Friday, August 29, 2008

Ambrose Bierce


This week my daytime reading has been the paperback of 23 stories by the strange, sardonic American writer, Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914?), who was shaped by his terrible Civil War experiences. The title story of this volume, "An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge", is his best known work and was made one of the Twilight Zone episodes. Besides the eleven Civil War stories, the book includes his horror stories and his tall tales of the Old West. (Dover Thrift Edition, 2008, $3.50)

And we thought the 20th century invented cynical realism!

This is strong stuff!

Friday, August 22, 2008

New Rowlingiana

Beedle the Bard? I haven't the faintest idea what's in this book of fairy tales by a very famous author, since it won't see the light of day until December of this year, but I'm sure it will be an instant best seller. I know at least one of you out there who will buy it. Oh boy, footnotes by Professor Dumbledore himself.


http://www.amazon.com/Tales-Beedle-Bard-Standard/dp/B001DB0HG2/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1219424707&sr=1-1

Thursday, August 21, 2008

Spidery comment at the University

What the heck is this, an alien space ship?



Yikes, it has legs!




Maybe it's a giant spider and this is one of its practice webs.





Bikes resting while owners toil within the big What-Is-It.




Fortunately there wasn't one. ( I just liked this composition.)





This big building, the Health Sciences Center, is the tallest structure on Long Island. There are 3 or 4 stories below where we were standing. The cubes are connected by walkways high up which give a view for miles. It reminds me of that Russian folk tale of the witch Baba Yaga who lives in "a cabin on chicken legs with no windows and no doors".

Monday, August 18, 2008

A few miscellaneous pictures

Wild grapes (unsprayed)

Jewelweed, the hiker's friend


Fresh from the garden (not mine, alas)


Every where you look fields have been turned into vineyards


What you're likely to meet on a back road


Village Lane in Orient, where I'm going to move once I win the lottery

Enlarge pic and read the red sign. Glad they have some.

Ladies clamming

Friday, August 15, 2008

The Short Stories of Saki

The last two weeks of August are hot, thunderstormy, full of mosquitoes, and I'm moving s..l..o..w..l..y.. I want to read something... but something that is light, undemanding, witty, trenchant, brief, satirical, and (did I say it?) light.

In other words, I'm in the mood for Saki (H.H. Monro, 1870--1916), a British author whose short stories apparently few people read any more.They are set in pre-World War One Edwardian England. It's a P.G. Wodehouse atmosphere. (Indeed, PGW was strongly influenced by him)

In reading over the Wikipedia article on Saki I realized I had read "The Interlopers" in school--can't remember grade or teacher--and been moved by the irony. All of his stories are now in the public domain and you can read them online.

In the volume "Beasts and Super-Beasts" http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/269 I especially enjoyed the stories "The Hen", "The Cobweb", and "The Lull".

Thursday, August 14, 2008

Drove Out East Yesterday:Martha Clara Winery

In addition to the wine tasting place they have animals, including a half dozen Scottish Highland cattle. Here they are heading for the shade of their barn.

One little calf trails along.



They also have a couple of friendly donkeys.




Roll in the dust? I don't do that. (Note shiny coat.)



This one liked to roll in the dust. When I told him I hadn't caught it the first time he obligingly rolled again for me.




Rolling.




The interview is over



High and mighty thoughts.




Oh, I guess I'll have a drink of water now.




Just the right height for a llama.




Wadda you lookin at? Never seen a llama before?

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Hail and a quick farewell






Yesterday a little after 1:00 we had a sudden hailstorm. I was sitting at a computer and I heard this rattle-rattle-rattle and thought it was the air conditioning system. The hail lasted only about 3 minutes. I finally realized what it was, remembered that I had my camera with me, and got myself outdoors, but by then it had turned to rain and most of the hail had melted. I got a few pictures of white stuff underneath a tree and at one side of the ramp. A case of IMpermanence of nature!

Friday, August 8, 2008

Three books I didn't read this week....

...but intended to.

1) Classical Whodunnits; murder and mystery from Ancient Greece and Rome (1996). Ed. by Mike Ashley. A collection of 22 stories. "Favourite historical detectives such as Gordiannus the Finder, Decius Metellus, and [others] ... rub shoulders with eminent temporary sleuths such as Socrates and that honorable man Brutus ... terrible and ingenious crimes." [back cover blurb]
My excuse for not reading this (yet)? Just picked it up at a yard sale 5 days ago AND there are about 17 other books on my table which I'm in the middle of [in the middle of which I am?]. Yum-yum, crime.

