Sunday, March 1, 2026

Sunday Book Review: Living the Overcoming Life by Richardson George

Title: Living the Overcoming Life 

Author: Richardson George

Date: 2015

Quote: "This book presents practical principles for overcoming life's many challenges drawn from the life of Jesus Christ."

Of the making of inspirational sermons and Bible study books about how to lead a good Christian life, there is no end. Nor should there be. Christians love writing them, and Christians love reading them. This book is a good example of its genre.  Richardson George discusses overcoming rejection, fear, personal attacks, and other obstacles to leading a good Christian life. 

What you'll like about this book: Solid outline, focussed presentation of the author's points, and a good sound scriptural foundation all the way. 

What's not to like: I found one thing. The author does not parrot the too common advice Christians get to "Be a people person!", in defiance of the neurological fact that being "a people person" seems to be mostly a defense against a defect or damage to the brain that keeps a person from developing a healthy conscience or, usually, any other talent that involves a healthy cerebrum. "People persons" seem to live in a torture chamber of envy, resentment, and fear of other people that comes out as an obsession with getting control of other people's attention. They probably do like, and may try to reward, those who encourage their antics but their attitudes toward people who have talents and vocations, and don't reward the "people person's" demands for attention, give them away. The Bible doesn't say that they're not going to be resurrected at all, since they don't have fully human minds, but the arguments for that interpretation are credible. The way twentieth century society devolved into a support group for these wretched extroverts was one of the major obstacles that people with spiritual consciousness have to overcome..I could not recommend a book that specifically advised Christians to try to imitate these puppies in human shape, and I'm glad to report that this book doesn't do that. But it does include in its bibliography, and thereby recommend, a book with the actual title Be a People Person.

In view of the fact that the most convincing way a person who has a conscience can pass for an extrovert is to have a blood alcohol content beyond the legal limit for operating a motor vehicle, it's encouraging to note that the author is in favor of sobriety and offers sound advice for those tempted to backslide into drinking alcohol, taking drugs, shoplifting, and all the stupid little sins that tempt the very young.

The function of books like this one is not primarily to teach people things they didn't know, but to remind them of teachings they may have been tempted to overlook. Living the Overcoming Life is likely to offer a good reminder to almost any Christian in almost any situation. That means it's also a good choice to give as a gift.

Praying for You

People posting on the Internet often request prayers.

Reading these posts, I used routinely to type "Prayers said." It was true. I would in fact bow my head over the keyboard and silently pray, "Dear Lord, please help this person, whoever and wherever the person is." 

Many times, that was all I knew about the situation and all I ever thought about it afterward. I would park the computer in town overnight, and by the time I turned it on again the next day, I might remember that a long-term e-friend was preparing for surgery but I would have forgotten the strangers with the sick children, the need to find lodging in a new city, the employers going out of business, and so on.

Some people began to complain, not to me specifically but to the Internet generally, about the routine typing of things like "prayers said" or "you will be in our thoughts and prayers." They didn't believe these things were even true, they didn't believe it would do any good if they were, and what if the people being prayed for had a different religious identity and thought our prayers were idolatrous?

Considering the matter, I decided that those momentary prayers that didn't take longer for me to think at God than they took for me to type "prayers said" were not worth mentioning on the Internet. I did not stop thinking those prayers at God. I recognized that typing the phrases did not necessarily send moral support to the strangers for whom I entertained fleeting thoughts of good will, and might even be seen as trying to claim some sort of credit from other people for having thoughts of good will, which seemed absurd. Christianity itself is hard enough to understand without having to try to understand things that aren't Christian at all, like a person claiming credit for thinking kind thoughts, as if they had anything to do with Christianity. So I stopped retyping the words.

During the past week I felt a very strong urge, more than once, to pray for a specific e-friend who had not requested prayers or even directly expressed a need.

In real life I've had only a few friends who identified as Neo-Pagans, the catchall category that includes several unaffiliated groups of people of different types and outlooks. The few were especially congenial people, when we were forty years younger. They wanted to express their spirituality in lively and practical ways, without going back to churches where they had been spiritually, emotionally, or even physically abused. They wanted to affirm what many classified as feminine aspects of the spirit and of the Great Spirit--peace, tolerance, love of Nature, acceptance of the body, nurturance of the environment--and to replace the nasty baggage some people had placed on femininity itself with an awareness of the feminine qualities even the Bible ascribes to God.

They were easy for me to like, and the writings of Neo-Pagans like Isaac Bonewits and "Starhawk" (Miriam Simos) were also easy to like. I myself, however, never felt rebellious enough toward God or Christ or Christianity to feel a need to worship Juno or Kwan Yin. (A lot of cultural appropriation went on in Neo-Pagan circles.) When I read The Spiral Dance I always thought, "What's missing from Christian practice today that people are finding here? What in this book properly belongs to, and ought to be reclaimed by, Christianity, and what is mere self-indulgence?"

At the time, in the churches I attended, about the most charitable thing that would ever have been said if someone had come in saying "Well I'm 'gay'; I've been happily living with the same person-of-the-same-sex for ten years and think I'm committed to person for life, I only want to let people know that we don't need to meet your single relatives," would have been "Let's all pray that God will heal you of THAT!" In contrast to that, the Neo-Pagans would say "That's cool! You know the virgin goddess Athena had a very dear friend, Pallas, whose gender the Greek writers disagreed on, whom she accidentally killed in a game. In real history the cult of Athena must have destroyed or absorbed what started out as a friendly group, possibly the cult of Pales. In Greco-Roman religion Athena adopted Pallas's name, never married, and ritually mourned for her beloved friend. She would understand how you feel about your girlfriend," or "The Greek gods replaced Hebe with Ganymede as their cupbearer because Zeus preferred the view when Ganymede bent over. He would sympathize with your feelings for your boyfriend." Sexual diversity was welcome in Neo-Pagan circles, as were other deviations from social norms. There were even Neo-Pagans who accepted asexuality. That was nice to know during my ace phase.

