Monday, December 30, 2024

Monday, Monday

 

Timothee Chalamet does a great job of both singing and playing Dylan. He creates his own version of him and a credible one it is. All of the music is sung by the actors playing Dylan, Baez, Seeger, etc. A bit long, but delightful. Living through those years, undoubtedly helps.

Reading Megan's EL DORADO DRIVE, which comes out in June. This one takes place in Grosse Pointe on around 2008, which is both eerie and fun.

Watching the most recent season of SHETLAND on Britbox. Still not crazy about Ashley Jensen-the two women run together for me. I wish they had promoted Tosh and brought in a personable male for her. Jimmy Perez is hard to replace.

Watched the final episode of BAD SISTERS, which was a disappointment. I think they have played that show out in two seasons. SHRINKING fared a bit better. 

Had a nice holiday. Can't believe in was close to 60 here yesterday. So much rain though.

How about you?


Friday, December 27, 2024

Favorite Movies of 2024


In no particular order

SMALL THINGS LIKE THESE

GHOSTLIGHT

STRANGE DARLING

LAST SUMMER

PERFECT DAYS

THE TASTE OF OTHERS

I SAW THE TV GLOW

FRIDA

A COMPLETE UNKNOWN 

EXHIBITING FORGIVENESS

ANORA

CONCLAVE
THE CHIMERA
FILMS OF MERCHANT-IVORY


A few of these were from 2023 but I didn't see until 2024. Despite the strike and other mishaps, I didn't think it was a bad movie year.

Thursday, December 26, 2024

FFB: SALVATION OF A SAINT, Keigo Higashino

 

I think I read THE DEVOTION OF SUSPECT X a few years back but this one made a greater impression. A businessman is poisoned and the plot hinges on the police (along with a physics professor) figuring out how the poison was administered. And a devious solution it is. Thoroughly enjoyed it and will read more. Thanks TracyK for mentioning this on your blog.

Wednesday, December 25, 2024

                                                                    2024
                                                     (Haphazard) Happy Holidays          

                                                            Maybe around 2000

                                                                Christmas 2023
                                                                    1998                                                                    1977


                                                                1975

             
                                                                    2005

                                                                    2015
                                                                        2016
                                                                        2017


                                                            Christmas 2019

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.

Wednesday, December 11, 2024

Short Story Wednesday: "Between the Shadow and the Soul" Lauren Groff in THE NEW YORKER, Dec 16, 2024

https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2024/12/16/between-the-shadow-and-the-soul-fiction-lauren-groff
 

There is a lot to take in in this story. I listened to it first and then went back and read it, realizing how much I miss with listening. It's not a hearing issue because it comes right through my hearing aids. But rather a focus issue. I drift off and come back minutes later. 

A woman retires at fifty from the post office. Her husband is still teaching and she veers close to a nervous breakdown. He helps her to find new activities. Eventually she takes up pottery, exercise, a class in growing plants. She has a flirtation with her Dutch greenhouse instructor that doesn't really go anywhere. 

There was something unsatisfying about this story. It was too long for its subject and yet not long enough. There were too many characters, too many events for a short story. It probably would make a better novel. But Groff writes both so this might be its intended length. Sometimes it is hard to put your finger on why something doesn't work. In this case, I never understood the protagonist well enough. 

TracyK

George Kelley

Jerry House 

Todd Mason 

Monday, December 09, 2024

Monday, Monday

MARIA was okay although the director's earlier movies SPENCER and JACKIE O were better. 

LOST LADIES, an Indian movie, was better.

Watching SHRINKING (Apple), BAD SISTERS, (APPLE), A MAN ON THE INSIDE (Netflix), SOMEBODY, SOMEWHERE (Max). I am sad SOMEBODY is over after tonight. I would like to have the characters from this one in my life.

My Roku broke and I had to reinstall all the streaming channels. I really have no idea what I am doing in so many areas of my life. On Wednesday, three friends and I went to what we thought was a concert with four string players from the DSO. I wondered why I got an email telling me I could bring any comfort items I wanted. It turned out this was a concert for families with handicapped children. Must learn to read the fine print more closely.

