Thursday, July 16, 2026

Recent Reading

Fiction

After Lonesome Dove last year, the finest novel I've read in a while, recent fiction reading pales in comparison. 

A Murder in Springtime by Martin Walker, is the 19th in his series about Bruno, Chief of Police, in the Vezere Valley of Dordogne, our favorite spot in France.  It continues the decline in quality of his more recent work with poor plotting, a lot of lecturing, and lazy characterizations.  As much as I enjoy the region, that's it for me - no more Bruno. 

Philip Kerr has a series about Bernie Guenther, a Berlin police detective during the Third Reich.  Bernie is opposed to the Nazis but keeps getting roped into situations that require him to cooperate to some extent, while simultaneously trying to expose them.  A Man Without Breathe, the second Bernie book I've read, is set around the 1943 discovery by the Germans of Stalin's Katyn massacre of thousands of captured Polish officers.  While the situation is intriguing and I keep wanting to like these books, I don't think they are well written or plotted.

In Los Angeles, Michael Connelly is still trying to find a lead character as compelling as Harry Bosch, who has aged out.  Ironwood, set on Catalina Island, is his latest attempt.  A good, but not compelling read.  At this point, I prefer Robert Crais' series with Joe Pike and Elvis Cole when it comes to LA crime stories.

I am looking forward to the release of Robert Harris' next historical novel in August which is about Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa.

A couple of weeks ago Mrs THC and I watched the Lonesome Dove miniseries.  While it could never match the novel it was still quite the experience; enjoyable, funny, moving.  Tommy Lee Jones is excellent while Robert Duvall is just astonishing. Followed the book very closely, taking much of the dialogue directly.  The only significant deviation was the final scene. I can understand why the change was made as the novel ends on an ambiguous and abrupt note, which I preferred but it would not work on TV. 

Non-Fiction 

The first three attempts to climb Mount Everest in 1921, 1922, and 1924 are the subject of Wade Davis in Into The Silence: The Great War, Mallory, and the Conquest of Everest.  All were British expeditions.  At the time Everest was inaccessible via Nepal, so the three British led expeditions, all went from Sikkim into Tibet, which at the time was an independent country, to approach the mountain from the north.  Most of the climbers were World War One veterans, most of whom were fully immersed in the horrors of that conflict, and Davis does an excellent job tying their experiences into the attitudes they brought to the expeditions.

The expeditions were permitted by the Dalai Lama and supported by Tibetan porters and Sherpas and Davis spends considerable time explaining their culture and religious beliefs. The first expedition traveled hundreds of miles and had to find out how to get to Everest in a way that would allow for a climb to be attempted.  Given the lack of equipment and clothing that is common today for climbing, along with the lack of oxygen, it is surprising so much was accomplished on that first try. The second expedition saw six Tibetan porters die in an avalanche, while the third climaxed with the disappearance of George Mallory and Sandy Irvine near the peak of Everest. Mallory's body was found in 1999 while part of Irvine's was discovered in 2021.  An incredible tale, well told.

The tale of Coronado's expedition (1540-42) into what is now the American Southwest and Great Plains is the subject of The Lost Cities of El Norte by Peter Stark.  While I've read other accounts of this exploration, this is the best, in part due to Stark being a fine writer.

I read Julian Jackson's biography of Charles De Gaulle in 2024 and just finished France on Trial, his account of the trial of Marshal Petain in 1945 at which the 89 year old head of the Vichy Regime was convicted of high treason and conspiracy to overthrow the Republic and sentenced to death, a sentence commuted by De Gaulle. Jackson explores the complex factors behind the trial as well as the day to day details. Interesting probably to a very limited audience.

The Witches by Stacy Schiff covers what is known as the Salem Witch Trials of 1692, which resulted in the hanging of 19 convicted witches, but which actually grew to engulf more than twenty Massachusetts communities with more than 700 people accused in those months.  My interest was triggered by the recent discovery that Mrs THC is not only descended from John and Priscilla Alden of the Mayflower voyagers but from individuals who were accused of being witches in 1692 as well as others who were accusers.  Before reading Schiff's book I only knew about the events of 1692 at a very general level.  She does a good job laying out how the hysteria erupted and grew and I had no idea of the extent to which it infected the colony.