Toward the end of my ace phase I was even invited to a Neo-Pagan spring gathering by an older male friend who was entering his own postsexual phase. We went to a large public park, where we were greeted and handed cookies. Mine was the sort of coconut walnut macaroon Mother used to make, and I was glad it didn't have the overpowering taste of the honey Mother used to buy from the old neighborhood beekeeper. I didn't pay much attention to the cookie because I was noticing, as a freshman-class baby-boomer, that every other person there appeared to be a senior-class baby-boomer except for a few people with (yikes!) white hair! Someone kept walking around asking "Who got the cookie with the whole nut in it?" and I finally had the presence of mind to ask, "Was it an English walnut?" Apparently everyone else's cookie was plain coconut. Having got the walnut half, I had been selected by lot to impersonate the goddess of spring. Body language suggested that whatever good will some other women in the group had been prepared to extend toward a stranger had just evaporated--they might have wanted to take that role. In some close-knit covens this would have been altogether inappropriate for a stranger and unbeliever, but at this public gathering, where all I had to do was stand in the middle of the circle and exchange fresh strawberries with one of the older men, it didn't seem like a bad thing so I played along. I didn't think I was all that gaunt, jaundiced, and haggard, after two or three years of being able to work and live a normal life, but I took it as a reality check that someone said, "Inanna would be a good spiritual name for you." For a small group of people in Maryland it may still be my name. I avoided those people, after that. Inanna's best known attribute was not the part of myself with which I wanted to be identified. Fortunately they seemed content to be avoided.

It was a nice day in the park but on the way back my friend and I felt that, although nobody seemed to take the notion of "worshipping" randomly chosen fellow mortals seriously, although the crowd were mostly nice sober employees of the federal government who thought that, if anything, asking people to stand around symbolizing the cosmic principle of springtime and new life was too theatrical and silly, nevertheless we'd participated in something that was not appropriate for non-churchgoing Christians to do. ("Though it was suitable that they picked you," he said thoughtfully. "I mean a lot of the other women are prettier than you are, but you're so young..." We remained friends.) 

I never tried to worship any attribute of the Holy One in fellowship with a Neo-Pagan, ever again. The experience wasn't traumatic; it felt more like having put my shoes on the wrong feet. And I never seriously tried to cast a spell, although I did once try to psych someone out with the surface trappings of one. Christians pray and trust in God. I wondered whether God withdrew support from me, in the conflict with that person, because I was meant to give the person a solidly Christian message rather than appropriating a message from the person's non-Christian culture.

In the church of which I'd been a full member, for a few years, anything to do with Neo-Paganism was considered idolatry. I should have repented, burned all those Neo-Pagan books, and shunned the friends who weren't willing to burn theirs. In the church whose college had finally accepted me as a student, Neo-Paganism was seen as a valid path to spiritual understanding and could be practiced in a Sunday School room, if not in the sanctuary. If I'd wanted to worship Wicca or Artemis or Sarasvati, with the Unitarians that would have been cool. I never have taken either position. It's seemed to me that the strictly Christian path my family set me on was better, but that the Holy One knows each of our hearts well enough to know whether Neo-Paganism is a valid spiritual path for one person or an infantile show of rebelliousness for another person. I am not qualified to judge. 

The Old Testament prophets had an easy job. Their religious group was defining itself in opposition to groups that had not fully rejected human sacrifice. The various cults of Baal (which was a general Semitic word for "lord and master," and was sometimes used by devout Israelites to mean the God of Israel, and is still used in Hebrew to mean the owner of a house or business) still encouraged people to produce too many babies and get rid of the babies whose fathers didn't want to rear them, whether by "making them pass through the fire" and burning some of them alive, or by "exposing" them to the care of the general group in a public place where some babies were adopted and some starved. The questions we debate today about how bad overpopulation is, whether it's justifiable for people who can afford multiple children and think their DNA deserves to be preserved in extra copies, etc., don't seem to have been raised; only the question whether a baby's parents were willing to rear it, as in our abortion clinics today. The Old Testament prophets could repeat, "Thou shalt not kill! Thou shalt not commit adultery! Thou shalt worship our God who has made these Commandments, and our God only shalt thou serve! All other forms of worship are idolatry and abomination!" And so for them it was.

The New Testament church had, however, a more difficult time. The Pagans they knew were more or less civilized. Paul said that if you were enlightened enough to have lost all fear of the idols of the Emperor's ancestors to whom most of the meat in the markets had been ritually dedicated before it was sold, then no guilt for "worshipping" those idols adhered to you. Paul even found a Greek temple dedicated "To the Unknown God," and cheerfully told an audience, "Whom therefore you ignorantly worship, I declare unto you. That's the God I'm here to tell you about." Sincere believers in the Pagan gods who embodied ideals like Justice, Health, and Public Spirit were worshipping attributes of God and were to be further enlightened, not chastised. It was the people sitting in the Jewish Temple and worshipping Money who deserved to be whipped. 

So I did not think it was my business to tell Neo-Pagans that they ought to be Christians. 

I do think, from what those few Neo-Pagans I knew told me, that reconciliation with Christianity would have been the best thing for them. I've never felt called to oversee that process. If in your mind "Christianity" really means "the Catholic Church where the priest molested me and the nun whipped me for telling her," then I don't know whether God demands that you become what you believe a Christian needs to be; I certainly don't demand that. If in your mind "being a Christian" means "not making my mother, in whose home I live and from whom I regularly receive material benefits, weep over my apostasy and pray that I'll repent, because I enjoy torturing my mother," then you are not a friend of mine. Either way, I believe that God can send you a Christian vision when God knows you can benefit from one. That is between God and you. If you have been living in rebellion against the form of Christianity you knew in the past, and would like to hear more about a different kind of Christianity, then talk to me.

In cyberspace I've found far more Neo-Pagan e-friends than I've found Neo-Pagan friends in real life. In cyberspace as in real life, they are congenial people--although they tend to vote blue, which has reduced their congeniality to Independent thought in recent years. I wish them all well, even if I wish them the great blessing of seeing how unhelpful socialist ideas are before they have a chance to aggravate the socialist ideas that are already doing us damage today. 

It surprised me that the thought kept popping into my mind last week, "Pray for X." Why X? Well, X is not a Christian. I've never asked why not. If I'd made a more diligent study of X's published writing I'd probably know. I've saved several of X's blog posts to files for printing, but printing costs money and those files are still languishing in cyberspace, unprinted. But X is older than I am, and may have some Christian people to seek reconciliation with, this spring, while X is still healthy enough that reconciliation with them might mean home nursing care. 

I've prayed for X. I don't want to burden X with even a private message that "by X, I mean you." I have had these thoughts about one older writer who's often been mentioned here, more than the others; I don't know that it matters, to readers, which one that is. All of them are nice cyberspace entities and good writers. I think some of them are ex-Christians, some are ex-Jews, and some may be ex-Scientific Humanists who have dared to reclaim spirituality as part of their humanity; that doesn't matter here. I don't know that it even matters that the need to pray for X felt urgent to me because X is older than I am. At any age people can lose loved ones with whom they need to be reconciled. At any age people can become ill. 

