Monday, June 29, 2026

Web Log for 6.28.26

After I prodded Google about our foreign readership, the said foreign readership deflated. Did it ever deflate. Total page views dropped by ninety percent. Nine out of ten readers of this web site were bots or hackers? Well, never mind, it's good to have real humans in the audience. 

Animals 

Video of the songbird called a dipper. The dipper is unique. It's been called a kind of wren or thrush, because it has some features in common with wrens and with thrushes, but it's the only North American songbird that swims and it really isn't much like anything but a dipper. It is usually found in the West but I used to watch one at a park in Wheaton, Maryland.


Books 

US readers who have been unable to find copies of Tom Cox's novel Everything Will Swallow You, rejoice! As a temporary promotion this UK store can ship copies to the US with no international shipping charges! Link to order, and first chapter of the novel:


Music 

Traffic...Really youall can read the Meow for yourselves. (Howtomeowinyiddish.blogspot.com is always a good source of music.) I'll try at least to alternate between a music link from that site and one from some other site.


Ella Roberts.


Tom Petty.


Van McCoy.


The Kinks.


Priscilla Block.


Steve Miller Band.


Bobby Horton. This is one of the earliest American songs, thought to have been sung during the Revolutionary War and now beloved of renactors everywhere. At the time rifles were a technological innovation. The British thought heavier muskets would have to work better. History has been the judge.


Robin Trower.

Harry Chapin.


Grand Funk Railroad.


Karunesh.


Donovan.


Charli Xcx. (This link was shared by someone who didn't mind its pushing limits, but used it as an example of how stretched out the limits of how much eroticism the industry demands from young women singers these days. May offend viewers; not recommended for viewing at home, work, school, or anywhere where others might see and hear.)


The Cars.


Tears for Fears.


Buddy Holly.


The Police.


Three Dog Night.


Stryper.


Neil Young. 



The Troggs.


Queen.


Writing 

Although this piece of Bad Poetry is fiction, and seemed like nonsense when I wrote it...


...I suppose it may be worth mentioning that it only becomes "dark humor" rather than "ironic satire" when the characters involved are male. Women have been "suffering to be beautiful," having functional teeth removed and functional fingers broken and functional breasts chopped up to conform to the current idea of what looks good, for a long time. 


That novel is also comedie noire, but serious studies of the cosmetic surgery industry have been being made (and ignored by those marketing cosmetic surgery) throughout my lifetime. People are seriously told--by their employers, if they're in movies or television!--that their work will be more valuable if men have "hair implants" or nose reductions, if women have "face lifts" or liposuction. There's no real end to it; as a child in California in the 1970s I remember noticing a woman who had the tiniest tapered waist I'd ever seen, hearing her tell my mother that she was getting pressure about centimeters of flab her waist had supposedly added after childbirth. I was small and skinny at nine years old and this woman was shortening her last year's jeans so they'd fit me. And she was getting that "You'd be more valuable to some people if you were even thinner" routine.

To imagine guys doing this kind of thing I had to imagine that at least the corrective operation was supposed to relieve pain. Crooked teeth can be painful when impacted molars grow in. 

Then there was a vlog...I forget now whether it was on the Meow or the Mirror or somewhere else, because I didn't originally intend to link to it...about how much the talking heads on TV look alike, "and it's scary," because the combination of "lifted" and Botox-stiffened skin, exaggerated North Asian  type cheekbones, straight European type noses, and full African type lips are not only hard to tell apart but unlike any natural human you're likely to know if you look at them closely. Have we achieved an ideal of beauty, especially but not exclusively female beauty, that can be achieved only through cosmetic surgery? 

If so, how do we go about rejecting it?!

I don't watch enough television to know, or care, whether the talking heads look like siblings or really are siblings. Only in an abstract and theoretical way do I think it would be better if the talking heads looked like the United Nations with a full range of heights, hairstyles, nose shapes, complexions, and ages represented. (And cheers to all those 60-year-olds who look healthier than their 30- and 40-year-old children, but y'know, "The Golden Girls" were not the last women on Earth who looked good and were funny when their hair really was white.) It's for those who watch television to encourage the industry to show us real faces, aging naturally.

