married couple: The man is a professor at the university who is tempted into a position with NICE, the invading Scientific (and ultimately demonic forces); the woman is a modern (ca 1940s) woman who starts having vivid predictive or clairvoyant dreams and ends up reluctantly joining up with the saintly crowd, led by The Director, a saintly figure with a wounded foot that won’t heal (revealed to be Ransom later in the book, and to be honest, it had been so long since I read Paralanadra before I got to the character, I’d forgotten the foot thing). Eventually, we get a sense of the demonic forces behind NICE amid some expository text, and then a bang up climax. Apparently, the MacGuffin ultimately is that NICE wants to dig up Merlin, who is in a state of suspension beneath the wood they bought and/or the university, but he lets himself out first and joins the saintly side to defeat the forces of darkness. All the almost-characterized bad guys get what’s coming to them, and the book ends with a rather long denouement where couples are united in love matches, including the main couple who are to rediscover their marriage in a more Christly fashion, and Ransom goes back to Venus.

I mean, I say British Christian Ayn Rand novel because it’s wordy with long philosophical conversations and interior monologues, especially as the professor worries about whether he’s in the out group or the in group at the university and NICE. The first part of the novel seems swamped by university intrigue, and then we get instruction as the head of NICE police and various officials tell him how to navigate the Party, or allude to how to navigate the Party, and…. Well, it’s awful wordy. But, I guess, it’s a novel of ideas. I have seen allusions to it here and there before I mentioned it at the potluck last year and as late as…. what, last week?

But I think I will prefer Lewis’s nonfiction work. When I was a kid, I read The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe and Prince Caspian, but even though I checked The Voyage of the Dawn Treader out of the Milwaukee Public Library, I don’t think I got through the first chapter of it.

So I’m glad to have read it, although I did not rather enjoy the reading of it. And I had to apologize to my wife for repeatedly saying what a chore it was to finish the book; after all, this was slagging on a gift, and it was definitely in poor taste.

OH: And Lewis alludes to other fantasy works; I guess the Numinor talk alludes to Tolkein’s Númenor, so I didn’t get it (I’m also not that into the Middle Earth stuff, although I did read the The Lord of the Rings trilogy in 2011).

But I did get this reference in the long denouement:

That same afternoon Mother Dimble and the three girls were upstairs in the big room which occupied nearly the whole top floor of one wing at the Manor, and which the Director called the Wardrobe. If you had glanced in, you would have thought for one moment that they were not in a room at all but in some kind of forest–a tropical forest glowing with bright colours.

It would be an allusion to The Chronicles of Narnia–but they were published a couple of years later.

As would be the source of an allusion on the following page:

“Gor!” she said.

Probably not–that series would not start for 20 years–but it was funny to note.

At any rate, the book side table is looking almost bare now with only the Complete Works of Shakespeare (started in 2018), the second book of The Story of Civilization (started in 2023), the first volume of the Masterplots series (started last year), and another small hundred-year-old collection of Pope that I have discovered after I found this additional copy and wherein I will read the additional poems not found in the hundred-year-old textbook I finished last month (including “Essay on Criticism”) and count as a whole book since The Space Trilogy only counts as one book, and I have some catching up to do since I’m only at 51 books for the year.

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Independence, and Other, Parades I Have Known

Last Independence Day, I mowed my lawn. We don’t generally do much with on the holiday. But last year, while mowing the lawn, I heard the radio station on location at the Marshfield, Missouri, Independence Day Parade, billed as the oldest continuously running July 4th parade west of the Mississippi. And I thought it might be an interesting thing to go to an Independence Day parade. For we hadn’t been to one since… what, 2009?

When I was a kid in Milwaukee, it was just a thing. A small neighborhood parade went past my grandparents’ house on 33rd Street and ended in Smith Park, so we did that all the time at least a couple of years so I thought of it as “all the time.” The parade was chock full of marching bands, veterans’ groups, and neighborhood kids on their bedecked bicycles and Big Wheels. When the parade had passed, the neighborhood fell in and followed them to Smith Park for little ice cream cups with wooden spoons.

After my parents divorced, we came to Missouri, and… Nothing happening down here, parade-wise, but a lot of times where we kids convinced, easily-because-they-wanted-the-money, operators of the fireworks stand up the hill from the trailer park that we were 13, and so we did that instead. Many summers, though, we spent in Wisconsin with my father, and his new neighborhood might have had a parade–but I know think that they had a festival, with ice cream and wooden spoons and all, up there. But a quick search indicates that those parks no longer have events, probably to save money and probably because neighborhoods are temporary these days, so who would go to a neighborhood event? Also, they’re probably not very safe these days anyway (say, why isn’t this footage being seen on stateside news outlets?).

After that, what, 1994 ish?–I didn’t go to parades, Independence Day or otherwise, very much. We went to the St. Patrick’s Day Parade in St. Louis around the turn of the century, downtown whilst we were living in Casinoport. That was at the invitation of one of my beautiful wife’s co-workers, although we never saw him there.

After we had a baby (and moved to Old Trees), we could walk down to the Old Trees parade, and we did in 2007 and, maybe? 2009. It was the first of the modern parades: Light on bands and marching and elaborate floats, and heavy on cars–the Corvette club, the Mustang club, the old cars club. They had a good representation of old military vehicles, jeeps, two ton trucks, and whatnot. Political candidates and local organizations and probably youngsters from the high school vying for a crown of some sort. I rather enjoyed it, and it made me feel like a dad in a family, for sure.