This much I do know from personal experience: Grief is cleaner when we were reconciled with people while they were alive. Spiritual feelings tend to seek reconciliation with the first true things we learned about God. Facing the Great Unknown is easier when we have accepted that feelings of guilt can have valid causes, and are most easily put behind us after those causes have been addressed. For anyone. At any age.

Web Log for 2.27-28.26

Glyphosate Awareness 

I was thinking the big story behind Trump's executive order protecting glyphosate manufacturing was Trump's long involvement with Syngenta, the company the order is obviously written to protect. I still think that but everyone should read this list of people in the Trump Administration who are known to be involved with Bayer and/or Monsanto. Pam Bondi is not the only one who needs to resign and get out of Washington.


This web site never recommends violence. There are, however, alternative ways to demonstrate our feelings about any further weaselly talk about "phasing it out" and "using up existing supplies," as distinct from the long needed TOTAL BAN for which farmers have had the seven years they needed to recover from the Vicious Pesticide Cycle. If you live near a bitter clinger to glyphosate and your reactions involve blood, well, blood throwing did serve the homosexual lobby well. This web site will only say that there are violent and nonviolent ways to throw blood. On pavement or the outsides of parked motor vehicles is nonviolent. 

History, Repeating 

Bill Clinton, photographed in hot tub with unidentified woman who wasn't Hillary, "did not have sex with that woman." We know he knows what year it is because he doesn't refer to her as "Miss Lewinsky." He says, "I did nothing wrong."

Er. Um.

As all good Southern Baptists of the baby-boom generation know, there are a lot of things that feel pretty dang sexy when people have feelings for each other. Playing board games, or talking on the phone, or sharing a laugh at the speaker's expense in assembly at school. The mere idea of all the other people having nothing to do but listen to Professor Natteron while you are sharing these very special sensations, looking into each other's eyes. Things we all did as reasonably cool bachelors saving our virginity for marriage can look and feel very similar to making babies, except that they don't make babies. Bill Clinton is, according to shameless Monica Lewinsky and nasty-minded Ken Starr, an expert at not doing what some call the sexual act while doing lots of things other people call safe sex.

But after marriage the rules change, Bill Clinton. Before marriage it's only natural to wonder and experiment and explore. After marriage you're not supposed to think lustful thoughts about other people. There's nothing left to wonder about, really. You're supposed to give Hillary Rodham Clinton a baby if and when she wants one. Your sense of curiosity and adventure is supposed to be redirected to other things, like work, or...well, some men may have the excuse that the only adventure left for them is work, but you, being Bill Clinton, could always be the first former President of the United States to do just about anything beyond playing golf. A lot of them play golf, because that's one of the easier things to do with Secret Service men underfoot.

Lying in a hot tub with some other woman, even if you're telling her that HRC is sure to find someone to make up a cozy foursome and pop into the tub at any minute, may not absolutely break the rule because it's possible for middle-aged people to lie in a hot tub with their minds focussed on feeling muscles relax. Frankly that's what the look on your face in that picture suggests you were thinking about, Bill Clinton. But we are told to abstain from all appearance of evil.

Music 

Vince Staten reminisces about the popular songs of his youth. Several of which were also popular in my youth. But I'd guess that even people who are currently young, even in the restrictive sense of, say, under age 30, have heard at least one out of three of these songs. They have a way of coming back onto radio playlists. I heard a couple of them during the past week.


Photographs 

Worth clicking through to see this prettiest of the pictures Joe Jackson took in Ireland last summer. (Parental warning: Many things at this site are PG-13, including a GIF of people bouncing on a bed.)


Politics 

Scott Pinsker is awfully uninformed. Doesn't everybody know that Hell is in Michigan? (And it freezes over every winter--despite the local warming effect that allowed it to log official temperatures, this winter, above those at the Cat Sanctuary.) Hell is, in fact, a little tourist town whose main tourist attraction is souvenirs that play on its name. And that settles that.

Pinsker's right about one thing, though. Gavin Newsom does not have Bill Clinton's please-please-oh-please-like-me sort of charm. Nor does he have Bernie Sanders' I-could-be-your-favorite-great-uncle charm. Nor does he have even Karine Jean-Pierre's do-I-look-like-a-living-Raggedy-Ann-doll-yet? kind of ditzy appeal. Newsom tried to be funny about being dyslexic and, thereby, revealed that his problem has nothing to do with being dyslexic. That is, he may really be dyslexic too, but he has a much more serious problem. He is also stupid. Dumb as they come. Asked turkeys for help on examinations. Probably has lost contests of wits to a box of rocks.

If you want to be a Classic Clueless White Person, you tell Black Americans you can relate to them because you like Aretha Franklin, or admire Michael Jordan, or wish you looked like Halle Berry or could get a date with someone who does. Telling them you can relate to them because you're stupid... 

Somewhere a box of rocks lost a place at Santa Clara University to Gavin Newsom. That box of rocks should sue.


Weird 

The Nephews knew this when they were three years old: There are some adults at whom you can safely throw snowballs, such as your Auntie Pris, and the worst thing that happens is that they throw snowballs back at you. These adults are exceptions. You should never throw snowballs at an adult unless you know for sure that that adult is among the exceptions. If you do, your ignorance, stupidity, and reckless endangerment of an older person's health, may make news headlines around the world, and people will remember, and you will not get a job, and when you try to get a disability pension the social workers will say, "Being a stupid jackass may be a disability but we don't have a program for it."

Years ago this web site shared a link to a news report of idiot kids throwing snowballs at an old man during a rare snow in Israel, where they hardly ever see enough snow to form a snowball so one can understand why kids living there would throw snowballs at anything and anyone in sight. 

Now it seems civilization has declined enough that people who were apparently adult-sized were caught throwing snowballs at police officers, on duty, in New York City. Where they get enough snow that it should have lost all novelty before their adult teeth started growing in.


Cartoon found at TheViewFromLadyLake.Blogspot.com. Google says it was posted earlier this morning by Tom Stiglich at Arcamax.com. 

Burying these people in snowbergs and then icing over the snowbergs would probably be considered an unusual punishment, but I submit that that's only because you don't see that level of idiocy in every decade. 

Friday, February 27, 2026

Bad Poetry: The Ice Dancers

Most of the Poets & Storytellers United have been watching the Winter Olympics. I have not, but I know the sort of eye candy that prompted this week's call for poems about dancing. I started writing a normal rhymed poem and then thought that this poem worked better with consonance rather than full rhymes...


They make it look so easy.
They're having so much fun.
We never see the hours
Of practice they put in.