Palestine 1936 by Oren Kessler and Anonymous Soldiers: The Struggle for Israel 1917-47 by Bruce Hoffman deal with aspects of the struggle over the fate of the Palestinian Mandate held by Britain from 1922 to 1948.  Although there were outbreaks of Arab violence against Jews in 1921 and 1929, it was only with the Arab Revolt of 1936-39 that the British became seriously entangled in the disputes over the Mandate.  The Arab Revolt, the subject of Kessler's even-handed account, while initially directed toward Jews eventually focused on the British, triggering massive crackdowns and reprisals.  Though the revolt was eventually crushed it had longer consequences, prompting the British to propose a partition of the Mandate, a plan reluctantly accepted by the Jews and rejected by the Arabs, and, in an attempt to pacify the Arabs, for the British to radically restrict the number of Jewish immigrants it would allow into Palestine, at a time when many European Jews were trying to flee Hitler.

Hoffman writes of the Arab resistance to the Jews and even more so, on the eventual emergence of Jewish groups, primarily Irgun and Lehi, which actively sought retaliation against Arabs, including at times innocent civilians, and against the British military.  He explores the sometimes murky connections between the Irgun (which from the early 1940s on was led by Menachem Begin, who proved to be a brilliant strategist) and the Haganah, mainline Jewish military organization, in which they sometimes cooperated and sometimes fought each other.  Overall Hoffman judges Irgun's approach, under the direction of Menachem Begin, who proved to be a brilliant strategist, to be the critical element in getting Britain to surrender its Mandate.  Palestine 1936 was very good but I found Anonymous Soldiers to be particularly informative.

An Abundance of Caution by David Zweig was an infuriating read.  Not that it was a bad book.  In fact, I highly recommend it.  It is a detailed, well-researched, and accurate account of the decisions to close schools and keep them closed during Covid.  Zweig lived in suburban New York with his young children and grew increasing frustrated with the actions of authorities at the local, state, and federal level, prompting him to dive into the available data.  What is infuriating about the book is reading how available information was repeatedly ignored by American authorities, even though by the spring of 2020 European data showed school posed no greater risk than staying at home.  I'd been aware of some of the research Zweig references but he pulled together a lot of additional information I'd not been familiar with.  What America did with children and Covid is a disgrace and resulted in both short and long-term damage.  I will definitely write a longer account on this topic.  

Wednesday, July 15, 2026

Cry Baby Cry

From Revolver on, John Lennon, who disliked his voice, insisted it be processed or altered, primarily through compression (called ADT), most famously on Tomorrow Never Knows when he instructed George Martin to make him sound like the Dalai Lama singing from a mountaintop. As someone who appreciated Lennon's vocals on the early Beatles albums, I did not like the production treatment of his vocals on the later records, which stripped out the fullness and warmth in his voice.  Cry Baby Cry is from the White Album in 1968, a song I liked on a double album of uneven quality.  However, this is Take 1 before Lennon's voice was altered and additional instruments added to the track and the vocal is superior to the final version.

Saturday, July 11, 2026

Vertical

Wonder how Pete Townshend's vertical jump height compares to Michael Jordan's.  Of course, Pete is doing it with a guitar.

 

Thursday, July 9, 2026

Maine Bound And Down

We spend summers in Maine, returning to Arizona in October  Last September I started seeing lots of posts in my Facebook feed from a guy named Graham Platner, mostly yelling about genocide in Gaza and using the usual code phrases regarding Jewish influence.  Seems he was running for the Democratic nomination for Senate.  I thought he was just some nut who'd get wiped out in the primary.  Instead he drove the incumbent Democratic governor, a solid progressive, out of the race and won the nomination.

That's despite:

- the Jew bashing

- the Commie loving

- the Nazi tattoo wearing(1)

- the phony background story 

- enlisting in the Army, not because of patriotism or a sense of duty, but because he liked killing people 

- mocking the death of his fellow soldiers 

- the rape fantasies (to be fair he said he'd only rape to establish dominance not as a sexual thing)

- sexually assaulting a Republican woman 

No, what it took to finally drive him out of the race was sexually assaulting a Democratic woman.  Tells you a lot about the state of the Democratic party in Maine.  None of the other stuff mattered - and the Jew bashing was seen as a positive by D voters. You could also already tell how bad Platner was just by looking at the Senators endorsing him early on - The Bum (Sanders), The Cherokee Princess (Warren), The Dirtbag (Gallego), and The Callow Youth (Murphy).