But when we moved to Nogglestead, we’re a bit afield of parades. I don’t think Battlefield, the closest town has one, nor to my knowledge does Republic. So we went through another long draught, for sure, broken by attendance at a Christmas parade in Springfield the year after we arrived (where my oldest saw a girl in his class in one of the Corvettes, so he really thought Springfield was a small town) and one or two in Republic, including one that a couple when the oldest marched with the high school band (the youngest was supposed to his only year in the marching band, but he turned up at the parade without his band shoes and was kept out). It doesn’t help that many of the parades are time-shifted–the Independence Day will come on a Saturday before or after July 4, the Christmas parades are sometime in the beginning of December.

But this year, ah, we would make the trip. Marshfield is not so very far–although it does seem a long ways from home when we are coming back from St. Louis, and Marshfield is almost home but not just minutes away–but our trip to an estate sale last year (already?) put it into its rightful orbit around Nogglestead: A little under an hour by car, so as close as Aurora or Crane, but it seems further because we have to swing out and around Springfield to get there. We left a little after 8 to get to Marshfield, leaving plenty of time to find parking and to walk–which turned out to be just the right amount of time because by the time I hit the head and we walked the (crowded) parade route to find a spot which turned out to be a curb right outside the city courthouse (not the federal courthouse on the corner to the west or the county courthouse on the corner to the east). Right outside…. Well, that’s another story.

The parade itself was two hours long, but: Only one marching band, the high school band. A couple of veterans’ groups on flatbed trucks or trailers–with very few veterans from the mid-20th century wars left. Not depicted: Desert Shield/Desert Storm, Iraq II, or Afghanistan.

But depicted: The Sons of Confederate Veterans:

With a confederate flag and all. Wikipedia unhelpfully sermonizes:

The Sons of Confederate Veterans (SCV) is an American neo-Confederate[1] nonprofit organization of male descendants of Confederate soldiers[2]: 6–9  that commemorates these ancestors, funds and dedicates monuments to them, and promotes the pseudohistorical Lost Cause ideology and corresponding white supremacy.

The SCV was founded on July 1, 1896, in Richmond, Virginia, by R. E. Lee Camp, No. 1 of the Confederate Veterans.[3][4] Its headquarters is at Elm Springs in Columbia, Tennessee.[2]: 29 

In recent decades, governors, legislators, courts, corporations, and anti-racism activists have emphasized the increasingly controversial public display of Confederate symbols—especially after the 2014 Ferguson unrest, the 2015 Charleston church shooting, and the 2020 murder of George Floyd. SCV has responded with its coordinated display of larger and more prominent public displays of the battle flag, some in directly defiant counter-protest.

Some of that is undoubtedly true. But not all of it.

At any rate, again, it was heavily motorized–the marching band might have been the only marchers in it. The Springfield Shriners were in heavy rotation, with a variety of motorized vehicles including little trucks, barrels on wheels, motorbikes, and motor trikes spaced throughout the parade. A number of candidate presentations, but few actual candidates. And, at the very end, a number of horses and carriages, mostly promoting a local cowboy church–but nobody scooping horse poop, which was unfortunate. One of the early horses left a deposit right by us, and the rest of the horses decided that was the official horsebox and started going in the same place. Within minutes, our spot smelled like a barn, and if they hadn’t been at the end of the parade, we would have left anyway.

But, in addition to the normalcy of the stars-and-bars: So. I was gorging on the thrown candy that came our way (except the suckers), and I tucked the wrappers in my shirt pocket. I took a couple of photos and stuck the camera in my shirt pocket. I sent my youngest looking for cold drinks with a couple of Jacksons, and when he came back with free cold water, I stuck the money in the shirt pocket. When I was going for candy, the phone fell out of my pocket, so I put it back into my pants pocket. And when the parade was over, I went to a trash can to empty the pocket, and I mindlessly tossed the money into the trash. Fortunately, another guy was throwing something away, and fortunately (by design), we’re in southwest Missouri where people are generally good, and he said, “Someone’s throwing away money.” So I was able to recover the cash. I mean, he could have just grabbed them himself, but he did not. So I’ll trade having to see “evidence of pseudohistorical Lost Cause ideology and corresponding white supremacy”–just the celebration of regional heritage, and if you know your regional history, you’ll know it was not homogeneous and it was awfully bloody–for honest people.

But: Having been, we will probably not go next year. It was a whole family excursion, and I think my oldest is coming to realize how few of those we have left now that he’s looking, at a distance but in sight, at moving out.

But: I see on the local news sites stories about a local neighborhood Independence Day parade with kids on bedecked bicycles and Big Wheels. Maybe that’s where the real action is. Maybe next year.

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BREAKING NEWS

President Donald Trump on Sunday posted a falsified image of former President Barack Obama and his wife, Michelle Obama, waving before boarding an Air Force One that had been spray-painted with graffiti.

It came months after another racist post by the president that showed the couple as primates in a jungle. That one was deleted after stiff, bipartisan backlash.

The breaking news is that there is no news today, or that journalists think posting and being OUTRAGED!!!! about Internet chatter is news.

Want to know why I don’t post about the news much any more and instead am veering into long-winded reminiscences? Because all the news is like that, and posting a hot take on the news would make me like that.

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Money Well Spent

However much we spent ensuring a US/England World Cup final where the US prevails in extra time, it will be the best money spent on the Semiquincentennial Celebration yet.

(Yes, I know this post might be negated later today when the US takes on Belgium, and, yes, I am ashamed I know what “extra time” means in Euroball, but I watched a bunch of Premier League footy twenty years ago when the NHL was locked out, so I kinda(?) have an excuse.)

UPDATE: Well, it was funny while it lasted.

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