Was it a planned and practiced move
Or a disastrous fall?
They're young! They're cute! They always grin!
We never can quite tell!


Whatever happened in real life,
They never let it show.
Defining grace in motion is
All they are paid to do.


For all our lives, and theirs, in our minds
They remain nineteen.
They go on to have private lives;
Nobody knows them, then.


Twirl on, the fairest of the land;
Your dances freeze in time.
Next year there will be different girls;
The dance will be the same.

1. Photo of Dorothy Hamill from Vogue
2. Photo of Tara Lipinski from facebook.com
3. Photo of Nancy Kerrigan from ebay.com
4. Photo of Michelle Kwan from britannica.com
5. Photo of Debi Thomas from alamy.com

Book Review: Counting Sheep

Book Review: Counting Sheep: The Log and Complete Play of Sheep on the Runway

Author: Art Buchwald

Date: 1970

Publisher: G.P. Putnam’s Sons

ISBN: none

Length: 219 pages

Illustrations: black-and-white photo insert

Quote: “Writing plays is pretty tough in Washington. Writing about anything except politics is pretty tough.”

So he wrote a play about how the American embassy destroys a small mythical Asian kingdom, not so much because the ambassador’s bratty kid wants to protest everything, nor because the embassy’s butler is a spy, but most visibly because a planeload of American “experts” want to sell the country a lot of things nobody really needs. Before the audience’s eyes, the peaceful kingdom is reduced to a banana republic whose prince has declared the whole embassy persona non grata.

Any resemblance to any small Asian countries our government was trying to help, at the time, is of course purely intentional, and the ethical acceptability of producing this play in 1970 was very questionable...but Buchwald’s light touch apparently made Sheep on the Runway acceptable. We all know the sequel: Buchwald became one of America’s best known and best loved syndicated satirists.

Sheep on the Runway, however, did not become a classic play. It went the way of almost all modern plays: it was protected by copyright laws, so while the author was waiting to sell it to Hollywood (or in this case writing witty newspaper columns) the student drama groups that keep live theatre alive, in most of the United States, were saying “We can’t afford it” and doing something by Shakespeare, or else by Gilbert & Sullivan, again. Too bad. Sheep on the Runway is quite funny.

Anyway, the book is now somewhat obscure. Many people became Buchwald fans only after Counting Sheep went off the market...Buchwald has fans who are younger than the book is. This means that, for Buchwald collectors, the book is a Rare Find.

Thursday, February 26, 2026

Book Review: The Giant

Book Review: The Giant

Author: William Pène du Bois

Date: 1954, 1970

Publisher: Viking

ISBN: none

Length: 124 pages

Illustrations: black-and-white drawings by the author

Quote: “My first instructions to the lad were ferociously firm and severe. ‘You must not pick up anybody without the person’s permission’...”

William Pène du Bois dedicated this one to “My Big Friend I. Lawrence Richter.” It’s a simple story about the point in an impossibly enormous toddler’s life when the Giant begins to learn to talk to normal-sized humans. Pène du Bois couldn’t resist drawing gadgets and contraptions to fit the impossible story, but the story seems also to have been shaped by empathy for the social isolation being larger than, say, 6’6” or 250 pounds tends to impose upon people.

He also couldn’t resist giving the story a touch of sophistication: the narrator, who is American, meets the Giant, who is Spanish, while both are touring the capital cities of Europe. The text is sprinkled with foreign words and descriptions of quaint buildings and exotic menus.

If you’re aware that, according to various laws of physics, it’s impossible for a human body to grow big enough to pick up live elephants and play with them as if they were puppies, suspending disbelief long enough to enjoy The Giant may be hard. Then again, a bit of preposterous imagination might help a normal, fast-growing child feel a little less awkward about being only two or three inches taller than everyone else at school.

All this author’s books were to some extent picture books, and appeal to art collectors as well as to children. 

Web Log for 2.26.26

Economics, Basic 

The Nephews already know this, but some young person out there needs the explanation: When the minimum wage is raised, minimum wage workers have more money in their pockets for a month or so. Then manufacturers and retailers raise the prices of things to offset the cost of paying their employees what used to be considered a living wage. Then minimum wage workers end up having less money in their pockets, even though it takes more money to buy things. People who want to raise your wages are not generally your friends. It makes more sense after you've lived through a few rounds of inflation, but we don't need any more inflation, so please, young people, trust those over age 30 on this.

Meet the Blog Roll: Ann Mackie Miller

This web site now has three series of posts on Thursdays: Meet the Blog Roll, Frugal Basics, and Dinner for Two for Less than Ten Dollars. Which comes next? You decide which to sponsor. All three series are sponsored by readers. 

For today, it is Meet the Blog Roll: Ann Mackie Miller, whose blog is "British Birds" at 


It's not been updated recently because it's pretty well filled. This blog gave me the mental model for my butterfly posts--only it consists only of bird articles, no link logs or book reviews or other fun stuff found here. Each article could be a chapter in a field guide, with clear, beautiful bird photos and facts about the birds' lives. If you are not British and have ever seen a reference to a bird in a British book and wondered what kind of bird the author meant, this web site will show you.

As with butterflies, several British species are found on both sides of the Channel and a few are found on both sides of the Atlantic. Many are considered close relatives of eastern North American species, having evolved only slight differences; some might be able to hybridize. Some, like the Mute Swan, Starling, and English Sparrow, were intentionally imported from Britain to North America. Some, like the Robin, aren't related, don't look much alike, and have similar names because British immigrants seem to have wanted to give familiar names to some sort of creature they found in North America. 

The British Birds blog may be more like a book-in-progress than like a typical blog, but those who enjoy birds will enjoy reading it. Its posts never really go out of date.

Some favorites:


Great Blue Herons became the icon for the Chesapeake Bay and efforts to keep the water that flow into it clean. So they are among my favorite birds--in my top hundred list, anyway. We used to think they were solitary creatures, only ever seen by ones. We've learned, as some specific kinds of pollution have been reduced, that herons are as solitary as they need to be. They are obligate carnivores who are built to catch prey in what seems a peculiar, inefficient way, so they spread themselves out enough during the day that each bird can find enough fish and shore creatures to survive. At the end of the day, family groups gather in a favorite tree. It has to be a large tree, for herons to roost in it, and as it will probably be grossly over-fertilized it's unlikely to last long. Anyway they "talk" to one another, and sometimes even "kiss" with their long sharp bills. North America's Great Blue Herons are different from Britain's Grey Herons and the Caribbean Islands' Cocoy Herons, but their ancestors may have been one species and, conceivably, their descendants might some day be considered one speies again.