Actually, it's a bit misleading to say it was the sexual assault on the D lady that did it.  The truth is that a week ago, polls in Maine showed Susan Collins (R) edging ahead of Platner in the Senate race.  Usually, Collins trails the D challenger, only pulling ahead in the final couple of weeks of the campaign, but here she was beginning to open a lead on Platner in early July, spelling his doom.  Time for the D's to pull the plug in time to insert another candidate, so time to come forward with the sexual assault claim. 

Platner is a strong indicator of where the Democratic party is headed in Maine but there was another story, under covered in the media, that really tells you about the danger Maine Democrats (and those similarly situated elsewhere) pose to our democracy.

In early 2025, a Republican State Representative, Laurel Libby, posted a photo of a local high school track meet on Facebook.  One of the winners in the girl's competition was a boy who claimed he was a girl.  The representative stated in her post that this was wrong and boys should not be allowed to compete in girls competitions.

The Maine House of Representatives is narrowly controlled by Democrats, 75 to 72.  The House voted on party lines to censure the Republican representative and, until she apologized, banned her from speaking and voting in the House.  Not even one Democrat representative saw anything wrong with this action.(2)

Rep. Libby filed a federal court action seeking an injunction against the House for stripping her constituents of representation in the legislature.  In the District Court, a Biden appointed judge saw nothing wrong with the silencing of Rep. Libby and refused to grant the injunction.  Libby appealed to the First Circuit but a three judge panel of Biden appointees saw nothing wrong and declined to grant the injunction. 

It finally took an appeal to the United State Supreme Court to get Libby's request granted (Sotomayor and Jackson dissenting). After the Supreme Court action, the legislature lifted the sanctions.

What happened to Rep Libby is as much an indicator as Platner's primary win, of how radical Maine Democrats have become.  Libby was opining on a public issue, taking a position that all polling shows is the majority position of all Americans nationwide.  Yet every Maine representative voted to silence her, and Democratic appointees at the District and Appellate Court levels refused to intervene.

What has become ever more evident over the last few years is that Democrats have convinced themselves they are entitled to use all measures to suppress dissent, and will use any excuse to do so. To them, democracy is when they win everything.  They oppose diversity in viewpoints.  Look at their hysteria over losing control of just one social media platform - twitter when Elon Musk purchased it. They have an insatiable need to control every avenue of opinion, every institution, every organ of government. What happened in the Maine state legislature in 2025 is just the front of the new wave of repression.  If the Democrats attain a trifecta at the federal level and stuff the Supreme Court with radical justices, a plan they have adopted as their goal, in the future elected opposition figures like Rep. Libby will be successfully suppressed.  There is no "moderate" wing of the Democratic Party left.

Taken together, the path forward for Maine Democrats is to find a new candidate who is Jew-bashing, Commie loving, and thinks boys should play on girl's teams and be allowed in their bathroom, but does not sexually assault Democratic women.  

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(1)  Best quip I saw on this was that Platner's autobiography is called Maine Kampf. 

(2) The nominal justification for the sanctions was that Rep Libby included a photo and name of the boy in question.  Here's how the game is played; whatever a Democrat says or does is free speech, whatever their opponents do is, even it is speech, is the equivalent of an action and deemed harmful or unsafe and thus justifies suppression.  Here's how it works if your actions break the law but are in support of a Democratic favored cause. Recently, several members of Antifa were convicted and sentence to prison for violent acts in Dallas as part of their anti-ICE activites, including shooting a law enforcement officer in the neck.  In Democratic circles this was reported as being sentenced because of "protests", so it becomes another example of Trump's "fascism".

Waitin' For My Ya-Ya

Time we had a little zydeco music (a fusion of Cajun and rhythm & blues) here.  It's a cousin to Dr John's style of music.  This is Buckwheat Zydeco from 1985, a cover of Lee Dorsey's 1961 original.  Buckwheat Zydeco (aka Stanley Dural Jr) had a long career, winning five Grammy's between 1985 and 2010.

Buckwheat Zydeco playing on the main stage at the 2006 Festival International de Louisiane 

Wednesday, July 8, 2026

Beginning To Leave

On this date in 1969 the initial withdrawal of American troops from South Vietnam began as ordered by President Nixon a few weeks earlier.  This first phase involved 25,000 troops from the approximately 540,000 currently in that country.  By the fall of 1971 troop levels were down to about 190,000.  The last American forces left by early 1973.  South Vietnam fell to the North Vietnam communists in April 1975, ending a thirty year civil war.

For how America became engaged in the conflict read Dereliction of Duty