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Interesting. I'm glad I wasn't savaged by your Newfoundland dogs.I am so glad you are well. You were also in my backyard when you were at Greenwich Hospital.
Things such as nursing and airline travel were more classy and glamorous back in the day. People now go to religious services in sweats.I volunteered as a candystriper there when I was 15, working in the Central Supply Room under the watchful eye of a Head Nurse. (They wore caps in those days.) (We wore red and white pinafore type uniforms over white blouses, if I remember correctly.) I learned how to fold towels and blankets really, really well. I looked at the glamorous 18 year-old nurse's aides in their blue and white uniforms who could handle syringes and things we couldn't go near. They were really old and pretty. I wanted to be one someday. And guess what? When I graduated from high school at 18, I got a job that summer as a nurse's aide at Greenwich Hospital! I got the blue and white uniform and all the glamour of being a nurse's aide.
I just finished Phil Lesh (of the Grateful Dead's) autobiography Searching for the Sound: My Life with the Grateful Dead by Phil Lesh.Phil Lesh said:The irony was undeniable; Drugs had helped us to create our group mind and fuse our music together, and now drugs were isolating us from one another and our own feelings, and starting to kill us off."
I go to the library and walk the stacks until something catches my eye. I screwed up today by going at lunch time.
I just finished reading Taking Manhattan: The Extraordinary Events that Created New York and Shaped America by Russell Shorto. This book got an extraordinary sendoff and I put myself on the library list shortly after it was published. It was good, but a three and a half rather than four star read. I previously read the author's The Island at the Center of the World: The Epic Story of Dutch Manhattan and the Forgotten Colony That Shaped America and expected more. Basically, his thesis, which I think he overstates, is that remaining Dutch influence, after Great Britain took control of New Amsterdam in 1664, was pervasive. The book did introduce me to a new character, Richard Nicolls, the British leader that actually orchestrated the peaceful takeover. Again, I think that New York was the major center for immigration and many groups had similar influence.Ralph Shorto said:And it operates on free-market principles, as a laboratory for economic experimentation, providing (theoretically) unbounded opportunity for its inhabitants. New York came into being not organically but through a purposeful act, which involved the stitching together of two cultures and traditions into something new. The Dutch had developed New Amsterdam to be an entrepôt—a port city with pretensions to global trade. Richard Nicolls, as the representative of relatively tolerant and pragmatic factions within England, came to see that rather than crushing New Amsterdam and starting over, it would be in his interest to make a deal with his Dutch nemesis, one that might benefit both of them. The pluralistic and capitalistic features of New York had their origins in the Dutch colony, and both of those elements of the city were reconfigured and invigorated when the Dutch and English strains merged.
As with, say, the light bulb or the computer, the invention of New York rested on earlier ideas. It required a willful steering of forces in a particular direction, as well as a will on the part of the inhabitants to be steered in the new direction. And, as with the light bulb and the computer, nobody who played a role in the invention of New York could comprehend what it might lead to.
Just checked it out of the library, looking forward to reading it.
Careless People: A Cautionary Tale of Power, Greed, and Lost Idealism
By Sarah Wynn-Williams - Flatiron Books - 2025 - 400pp.
An explosive memoir charting one woman’s career at the heart of one of the most influential companies on the planet, Careless People gives you a front-row seat to Facebook, the decisions that have shaped world events in recent decades, and the people who made them. Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg is the consummate liar wrapped in the American flag. He willingly cooperates with brutal dictatorships to gain access to their countries and to their people.
Zorba was a person who lived life to its fullest. A model I can admire and learn from, as did the narrator.Zorba the Greek said:"But don't you believe in anything?" I exclaimed in exasperation.
"No, I don't believe in anything. How many times must I tell you that? I don't believe in anything or anyone; only in Zorba. Not because Zorba is better than the others; not at all, not a little bit! He's a brute like the rest! But I believe in Zorba because he's the only being I have in my power, the only one I know. All the rest are ghosts. I see with these eyes, I hear with these ears, I digest with these guts. All the rest are ghosts, I tell you. When I die, everything'll die. The whole Zorbatic world will go to the bottom!"
"What egoism!" I said sarcastically.
"I can't help it, boss! That's how it is. I eat beans, I talk beans; I am Zorba, I talk like Zorba."
I said nothing. Zorba's words stung me like whiplashes. I admired him for being so strong, for despising men to that extent, and at the same time wanting to live and work with them.
You are ahead of me. Kingsolver is one of my favorite authors, but that book has been on my list for years. Congratulations on tackling it.Late to the party as I’m just now reading Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kinsolver.
I was forced to read David Copperfield in the 9th or 10th grade, and found that novel torture to read. The retelling by Kinsolver is compelling, and as one reviewer stated, with a fair amount of Mark Twain included. The Twainisms had me feeling guilty by laughing as the boy Damon aka Demon describes the daily horrors of a child’s life in poverty, and the callous, and at times exploitative, attitudes of those that make up the so-called safety net.
I’m maybe a third of the way through the novel, and just know life is going to throw the now orphaned Demon more disasters on his way to adulthood.
Kinsolver’s Demon Copperhead won the 2023 Pulitzer Prize for fiction.
Late to the party as I’m just now reading Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kinsolver.
I was forced to read David Copperfield in the 9th or 10th grade, and found that novel torture to read. The retelling by Kinsolver is compelling, and as one reviewer stated, with a fair amount of Mark Twain included. The Twainisms had me feeling guilty by laughing as the boy Damon aka Demon describes the daily horrors of a child’s life in poverty, and the callous, and at times exploitative, attitudes of those that make up the so-called safety net.
I’m maybe a third of the way through the novel, and just know life is going to throw the now orphaned Demon more disasters on his way to adulthood.
Kinsolver’s Demon Copperhead won the 2023 Pulitzer Prize for fiction.
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Pretty much every time I read this book, I'm losing weight for one reason or another. It's a good read every time.
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Pretty much every time I read this book, I'm losing weight for one reason or another. It's a good read every time.
Nah. Only Thinner works like that. It should be in the self help diet section.Stranger things have happened. Keep it up.
In fact, I wonder if those of us who are married men when reading a book called "Laid" would get lucky every night. Hey! It could happen.
I've heard that The Long Walk is a new series. If it is, I'll watch it. Go, Go Garraty. Maine's Own.All the original Bachman books are classics to me.
If any film students are romping about, I think The Long Walk would make for an excellent little student film.
And a true (to the book) version of The Running Man would be nice to have, too.
For my part, I'm picking through the second book of the Revenger series by Alastair Reynolds, Shadow Captain.
Certainly not hard sci-fi, but I'm liking it. It's distant future, and human have devolved and are running around talking like pirates and fighting over the best leftover alien technology.
Never seen the word "cove" used so aggressively!
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