Same species, and what adorable close-ups of the fluffy little goslings! Canada geese are fun to watch. They may all look alike to humans, but they clearly relate to one another as individuals. Couples bond and mate for life; extended family groups divide into nuclear family units while raising their young, then merge back into big flocks in winter. Some migrate and some don't. The return of the migrating family members to a favorite lake is always an occasion of much happy excitement. During the winter younger birds pair off. A flock of Canada geese often picks up a few geese of different species, and these become part of the extended family. These bold birds don't seem to mind being watched by humans as their babies grow up, but if you come too close they'll "goose" your knees. From their perspective, a golf course is a sad waste of a nice lake, to be discouraged by every means possible. They are, however, pretty good mowers and weeders of ordinary grassy fields.

And, of course...


It's not the little birds' fault that a name intended to sound like a noisee they make happened to sound like "teat" in English. As a result Internet wits are always using "tit pics!" as a come-on and displaying pictures of small gray birds. Britain has a few different species of tits. North America has one, in the West; in most places we have to get by with chickadees, nuthatches, and juncos. Tits not only don't produce milk, but consume it. Britain's blue tits worked out a way to pick the tops off British milk bottles in the mid-twentieth century.




Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Book Review: The Pink Motel

I searched the Internet. Today a row of six little pink cabins on the beach is hard to find in Florida, because so much of the beach has been filled with big expensive hotel buildings...and yes, some of the big ones are pink! In real life, a pink motel has turned out to be a viable idea.


Photo from Google.

Title: The Pink Motel

Author: Carol Ryrie Brink

Date: 1959

Publisher: Macmillan

ISBN: none

Length: 183 pages

Illustrations: drawings by Sheila Greenwald

Quote: “Although they had been warned in advance, the Mellens were also astonished by the color of the motel...It was pink, pink, PINK.”

There’s plenty of nonsense in this tale of the bland Northern family who inherit the flamingo-pink motel building. There’s even a fictional motif I usually hate—the plot where the ten-year-old is the only one who notices or understands something any competent adult would have noticed or understood first—which becomes tolerable, in this book, because it’s deliberately exaggerated for comedy purposes. But it’s not pure nonsense; The Pink Motel is also a satire about conformity, and probably also about McCarthyism.

This is a comic satire about people who try to be sensible, inconspicuous, and predictable at all times, and therefore either fail to see what’s right under their noses, or else use their own superficial conformity to take advantage of anyone who believes conformity is good. Children and eccentric senior citizens have to rescue people like the Mellen parents from crimes, even though the crimes are both preposterously petty and preposterously obvious, because the Mellen parents have mental blind spots for anything unexpected. Kirby and Bitsy Mellen want to consult their parents when things look suspicious to them, but their parents keep telling them not to be silly—well-dressed, icily polite men with bulges under their coats can’t be carrying concealed weapons, and so on.

Kirby, Bitsy, and their parents have inherited the motel and its guests from an eccentric uncle. Kirby’s buddy, nicknamed “Big” because he’s the smallest in his family, speaks an outdated dialect but knows more about living in Florida than any other character in the book. Bitsy’s buddy, Sandra, has been trained to sit still “with her nose in the air” by her rich conformist parents, but the other children liven her up.

Then there’s Miss Ferry, whose shrewdness and ability to produce snacks out of nowhere suggest that she may be a “fairy” or wizard, and Mr. Carver, a very wise penniless eccentric wood carver, and Marvello, a depressed stage magician, and Miss DeGree, who will become the damsel in distress, and Mr. Black and Mr. Locke, who ooze criminality to such an extent that only conformists like the children’s parents would trust them for a second. Then there’s the baby alligator...

Carol Ryrie Brink is best known for realistic family stories that were based on facts, like Family Grandstand, Mademoiselle Misfortune, Two Are Better than One, and most of all the Newbery Award story of Caddie Woodlawn. Not all readers who liked those books appreciated The Pink Motel. Brink had written other whimsical stories in the doesn’t-have-to-make-sense-as-long-as-it’s-funny mode, however, like Baby Island and The Highly Trained Dogs of Professor Petit; and some of her readers liked her in both modes.

Today, The Pink Motel is an obscure children’s classic...and my copy definitely shows the effects of fifty years of enjoyment by children. 

Things from Fiction that I'd Like to See in the Real World

This week's Long & Short Reviews blog challenge asks which of the things reviewers have read about in fiction we'd like to see in the real world.

Of course, some of these things exist in the real world already, in a less perfect form...

1. The wise and occasionally magical grandfather/chieftain, like Ralph in Priscilla Bird's Book of Ralph and (so far) two sequels. Ralph is the leader of a peaceful and enlightened group of Sasquatch. As such he's hailed as the king of a forest community that includes cave-dwelling Neanderthal-like humans, talking ravens, unusually clever and social pumas, various other wild creatures, and quite a few normal modern humans from town who find their way to the forest and learn from the forest dwellers. Each story from their enchanted forest has something to teach humans about solving our real problems.

I had the relative I've referred to as Great-Uncle Vito at this web site. Some of us had our own grandfathers or great-uncles, or family friends, or even our own parents were the wise elders of a little close-knit community.

2. Accommodation Spells, as in Piers Anthony's Xanth series. The writer known as Piers Anthony liked porn and liked annoying people. Although the Xanth novels keep sex off the scene, Accommodation Spells are sold mostly to allow magical creatures of different sizes to crossbreed. In practice you know they'd be sold to allow creatures of different sizes and shapes to use tools and devices, too. "I typed so much more efficiently on the smaller keyboard of the Original or Practically Perfect Toshiba Satellite," a character like me might observe, and use the Accommodation Spell to shrink the keyboard of the computer the character was using.

In the real world, unfortunately we have to do the work of building accommodations. Still, progress is being made. A few years ago I lamented that the Mexican restaurant in my town, being sold because its owners couldn't afford to restore the building after storm damage, was taking with it the cutest little movable wheelchair ramp you ever saw. Today when I was downtown I saw that another store had bought the little ramp, and meanwhile on each block of the downhill side of West Jackson Street a big, permanent wheelchair ramp has been built in to help visitors deal with the steep steps between sidewalk and parking space.

3. The ability to fly by simply learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss, as in Douglas Adams' So Long and Thanks for All the Fish. No more expensive, wasteful jet fuel!

Actually, the real world would be more fun if it only had Douglas Adams in it.