Zazzle 

Gentle Readers, do youall believe that Zazzle should continue to be a distinctive site that sells quirky, even one-off, individuals' designs rather than just being another outlet for commercial designs?

Before blinking out of cyberspace entirely I would like to try adding a Zazzle Store page to this web site. I am not asking anyone to put any bank card information online. No. You probably already know someone who already does that, perhaps a storekeeper whose e-purchases are in a store building a good healthy distance from per home with locks and lights and alarms and insurance and all. You should bribe that person to buy Zazzle merchandise for you...give that person the full price and a loaf of homemade bread, or a foot massage, a free seat in a car pool the person wants to join, whatever kind of treats you like to give to friends. And support some deserving artists

Zazzle now pays designers considerably more for marketing our own designs than for marketing other people's designs.I hate that they changed what used to be one of the site's most endearing features. In the interests of preserving the classic Zazzle atmosphere (and perhaps bringing back the classic rule of double payments when Zazzlers marketed one another's stuff), I'll still share some other people's designs.

Zazzle works a bit like Zulily and other online marketers. Since the merchandise is printed on demand it doesn't disappear (from the store, to become bales of waste) after the sale day, which is a MAJOR advantage of Zazzle over Zulily, but your chance of getting anything at anything resembling a reasonable price is one day only. Buy it now or pay more another day. 

The site has hidden a lot of my merchandise because they weren't selling it. Well, what could they expect when they were spamming customers with ads for Disney merchandise and saying nothing about individual designers. What you need to know is that Zazzle is set up to allow you to be your own designer, anyway. Any design you see on a mug? They'll probably automatically show you how the design would look on napkins, coasters, pillows, wall clocks... You can click around and apply the public-domain images I've used to anything Zazzle will print. I'm known for designing plain shirts with just a few words over one shoulder in front and a big picture behind, for all the women Out There who want to encourage people to aim their eyeballs a little further up, but you can put the picture on the front if you want to. 

You can also request a design if you don't see it there. (Zazzle will print adult-content cards and suchlike, though the closest I get is a clingy pink shirt with the words or picture right over the bustline.) Readers have done this and, while one reader's idea for a girly shirt with person's URL on the bustline didn't go anywhere, another reader's suggestion for the "I'm the Mother Not the Maid" shirt actually sold. You can set up your own Zazzle store, or you can save your online time and send me ideas.

Book Review: It Came from the Lunchbpx

Title: It Came from the Lunchbox

Author: Eric M. Hamilton

Date: 2016

Publisher: Brief Conceits

Quote: "I pieced together what I was. Some discarded lunch, forgotten in the corner of a third grade classroom."

When Kamal is left alone in the classroom, the long-discarded lunch, which has grown a brain and learned English over the years, starts talking to him.  At first it seems friendly. But it is trash. By the end of this short e-book Lunch is threatening to eat Kamal. 

This story may aim over the heads of third grade readers with its 1980s jokes (Lunch learned English in the Eighties, and as a monster Lunch has things in common with the Eighties monsters in Gremlins) but it has series potential. Adults should love it. Lunch is alarming, but not beyond Kamal's ability to outwit. 

Will something finally eat Lunch? Will something make a Sensitive New Age Monster of him? According to ericmhamilton.substack.com, the answers to those questions have yet to be written.

Butterfly of the Week: Creamy Graphium

Graphium ucalegon is sometimes called either the Cream Lady or the Sepia Lady, depending on subspecies; it is sometimes called the Twin-Spotted Lady or Twin-Spotted Graphium; most sources that give it an English name call it the Creamy Graphium--and many sources don't mention it at all. Many scientists now think it is the same as Graphium auriger. It is one of the "White Lady" species that all look very much alike. 


Photo by Koenbetjes, who remains uncertain, at the time of writing, whether what person photographed was Graphium ucalegon or Graphium simoni. Some of the dead leaves clogging the puddle are Annonaceae. 

