Monday, December 23, 2024

Monday, Monday


 I haven't seen the British Arrows in years. They are the UK commercials voted best in many categories but I remember them as mostly funny. Few of this year's batch were funny. They were clever, fast-moving and mostly about political issues. Kind of depressing although certainly with a message. Any of you see them in the past?

Reading Keigo Higashina's SALVATION OF A SAINT, which is fun. Haven't read a novel like this in a long time. Never has how a poison got into coffee been given so much thought.

Watching the regular shows. Wrapping Christmas presents. Listening to the year end podcasts appraisals of books, movies, TV. And as little news as possible. 

Megan arrives tonight. 

What about you? 


Friday, December 20, 2024

FFB: CONTINENTAL DRIFT, Russell Banks

Continental Drift, Russell Banks.

It is hard for me to choose between AFFLICTION and CONTINENTAL DRIFT as my favorite novel by Russell Banks. But I am going with this one today. You may have seen the filmed version of AFFLICTION, a tremendous film with Nick Nolte and James Coburn.

Bob Dubois is a furnace repairman in a blue-collar town in New Hampshire, a state the American Dream has bypassed. Although Bob has a wife, three kids and a steady, if low-paying job, he is persuaded to look for a better life in Miami by his brother.

Bob is a good man although not a smart one. The sixties has persuaded him that there is something better out there. That it is foolish to be satisfied with a meager living in a depressed town.

Another character is also seeking a better life in Miami. A female Haitian refuge, who truly does need asylum and comes to the U.S. in a perilous manner. These two lives intersect in a Florida that is the antithesis of paradise, both characters suffering tragedy. This is not a happy book or one to escape into, but it is one that presents characters and situations that seem real and compelling.

Thursday, December 19, 2024

FAVORITE TV SHOWS of 2024


 In no particular order and I may be forgetting some. TV is so complicated now. And when years start and stop is anyone's guess.

SOMEBODY SOMEWHERE (Max)

RIPLEY (Netflix)

ENGLISH TEACHER (FX-HULU)

HACKS (Max)

SLOW HORSES (Apple)

MR. and MRS. SMITH (Prime)

PACHINKO (Apple)

MY BRILLIANT FRIEND ( Max)

THE BEAR (FX-HULU)

BAD SISTERS (APPLE)


Several of these shows did not have their best year, but overall I still liked them enough to put them here. 

What about yours?

Wednesday, December 18, 2024

Short Story Wednesday

 From hunting around online for other blogs on short stories.

From Sunday, March 24, 2013

SHORT STORY SUNDAY by Troy D. Smith


“When the time came for them to die, Pete Gossard cursed and Knife Hilton cried, but Wolfer Joe Kennedy yawned in the face of the hangman.”
Thus begins one of my all-time favorite short stories –it’s probably a three-way tie, with two others I’ll highlight here in future blogs (if no one beats me to it.) The story is called “The Last Boast,” and it was written by Dorothy Johnson –one of the greatest Western authors, and in my opinion the master of the Western short story (others have argued in this space for Elmore Leonard having that honor –in my book he’s a close second.)

Although she wrote until her death in 1984, Johnson produced her two masterpieces in t he 1950s: the short story collections Indian Country (1953) and The Hanging Tree (1957). “The Last Boast” appears in the second of those volumes, as does the classic “Lost Sister”, which won the Spur Award that year. “Lost Sister” would probably rank much higher on any list of the greatest Western short stories of all time, but “The Last Boast” remains my favorite Dorothy Johnson story for this reason: in only 1700 words, Johnson spun a tale with such enormous emotional power that it still impacts me decades after I first read it.
Gossard, Hilton, and Wolfer Joe Kennedy are about to be hanged for dry-gulching and murdering two miners. The deputy marshal asks Kennedy, at the scaffold, “I was wondering –did you ever do one good thing in your life?”
Wolfer Joe looked into his eyes and answered with his lips pulled back from his teeth, "Yeah. Once. I betrayed a woman.”

The deputy is puzzled –that is a strange thing for a man to boast about with his last breath. Most of the following pages are a flashback in which Kennedy remembers the woman he loved when he was young, and who loved him.

Annie would do anything for him –even give up a stable life to follow him into the unknown. Kennedy himself knew that, even though that was loyal on her part, it was not a good investment for her.

He had few illusions about himself. Once he had said, grinning, "Reckon I was born bad." More accurately, he might have said, "I was born outside the law, and mostly I've stayed outside it."
And beyond even concern for Annie’s future, the depth of her love frightened him…
He saw love by the fire, and he could not endure looking for fear he might see it end, during that night or some year to come.

And so Wolfer Joe Kennedy had made a fateful decision, at the age of 29… a decision he could look back on as death stared him in the face, and say “yes, I did do one good, decent thing, one thing I can be proud of.”
I won’t give it all completely away, though you can probably guess how and why he betrayed his love and was proud of it. You should read it for yourself, either by buying the book or by doing a quick google search –as it turns out, this story gets assigned in high school and college English classes often, and is easy to find.

You should check out both of those books, though. In addition to “The Last Boast” and “Lost Sister,” between the two of them they contain several of the greatest western short stories ever published. In fact, if you were to assemble an informed list of the top ten western short stories, odds are that Dorothy Johnson alone would make up half of said list. Maybe you’ve heard of some of them:

“A Man Called Horse”
“The Hanging Tree”
“The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance”
“I Woke Up Wicked”


Both the above versions are out of print, but used copies are not difficult to find online.
 

Monday, December 16, 2024

Monday, Monday

 

THE ORDER was a decent, well made movie but it reminded me too much of the rise of white nationalists yet again to enjoy. There is an odd assortment of movies at the theater right now. I would like to see ANORA but it's only time is at 10 PM.

Watched the Christopher Reeve doc, which was very depressing too. Not just his paralysis either. Haven't decided on what I think of BLACK DOVE. It is pretty far-fetched but still sort of fun to watch. Also watching NO GOOD DEED (Netflix) SHRINKING (APPLE) BAD SISTERS (APPLE). 

READING still THE LIFE IMPOSSIBLE and THE WOMAN WITH THE CURE.

Today I am going to a concert with three friends. It is holiday Baroque Music. 

How about you?

Friday, December 13, 2024

FFB: DIE A LITTLE, Megan Abbott

 

Hard to believe this book will be 20 years old in 2025. We were on Cape Cod when we got the call from Megan saying Simon and Schuster had bought the book. The first agent she sent it to took it and the first publisher he sent it to took it. She wrote the book as a distraction from writing her Ph.D, (THE STREET IS MINE, Palgrave Press).

I love reading this book because it reminds me of Megan, the girl. It's the story of a school teacher who worries that her brother (a detective of sorts) has gotten mixed up with an evil woman. And in her investigation ( a little Nancy Drewish) gets mixed up with a bad man herself. It has a lot of the themes Megan loves: Hollywood, betrayal, femme fatales, lust. And the love of a brother is a big part of it.

If you haven't read it, it's a lot of fun.