4. A book boyfriend for everybody who really wanted one, as in thousands if not millions of romance novels. Granted, most women don't actually like the heroes of most romance novels, but this is as it should be. We shouldn't like other people's men very much. Who cares how unappealing everyone else's book boyfriend is when her own book boyfriend is, if not already married to her, probably angling for a second chance to meet her now. Men could either evolve into book boyfriends, or settle for their own kind of fantasy girlfriends, many of which would continue to be inflatable plastic objects.

In practice it's probably best if women become our own book boyfriends. Book boyfriends do not exist in the real world and men who can be good husbands like women who take care of ourselves. Meanwhile the main obstacle to women's success and the main source of women's emotional problems is the way women rush into relationships with men who waste our energy and time.

5. The Chasti-tree, as in a Xanth novel I'm glad Piers Anthony did not write for me about 1990. The early Xanth novels annoyed women by including rape-terrorism. The Chasti-tree was a magic tree whose wood, if even a sliver of it was aimed at a male, neutralized all interest in sex for a day or two at a time. Once Xanth females discovered this tree, every home had one, every female carried a twig in her pocket, and further novels would be less annoying. In the Xanth novels as they were written, females achieved liberation in a sillier, funnier way, by discovering panty magic. The sight of panties turned out to be enough to stun Xanth males. 

In real life, the Bobbitt case had a salutary effect on my generation of men. We may need a similar case, though, to enlighten younger men. Especially if we want to allow men from Muslim countries to live in the English-speaking countries, it needs to be impressed on their minds that touching a woman in any way to which she objects can be more than their lives are worth. The punishment needs to be done by women, on the spot, and vigorously supported by men as well as women. 

6. Fully reliable election results, as in so many political speeches in this era when every election seems to be followed by a demand for a recount. 

In real life, after several generations of voting machines were invented to address the possibilities for confusion and cheating with paper ballots, paper ballots may still be the most reliable voting technology on Earth. It would be helpful if there were ways to keep people like Lyndon Johnson from mysteriously discovering boxes of ballots, marked in their favor, when the real popular vote seemed to be going against them. It would be helpful if there were ways to keep people like Lyndon Johnson out of the population altogether.

7. Odor-free biomass burners, as in the mind of Bill Gates and many other technological dreamers and science fiction writers.

I would like to live in a world where instead of feeling guilty if we flush the nastiest forms of biomass into rivers, or try to bury modern toilet outputs under rosebushes, we all sold biomass as fuel. All living things on Earth contain carbon. As we all should have learned in fifth grade science, that carbon can be purified by heating and compaction, forming the sort of cheap peaty stuff Europeans buy as "brown coal" while you watch in the classroom, and can, if you can afford the heating and compaction processes for several days, be further refined into your choice of soft coal, hard coal, or synthetic diamonds. Nearly all garbage--paper, plastic, banana peels, garden weeds, tissue paper and all it is used to wipe off--can go into a biomass burner. Biomass will burn well at the peaty stage, typically reached in 24 hours in a modern toilet, 48 hours in very humid weather. But it's not a perfect solution to everything because, as we already knew, even hard coal produces a lot of nasty smoke, soot, and ash, and the softer and less pure carbon is, the nastier. At the stage when biomass is ready to burn, the smoke makes it easy to tell exactly what went into the biomass burner. Nobody wants to cook food over a biomass fire. A bus that runs on biomass needs to have a lot of filters cleaned and/or replaced between runs.

8. Reliable Resistance computer networks, as in a forgettable apocalypse novel by Pat Robertson.

Robertson imagined that persecuted Christians would have a strong, worldwide, unhackable computer network so they could go on using their Internet. Ha. Ha. Ha. Though, seriously, someone who wanted to get rich could build a network of computers that didn't try to defy global tyranny, but merely tied into the Internet while running as durably and reliably as Windows Millennium Edition.

9. The island of Lilliput, as in Gulliver's Travels.

Swift's Lilliputians didn't sound as if they had enough sense to live very long if they had existed. But Lilliput sounded so cute!

10. Big businesses that stay wholesome, as in The Way Things Ought to Be.

It's happened so many times in the real world: J.C. Penney or Sam Walton or Jeff Bezos thinks of a way to make a store stand out, adds that to a mix whose main ingredient is incredible customer service, and builds one small-town store into a global empire of wealth. It's heartwarming to watch his business grow. His contemporaries love this man, or sometimes woman. His younger contemporaries, however, note that after his retirement his business "embraces change," whose main component is reducing the fabulosity of customer service. In a mere fifty years the business's trajectory can go from pushcart to mall shop to corporate empire to manifestation of cosmic evil. There ought to be a way to preserve the ethical purity of big businesses or organizations. I don't know that there is one.

Tuesday, February 24, 2026

Book Review: Don't Sit Under the Grits Tree with Anyone Else but Me

Book Review: Don’t Sit Under the Grits Tree with Anyone Else but Me

Author: Lewis Grizzard

Date: 1981

Publisher: Warner Books

ISBN: none

Length: 289 pages

Quote: “First, go out to your grits tree arnd pick a peck of grits.”

Grits are the peeled inner hearts of corn kernels. (Ever tried to peel a corn kernel? Traditionally it was done by soaking the corn in wood-ash lye.) Lewis Grizzard wrote many fact-based columns, some of which are reprinted in Don’t Sit Under the Grits Tree, but his “True Grits” column (page 83) is pure nonsense. There are other silly columns scattered through this book, like the advice from “Dr. Feelbad” for hypochondriacs, or the “Drinkin’ Wine” column, which seems intended to sound as if Grizzard had drunk a lot of wine before writing.

Then there are the serious reactions to actual news, like the column Grizzard, who otherwise couldn’t quite forgive Ronald Reagan for having run against Jimmy Carter, wrote after President Reagan was shot. Some people thought Grizzard did “goofy” better than he did sincere columns about people he admired or missed, but he wrote plenty of sincere columns. This book contains columns on behalf of dog owners who ran afoul of new leash laws, people who were out of jobs and money, writers whose books Grizzard wanted to launch, and several tributes to athletes and local celebrities.

Knowing that Grizzard was suffering from the hereditary condition that killed him, and refused to try to buy time by practicing better health habits, lends a special poignancy to the articles he wrote in defense of unhealthy pleasures. “Take This Salad Bar and Shove It.” “White Bread or Bust.” “Refill Time in Heaven.” These are the essays of a thirty-year-old man who, at forty, would be writing that a good bowel movement had become more satisfying and memorable to him than sex was; in his early fifties he would be dead. He always knew it. Like P.J. O’Rourke’s eco-hog persona, Grizzard’s junkfood-hog persona is best appreciated as a way of whistling in the dark.