Ucalegon was a minor character in the Iliad. He was a respected citizen, a friend of the king of Troy. His house was destroyed by fire when the Greeks swarmed out of the Trojan Horse and started to burn the city of Troy. The fire alerted his neighbor, Aeneas, to the attack. The Renaissance fad for referring to Greco-Roman literature whenever possible caused some poets to write "his Ucalegon" when they meant "his neighbor, whose house was on fire." Occasions to use this name-as-word have been few and far between but the poet Edwin Arlington Robinson called it his favorite word, anyway. Thus "Ucalegon" came to be listed in some dictionaries as an English word, though it never became common enough to be written without its capital letter. The original Greek spelling might be more closely transliterated as Oukalegon, with an accent mark over the E.

More is known about this butterfly's name than about the butterfly itself. Its wingspan can be close to four inches. It is found in Angola, Cameroon, the Republic and Democratic Republic of the Congo, the Central African Republic, Gabon, Guinea, Nigeria, Tanzania, and Uganda, in forests. Adults usually fly just before the beginning of the rainy season, presumably to give caterpillars access to new leaves. Males gather at puddles and also seek the minerals they need in rotting fish. 


Photo from the African Butterfly Database.

Females spend most of their time in the forests, placing their eggs. These butterflies are not often seen and, when they are seen, are not easily identified. Though they are described as "particularly uncommon" in Uganda, and some local populations are known to be threatened by habitat loss, as a species they are neither believed to be threatened nor even considered all that uncommon. Specific habitats are known, and the same small numbers of individuals are observed at each habitat site when they are counted. 

Their foodplant is not known, but it is probably abundant in the "sand dune forest" along the Congo River in Angola where SzabolcsSafian photographed this puddle party:


Nevertheless, three subspecies of ucalegon are still recognized by those who recognize ucalegon as a separate species: Graphium ucalegon ucalegon, G.u. fonteinei, and G.u. schoutedeni


Photo by Sven Bontenbal. 

Sunday, June 28, 2026

Web Log for 6.26-27.26

Last weekend, although the Professional Bad Neighbor had been up here to poison the spring whose water people in Tennessee drink, Serena gave birth to at least three living kittens. I didn't haul them out of the kitten box to look; I thought they were likely not to live long. Possibly Serena thought that meant I didn't care about them. If so she was mistaken; it was just that she was the only cat having kittens, and she had them in the box without any trouble, and they were so quiet I felt no need to do anything but shine a light into the box, I think three times altogether, and see that each little blob of mostly white fur was still breathing. 

Friday morning, about two o'clock, we smelled someone the Bad Neighbor had hired to take another shot at the Feral Elberta Peach Tree. The list of people he could hire to do such a thing is short. The list of people who could actually do it--the man scampered up and down a rough road in the dark, without a light--is even shorter. The list of people who could conceivably be on those lists, and have the odor and body shape of this spray poisoner, is very short indeed. Come to that, the man is short, too. 

Individually most of my family, even degenerates like the Bad Neighbor, tend to be told that some people find us intimidating. I know the Bad Neighbor has led others to believe that he speaks for all of us, which is just another lie in his everyday routine, in addition to lying about property lines and titles, so I can understand the short man's not having the fortitude to tell the Bad Neighbor to do his own dirt. In a spirit of pure Christian charity I hope he broke an ankle and will not be doing any more bad things for the Bad Neighbor. A broken ankle is better than being set up to take the blame for a sociopath's evildoing.

Anyway, Serena stepped out for a break and came in with her coat reeking of "Roundup." Serena's daughter have given birth to some horrible-looking Seralini kittens. Serena's own Seralini kittens have been beautiful babies who dropped dead at their first whiff of "Roundup." 

At dawn Serena showed me the first cold, dead little body. What got to me, apart of course from my own glyphosate reaction, was that in other years she's left dead kittens for me to find; this time she picked the body up in her mouth, waggled it about, and seemed about to toss it up in the air as if it were a mouse. It would have been a pale calico with longish fluffy fur. The two smaller, short-haired kittens were still alive and showed an appetite for breakfast.

Flowers 

Who Out There has been blessed with a good second generation of dandelions?


Music 

Bob Marley.


The Mormon Tabernacle Choir.


Tom Petty.