Got tkts to see the statue of David when we are in Florence. Hope we didn't screw that one up.

Reading  The Life Impossible by Matt Haig. 

What about you?

Friday, December 06, 2024

FFB-THE FILM THAT CHANGED MY LIFE, Robert K Elder

 

Thirty directors choose the film that sent them on the course to movie making in this collection. Some are expected influences and others surprising. Like Richard Linklater, whose films are generally gentle, picking RAGING BULL. The format is interviews and the answers are usually pretty interesting. It's also interesting if you know their work to see if it reminds you of their mentor.

What film, if any, had an influence on you? BONNIE AND CLYDE seemed like it came out of another world for me in 1969. I had never seen violence portrayed so vividly. Now that is not exactly an endorsement but it changed the way I saw a shootout.

Wednesday, December 04, 2024

Short Story Wednesday: NIGHT CALL AND OTHER STORIES OF SUSPENSE, Charlotte Armstrong

 Ed Gorman is the author of the Sam McCain and Dev Conrad series of crime novels.

Charlotte Armstrong Night Call & Other Stories



New from Crippen & Landru

   I first read Charlotte Armstrong after seeing a 1952 movie called "Don't Bother To Knock." The stars were Richard Widmark and Marilyn Monroe. Monroe plays a seriously disturbed young woman asked to babysit the child of Widmark and his wife. Monroe is terrific--terrifying. Will she kill the kid?
   I'd seen the name Charlotte Armstrong on the metal paperback racks. She always seemed to have a new paperback out. And she was in Ellery Queen a lot. I tracked down Mischief which the Monroe movie was based on and became an Armstrong fan for life.
   If she was not as phantasmagoric as Dorothy B. Hughes sometimes was or as Elizabeth Sanxay Holding almost always was, Armstrong, as a critic recently noted, updated the gothic tropes of the previous generation and made of them tart and contemporary popular art.
  No critic of the time was a bigger promoter of Armstrong's work than Anthony Boucher. He noted that she was the creator of "suburban noir" and he was right.
  Though she used the tropes of what was dismissively called "women's fiction" she took them into a nether realm that was riveting and terrifying.
  Editors Rick Cypert and the late Kirby McCauley have collected here a collection of short and long stories that are a tribute to the Armstrong finesse and darkness.
  None of the pieces here have ever been collected before and there is also unpublished material.
  Everything in the book is packed with excellent storytelling but my favorite has to be the long novelette "Man in The Road") about a "career woman" (yes that was how they were divided from "real women" :) ) who returns home to a small bleak desert town only to find herself accused of a sinister mysterious hit-and-run. I'll pay this the highest compliment I can--this is the kind of twisty crime story Richard Matheson excelled at. It would have been perfect for the long form "Alfred Hitchcock Presents."
  My favorite of the shorter pieces is "The Cool Ones" which concerns the kidnapping of grandmother and makes as contemporary a statement  as the Flower Power era she wrote it in.
  This is not only a major collection of a major writer  (thanks to Sarah Weinman for bringing so many overlooked women writers back to our attention) but is also the most beautifully jacketed and produced book Crippen & Landru has ever published. 
 

Monday, December 02, 2024

Monday, Monday


 Really cold now. I wonder what it would be like to live in a warmer, sunnier climate.

Saw three decent movies: A REAL PAIN, WICKED and ALL WE IMAGINE AS LIGHT. The third one I slept through mostly, a shame because I think it was the best of the lot. Three women slept while the man took notes for us. 

We celebrated Kevin's 18th. And then they took off for Chicago. So nice that he is still happy to go places with his parents. He is excited to be seeing SECOND CITY.

Enjoying LATER DATERS on Netflix as well as this and that. Also COLIN FROM ACCOUNTS (Paramount).

Still working my way though ALL FOURS (Miranda July, which is so very odd. Also a novel about a woman involved in solving polio. WOMAN WITH THE CURE. 

What about you? Had enough turkey?