The fact that many of these columns are more than thirty years old, by now, lends a touch of nostalgia to the cover of my copy, which identifies the book as “The New Bestseller.” It’s a nostalgia trip for all who ever voted for Jimmy Carter, drove a 1957 Chevy or wanted to, yelled “How’bout them Dawgs” in a crowd or wanted to, thought “nekkid” deserved to be considered a separate word from “naked,” copied Richard Petty’s mustache and glasses or dated a man who did, doubted that any word processor would ever work as well as a Royal Standard typewriter, or found it necessary to tell someone what Slim Jims are.

If you have not had these Southern-Preppie-baby-boomer experiences, but would like to grow up to avoid foot-in-mouth moments like Joe Biden’s claim that FDR did press conferences on television, reading Grizzard’s books will help. For many people in cyberspace, books like Don’t Sit Under the Grits Tree may provide the same sort of pleasure that reading Dorothy Parker, Will Rogers, and “Pogo” cartoons give me. And until time machines become reality, there’ll never be a more enjoyable way to study history. Therefore, this book is warmly recommended, not only to those who get all the references, but perhaps especially to those who don’t.

Petfinder Post: The Gray and the Blue

The thing about a "snow schedule" is that one tends to stay on it even if, as today, there's hardly any snow on the ground. Snow, as Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez reminds us, does not melt at 20 degrees Fahrenheit, but when the sun hits it the snow quickly reaches temperatures above 30 degrees Fahrenheit and starts to melt, so even though the air temperature has stayed below the freezing point of water you see much less snow in  the sunshine than in the shade. When there was less than an inch of snow before the sun came out, the snow vanishes in a few hours--in the sunshine. So today I'm still seeing an inch of snow in shady spots but hardly any left on most of the ground...and, nevertheless, I am running on a snow schedule.

This is because, instead of relying on an alarm clock, I let Silver and Serena join me in the office, then immediately leaned over on the bench and fell asleep. Exactly six hours later, I felt my warm velour robe being pulled away from my head. Something solid but furry bumped my forehead. 

"Is that you, Serena?" I said.

"No, it's Silver," Silver nonverbally said, sniffing my face in the way cats do as a friendly greeting, "and I hope you slept well and feel good and all that, and I really want to go out now." 

At which point the computers, which are set to "go to sleep" after six hours so that their faint blue glow leaves some confusion about whether anyone is in the office, went black. And the cats went out. 

Cats' digestive systems generally work on a six-hour schedule, very efficient. Even if they've been encouraged to use a litter box regularly and stay indoors all the time, they still have an instinctive tendency to wake their humans after letting us sleep six hours. Possibly they think we need to be exercised and encouraged to use the bathroom. Too bad about those of us who feel a need for more than six hours of sleep every night. That is a concept only very old cats understand.

If you, too, would like to be awakened in a quiet, friendly way after exactly six hours, consider adopting a cat. Dogs' sleep cycles may be more variable depending on the age and size. Both dogs and cats basically sleep in short naps rather than sleeping through the night, though older dogs and cats take back-to-back naps and can stay in the same sleeping spot all night. Smaller and more energetic dogs' digestive cycles can be even shorter than cats', while bigger, older, and generally slower-moving dogs' digestive cycles are much longer. Both species normally total at least twice as much sleep time in a 24-hour period than their humans do. Most humans, however, find it easiest to get up during the night at 90-minute or three-hour intervals, so it may feel more tolerable to put the cat out after exactly six hours than to go through the run, sniff, scoop routine with an Australian Shepherd after four hours' sleep at night.

Alternatively, of course, some people succeed in training their pets to rest in a crate or cage with a litter box. The crate or cage should be big enough for the animal to stand, sit, lie, and change positions comfortably. Room for puppies to run a few steps, for kittens to climb and jump, is a great asset. A secure water container can be harder to build in, especially if the temperature is warm and the animal learns to cool off by tipping out water and rolling in it, but also enhances the probability that the animal will think of its crate or cage as its comfort zone. Most animals I've known showed no interest in toys unless a human was playing with them, but some do like to have a favorite toy in the crate.

In theory, at least in the country animals stay outdoors at night the way nature intended. In practice, I'm not sure whether Silver really feels the cold so much or just learned to associate being indoors at night with her few months of being treated like a Queen Cat; anyway, since she's come in from the woods, when the temperature dips into even refrigerator range she wants to be indoors, preferably curled up against Serena or me or, if possible, both. 

Beside Drudge and Serena Silver looks tiny, but it's fair to mention that she's not exactly a midget; she lost weight while living in the woods and is getting back up to eight or nine healthy pounds. \

In honor of the cheerful sight that was the first thing I saw this morning, today's Petfinder post celebrates animals whose coat color is a flat, even shade of pale black that's often called "blue" or "silver," though it's nearly always a shade of gray with warm brownish undertones from the drab undercoat. Anyway, they're not tabby-striped, as a majority of gray cats are. (In a bright light you can see faint tabby stripes on "blue" cats; in most lights they look flat gray.)

As always, if you can't adopt or foster a shelter animal but would like to help it find a good home, just sharing the photos and links helps improve its chances, and you can also sponsor its adoption. 

Zipcode 10101: Mush from NYC


Few details are available about Mush. She is believed to be ten years old and shows no major health or behavior problems.

Omaha from NYC 


Are you the sort of person who should adopt a Siberian Husky? Omaha is not all that husky--38 healthy pounds and, at two years old, unlikely to grow bigger. She was brought up as a pet and has a friendly, gentle pawsonality, but she was born and bred to run long distances in snow. If you're not sure about your willingness to run with her, you could apply for a "foster to adopt" arrangement where you provide a healthy environment out of the shelter (preferably with a big fenced yard) and let her meet other potential adopters until you decide you can't bear to let her go. 

Zipcode 20202: Troll from DC 


Described as the leader of his litter, sassy and sweet, Troll is a lovable adolescent cat. They warn, though, that he's not completely "housebroken" and they offer no refunds, Male cats do often show status by scent-marking their favorite things, sometimes including their humans' legs, feet, or shoes. When neutering doesn't "fix" this behavior, the cats are probably best off in a barn.

Zipcode 20202: 

Thought to be a Catahoula Leopard Dog, or more that than whatever else he is, Tatum is about a year old and weighs about fifty pounds. He is still a puppy and needs some training, and this organization specializes in supplying professional training for dogs. He is available as a foster pet. He is friendly with humans but not with other dogs. Guarding a big fenced yard would be a suitable job for him. 