The Second South Carolina String Band.


Olexandr Ignatov.


Johnny Cash.


The Name Game 

Everyone knows, though some people don't want to admit, that the easiest way to show disrespect and ill will for someone in a "polite" environment is to misuse the person's name. Never mind that "Anjali Menezes" really is a name few English-speaking people have any idea how to pronounce, or how to spell if they've heard it pronounced. People who suffer from free-floating hostility are just as likely to foul up names like "Joe Jones." People whose memory for names is genuinely full up, but who are not hostile, show this by not calling people who are already present and, if it becomes necessary to call anyone, calling the person "Sir" or "Ma'am." 

Should Menezes have resigned from her job because people "dehumanized" her by misusing her name? Probably not. I must give her points, though, for being ethically superior to me. In her position I would have mailed out cheques to the guilty lower-paid workers, and messed up the names and addresses so that the cheques couldn't be processed by their banks.


Respect for Elders, Enforcement of 

No doubt everyone has already seen both the first release and the longer uncut edition of the video in which Pastor Tony Spell, whose wife's age has been given as 78, gives a beautiful beating to Scott Sherwin, whose age has been given as 20. Apparently Spell opened his church during the COVID panic and Sherwin and his parents have been harassing the pastor ever since. This time Sherwin threatened to harm Mrs. Spell and the grandchildren. Spell crossed the street to get up in his face, Sherwin took the first swing--and missed--and the only part of the Testosterone Tradition Spell missed was the part where the winner stands on the victim's chest and gloats, the way Justice is shown doing to Tyranny on the Virginia flag. 

Should a minister know better ways to deal with a stupid brat? Probably. Should Scott Sherwin spend the rest of his pathetic life ruing the day he pressed charges against an older man who was clearly acting in self-defense? Whoo-wee. Sherwin was caught on video bawling "Help me!" to people who passed by with an occasional indignant honk. Should all the spoiled brats on Earth know that, if we see a fight between a youth and a grandpa, and if we help anybody, it will be the grandpa? Yes.

Should all men who threaten rape, or any other kind of hatecrime against women, be preemptively neutered, such that they will gain no physical advantage from testosterone and will have incentives to avoid picking quarrels even with their ten-year-old brothers? I think so. Though I am glad the pastor didn't do it himself, on the street. 

Book Review: The Wedding Bible

Title: The Wedding Bible 

Author: Cherri Cain

Date: 2026

Publisher: Cain Global

Quote: "Everything about Hartwell feels like stepping back in time, and I can't decide if that's comforting or suffocating."

Here is yet another push from those clinging desperately to Social Security for young people to ignore the reality of an overcrowded population in a sagging economy and have babies, more and more babies, because only perpetual population growth can keep Social Security going and life without Social Security is...unthinkable.

Think it, this web site growls. Littering a crowded world with surplus babies is a horribly selfish thing to do to either the world or the babies. We have to redesign Social Security to fit a stable population, which we can hope to achieve by refusing to replace existing population numbers, allowing a good steep population decline. No need for horrible Japanese or Canadian efficiency to kill off us oldies. Simply don't have babies to replace us when we do leave this world. Meanwhile, consider: most people are ready to change jobs long before they've done one job for thirty years, but most people do not thrive on a "retirement" lifestyle of sitting around watching television and watching themselves rot. People in their seventies and eighties can still be useful to society. Social Security needs to be preserved to provide a safety net of disability pensions for all who need those, not "retirement." 

Consider how Social Security might be kept going as a disability pension plan, something people don't mind paying into in order to support those in need even though mostll towns, but  people never need it. Then, if you dare, be one of the few, the proud, the unretiring. 

Admittedly that's an easier choice for a writer than it is for, say, an overnight truck driver. Admittedly, also, it's a choice people have no business talking about before the age of fifty-five.

So...meanwhile, for a general audience, we have "romance novelettes" like this one, with pretty decorations and script chapter headings and lots of Southern charm and lots of Christian references, in which a young church lady decides to abort her career because her late grandmother left her a Bible full of little notes reflecting her prayers that Emily will come back home and marry one specific hometown boy. 