2) Sister Bernadette's barking dog; the quirky history and lost art of diagramming sentences (2006). By Kitty Burns Florey. 154 pages. I'm on page 47. Don't you dare read this book unless you love language and want to laugh and feel good.

3) The People of the Khyber; the Pathans of Pakistan (1963). By James W. Spain. 190 pages with photographs. I'm on page 55 and have been stuck there for 2 months. Why? Though it's easy reading, a travelog or memoir by an American diplomat turned academic, and I'm very interested in the subject ( a good friend of mine is a Pushtun studying in Canada), this book is 45 years old. Am not sure there is a more recent treatment in English. The Pushtun people (Pathan is a Britishism) of the North West Frontier Province are not terrorists, though every man carries a gun and always has. We must not demonize millions of people who need our help and compassion, not our bombs. We must try to understand Pukhtunwali, their Code, that includes melmastia, hospitality, as well as badal, revenge. Here's a quote from Mr. Spain, "history hangs heavy on the Khyber and has left its mark upon its sombre stone. Ground into dust of the Pass is Persian gold, Greek iron, Tartar leather, Moghul gems, and Afghan silver and British steel. All have watered it with their blood."

Well, those are the books I didn't finish this week. If you really want to read something refreshing (the sea, birds, the supernatural, storms) there's always Coleridge's wonderful poem

http://etext.virginia.edu/etcbin/toccer-new2?id=Col2Mar.sgm&images=images/modeng&data=/texts/english/modeng/parsed&tag=public&part=all

Here's the poem without illustrations http://www.bartleby.com/101/549.html

Friday, August 1, 2008

Thurber


I have been reading James Thurber this week, this hot, humid, sludgy, summery week. His humorous gloom and lighthearted wisdom are just what's needed while sitting at the beach or hanging out in the air-conditioned living room. From his Fables for our Time (1940) here is:


The Unicorn in the Garden
Once upon a sunny morning a man who sat in a breakfast nook looked up from his scrambled eggs to see a white unicorn with a golden horn quietly cropping the roses in the garden. The man went up to the bedroom where his wife was still asleep and woke her. "There's a unicorn in the garden," he said. "Eating roses." She opened one unfriendly eye and looked at him.
"The unicorn is a mythical beast," she said, and turned her back on him. The man walked slowly downstairs and out into the garden. The unicorn was still there; now he was browsing among the tulips. "Here, unicorn," said the man, and he pulled up a lily and gave it to him. The unicorn ate it gravely. With a high heart, because there was a unicorn in his garden, the man went upstairs and roused his wife again. "The unicorn," he said,"ate a lily." His wife sat up in bed and looked at him coldly. "You are a booby," she said, "and I am going to have you put in the booby-hatch."
The man, who had never liked the words "booby" and "booby-hatch," and who liked them even less on a shining morning when there was a unicorn in the garden, thought for a moment. "We'll see about that," he said. He walked over to the door. "He has a golden horn in the middle of his forehead," he told her. Then he went back to the garden to watch the unicorn; but the unicorn had gone away. The man sat down among the roses and went to sleep.
As soon as the husband had gone out of the house, the wife got up and dressed as fast as she could. She was very excited and there was a gloat in her eye. She telephoned the police and she telephoned a psychiatrist; she told them to hurry to her house and bring a strait-jacket. When the police and the psychiatrist arrived they sat down in chairs and looked at her, with great interest.
"My husband," she said, "saw a unicorn this morning." The police looked at the psychiatrist and the psychiatrist looked at the police. "He told me it ate a lilly," she said. The psychiatrist looked at the police and the police looked at the psychiatrist. "He told me it had a golden horn in the middle of its forehead," she said. At a solemn signal from the psychiatrist, the police leaped from their chairs and seized the wife. They had a hard time subduing her, for she put up a terrific struggle, but they finally subdued her. Just as they got her into the strait-jacket, the husband came back into the house.
"Did you tell your wife you saw a unicorn?" asked the police. "Of course not," said the husband. "The unicorn is a mythical beast." "That's all I wanted to know," said the psychiatrist. "Take her away. I'm sorry, sir, but your wife is as crazy as a jaybird."
So they took her away, cursing and screaming, and shut her up in an institution. The husband lived happily ever after.
Moral: Don't count your boobies until they are hatched.