Zipcode 30303: Glacier from Marietta 


His paws are exaggerated in the photo, but they really are large. He is still growing into them. He is described as very sociable, perhaps even social, inviting attention from humans and friendly with other cats. He will need another kitten to play with and has a look-alike brother who might be a good choice.

Buster from Texas 


Buster is believed to be a Staffordshire Terrier, a popular breed for house pets. The dominant trait of all terriers is that they are built for digging, and may dig out terroirs whether there are mice or moles to hunt or not. Buster does not like cats or other male dogs, but does get along well with medium-sized female dogs, although he's neutered. He is regarded as house-trained and has had some veterinary care. He can meet you in Georgia or Texas, as you prefer. (Points in between? Ask.)

Web Log for 2.23.26

The Edge of the Big Snow is here. Itsy-bitsy snowflakes have gently floated through the air, by ones,  for about 36 hours now. It's the kind of snow that you see in the air and think that it can't possibly stick, but it is gradually accumulating in spots, and as the ground continues to freeze it will accumulate faster. In the North we've seen people saying "Schools must not close." This is Virginia and I say schools must close. We can't have children in school buses on the road with Southern drivers in this. Not that most of the roads aren't clear, but Southern drivers panic when a snowflake hits a car window. So public-spirited Southerners stay home. Keep their children home, too.

Not that I'm not sitting here praying, "Please keep my lights on! Please keep my computer connected!" because I've lost enough computer time already in the past seven days. I need a glyphosate ban, for survival purposes, but I also want a federal law limiting all computer "updates" to the hour between 2 and 3 a.m. on the 29th of February.

Animals 

England has had such a mild winter that these cabbageworms reportedly were active and growing outdoors, in the wild, in December and January. 


Poetry 

Norma Pain has written one for the front porch and one for the bathroom:


Photography 

With jokes:


Racism, Gavin Newsom's 

Even Newsom had no business saying anything that stupid...One of the weirdest things about California was that even after the massive three-day race riot in Watts, White Californians would still look at people with straight faces, sincerity in their blue eyes, and say, "We don't really have race problems because there are hardly any Black people in California." (And there were significant numbers of Black people in California. Only they used to be "redlined," not officially segregated but sort of quietly segregated, into different neighborhoods. And some of them even used to play along. At age five or six my brother said to another litle kid, a playmate he liked, "You look Black. Are you?" and the kid said with a straight face--I was there--"Oh no, they wouldn't let me live in this neighborhood if I was Black! Everybody knows that! I just play out in the sun all the time and never take a bath.") So there is a kind of mass delusion or something going on, but you have to read Newsom's very words.


Dyslexia is not a mental disorder, but stupidity is.


Whatever else they did the Bushes, father and son, wore dyslexia in a liberating way. Thousands of reading-avoiders and skid-talkers dared to speak in public, even about our brainquirk: "I'm dyslexic, like the President," I started explaining when I skid-talked. "I'm dyslexic, in a different way from the President," people who knew how to read but didn't like reading or do it well could say. Newsom is embarrassing us all over again.

Monday, February 23, 2026

Book Review: Going Rogue

Book Review: Going Rogue

Author: Sarah Palin

Date: 2009

Publisher: Harper Collins

ISBN: 978-0-06-193989-1

Length: 403 pages

Illustrations: photo sections

Quote: “The way forward is to stand and fight.”

Fair disclosure: I’m not a real fan of Sarah Palin’s. I do respect her calculated decision to hand her political opponents what I think ought to be the most discrediting thing about her: her position on the use and sale of natural resources.

I will now display my moral superiority to most people who call themselves liberals these days. I admit: I never dug up the facts to debate Palin’s position on the most controversial issue in her campaign. I find her position philosophically reprehensible, and feel emotionally that beating her in a fair debate ought to be doable, but without being paid to do it I didn't try it. But I think the greater shame goes to the Democrats for not even trying to fight Palin clean. If anything could make a “Green” non-Alaskan think that there might be some actual reason for chanting “Drill, baby, drill,” it would be this left-wing pusillanimity. I say forget about her lipstick (if I lived in Alaska I’d pile it on too, and I’m a woman who, living in Virginia, seldom manages to use up an Avon lipstick sample before it melts) and focus on defeating “Drill Baby” in a reasonable, a self-respecting way.

In Going Rogue, Palin reveals more of her strategy for deflecting cheap, mean attacks by making them on herself first,. She claims authorship of some of the cheapest of the shots taken at her, including “Sarahcuda” and “pit bull with lipstick.” She might have learned the trick from observing W Bush, who authorized, if he didn’t compose, some of the cheapest shots about his intelligence.

A large part of Going Rogue analyzes how party headquarters’ attempts to “market” Palin and McCain may have cost them votes. Along the way, Palin also corrects some of the rumors we’ve heard.

During the campaign, Palin was identified as a single mother. In the book, she replies with a wisecrack: “Have they seen Todd?” I turn to the photo section. I think it’s a good thing, actually, that women have never been able to reach a consensus about the relative attractiveness of other people’s husbands.

Going Rogue also gives people who don’t like Palin’s position, or any number of her positions, reasons to like her. Dana Bash is quoted as publicizing one of the best. “McCain sources say Palin has gone off-message several times...she labeled robo-calls—recorded messages often used to attack a candidate’s opponent—‘irritating’ even as the campaign defended their use.” I have to give “the campaign” points for remembering not to call me at home, not ever, unless you (a) are paying for my time, including phone time, or (b) have a “phone appointment,” or (c) are having a personal emergency and need my help. I wasn’t aware that Senator McCain had defended this nuisance; I wasn’t aware that any sane person could. But if the Democrats really couldn’t challenge Palin on facts, which is hard to believe, can’t they at least give us a campaign without “robo-calls”?

Other writers may find their bonding-with-Sarah moment on page 322: “The special needs coordinator also called...to say that we should no longer use the term ‘special needs people’ because special needs families find it offensive.” Maybe we need a special campaign to stamp out p.c. censorship.

The book also explains the names of the Palin children...admit it, you wanted to know. You wanted to read Going Rogue. That’s why it became a bestseller.

On the whole, book sales have probably been good for Palin; in the book she comes across as a likable person. Is this good for the country? Well...somebody should have beaten Obama in 2012, and it wouldn't have been Mitt Romney (who suggested the most un-American and loathsome features of Obamacare). Considering the way the mass media distorted Palin’s image (the “single mother” bit was, according to this book, an outright lie) I think it’s definitely good that people are reading her book. We may not want Drill Baby in the White House but we need a good solid proof of just how unreliable broadcast news stories can be.