Plenty of people, male and female, young and old, would be happier leaving the cities and living more simply in small towns or on farms. It's a popular fantasy and actually works for some people. However, in this novelette Emily's decision is presented in a misleading way and makes Emily seem to be what C.S. Lewis called "a moron and a parasite." Her healthy sense that throwing away her career just to flop into bed might not be a wise decision needs to be taken seriously, not dismissed as "fear" of "love." Very few people are afraid of love but any reasonable person would want to take longer than it takes a physical attraction to run its course, to be sure that what person is feeling is love. A reasonable person would also want, before throwing away the job in the city,, to have a reasonably satisfactory and reliable job in the small town. Hometown hero is a nice young man--now what's Emily going to do if he's hit by a train a week after the baby's born?

This sweet romantic fantasy can be enjoyed as a fantasy but it's based on ideas that are false, that are being pushed toward young women by people who know these ideas are false but push them for selfish reasons. When today's young people have more babies the chances are that those babies won't even grow up to find jobs from which they will pay into Social Security, but selfish old people want to believe that they will.

Enjoy this fantasy if it appeals to you. And reject the lies on which it's based.

Friday, June 26, 2026

Web Log for 6.25.26

Serena's kittens are complicating everything. I didn't expect they could be born alive, but they are; I don't like to go out and leave Serena separated from them, I don't like to go out and leave Serena locked into the office (cats can be a bit phobic about being locked in alone), and I don't like to leave them out on the porch in the poisoned air. This inconvenience will pass, soon enough, one way or another.

Archaeology 

I always take archaeology with a grain of salt...but Elizabeth Barrette's science fiction "poems" are worth fact-checking. With archaeology the facts are that somebody who's studied a lot of remains and ruins thinks something used to be a certain way. They think that giant species similar to existing species today used to be found in the Southern States as well as along the Pacific coast. So, point to Priscilla Bird--if pawpaws, a small tree that bears human-hand-sized fruit, and persimmons, a medium-sized tree that bears human-bite-sized fruit, and honey locust, a tree that can grow large but bears small "bean"-like fruit, used to have giant relatives, then who knows, maybe a race of really gigantic apes, humans, or humanoids used to roam around and eat those fruit! Still, that would have been a looooong time ago...

(Clarifying terms: The Susquehannock people, or "Pennsylvania Giants," were bigger than most of the people who documented the collapse of their community but they'd be called tall people, not giants, by modern standards: most seem to have been about six feet tall, men often a little more, women usually a little less. By "really gigantic" I mean eight or nine feet tall. That Goliath really stood 9'4" I can believe, though the ancient Israelite cubit may have been less than 18". Reportedly a few men have grown almost 10' tall, though even reportedly they don't seem to have lived long. The tallest man whose height was verifiable by modern measurements was just under 9'. Biologists tell us that ape-type or human-type bones can't support a living body much over 10' tall, and  even those who are over 7' tall are seldom really healthy. If healthy Sasquatch are 9' or 10' or more, they'd have to be a different kind of animal. But there may once have been humanoid creatures who were as different from us as condors are from vultures--who knows?)

Linguistics 

Yet another reason why learning indigenous American languages is so difficult...


Music 

War (the band).


Bill Evans' "Peace Piece."


Blind Faith.


Neil Young.



Ludovico Einaudi.


Yeahman.


Madonna  (Ceccone).


Matthew Halsall.

Book Review: Faking It with My Brother's Best Friend

Title: Faking It with My Brother's Best Friend

Author: Chelsea R. Hill

Date: 2026

Quote: "I stopped waiting for Rhett Parker a long time ago."

When they were kids, Claire's brother's buddy Rhett was older and didn't want to be a pedophile. When they were in their early twenties, Claire had a boyfriend who revealed some repulsive qualities that make her want not to be alone with him. Thinking she's over her crush on Rhett, she asks him to be her fake boyfriend while her ex-boyfriend is in town. 

Needless to say, hormones take over. This is a romance. It doesn't linger on those boring descriptions of the parts all bodies have showing the reactions all fertile bodies show. Nor does it even try to pretend that its characters are real people with anything to do but reproduce.  

If you like stories where people just feel attracted to each other and act on the attractions, with all reasons to slow down being disposed of in two or three lines, this is the mini-book for you.

Bad Poetry: Never Too Old to Dream

This week's Poets & Storytellers United prompt invites reflections on a quote, "You are never too old...to dream a new dream."

Lady, Lady, dream again;
Not all dreams need notice men;
Short-lived creatures leave us here
To our own dreams, without fear.

Turn back to the dreams of youth;
Own your strength; proclaim your truth.
Men brought joy and likewise woe.
Easily come, they easily go.

Own your castle on the hill;
Travel wide and travel far;
Toil like an industrial mill;
Idle like a movie star;

Though we feel we're made for love,
Soon we're called to rise above,
Call in dreams that long have flown,
Rise with them, once we're alone. 

Thursday, June 25, 2026

Web Log for 6.24.26

Animals 

Butterflies in Malaysia. One of them, Dryas iulia ("The Julia"), is native to the Americas and found in scattered small groups all over our continents. It reached Malaysia "accidentally" and thrives there too. 


Books 

I went back and reread Neena Viel's I'll Watch Your Baby, reviewed here: 


...to decide whether I want to keep it or not. I do. At a time when book manuscripts are being automatically rejected because they sound as if they might have been written by plagiarism-bots, this one is "voicey" with a vengeance. The freshness of Viel's writing voice is worthy of Alice Walker and Zora Neale Hurston at their best. The nuances in the character Lottie's semi-reliable narrative are richly ironic: Lottie is certainly not making herself sound good, so what she says she's done is probably fictive fact, but we all know the "spirits" that cause tubercular coughing, weakness, and fever are the kind that look like little sticks under a microscope riiiight?--but in fictive fact they may be ghosts after all..and so on, and on. Horror stories that take ghosts seriously aren't Great Literature--are they? What about Hamlet? What I left out of that early review is that this book belongs in libraries. (Public libraries' adult collections where teenagers are allowed but not told to browse; not school libraries.) I think posterity will decide that it's first-rate subliterature, on the level of Dracula and Beloved, but who knows. It may transcend its genre, like Frankenstein or "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner."

History 

Ages ago, I bought, read, and sold a biography of Charles Carroll of Carrollton, Maryland. He was noted for several things before the colonies declared their independence. What stands out in memory was that he disapproved of frivolity and apologized if anything beguiled him into a chuckle; but he tried to be a fine gentleman, according to his understanding, and others thought he succeeded.

"Old" Carrollton was a farm rather than a town, and quietly fell apart before anyone thought about preserving it. New Carrollton,  however, is a town, probably best known for being the transfer point between DC Metro and Maryland commuter trains. 


Music 

Jefferson Airplane. 


Tom Petty.


Deep Purple.


Stevie Ray Vaughan.


War. 


Wilson Pickett.


Loggins & Messina.


The Beatles.


Pentatonix.


Peter Frampton.


Writing Whose Author Is Tired of Having It Called Whimsy Although That Is Its Most Immediately Obvious and Endearing Quality 


So, when you click you also see the full-sized photo by Tom Cox.

Book Review: Andy McBean and the War of the Worlds

Title: Andy McBean and the War of the Worlds

Author: Dale Kutzera

Date: 2014

Publisher  Salmon Bay

Quote: "Been'Tok often had an insufficiently positive attitude."

In H.G. Wells' War of the Worlds, Martians attacked Earth and killed lots of humans. The fictional story terrified people who heard it dramatized on radio. 

In Dale Kutzera's kid-friendly novel, Martians start to attack Earth, but their goal is not to kill humans, humans don't react by instantly trying to kill them, and there's an opportunity for communication. Specifically, Andy McBean, a middle-school-aged cancer survivor living in the Pacific Northwest and wishing he could move to a dry climate as he walks to and from school in the rain, and Been'Tok, a worker drone Martian who doesn't really like extracting all the water from every planet his people colonize. 

Been'Tok thinks Andy is treated specially because he's the supreme warrior of his race. He soon learns his mistake. Kutzera is careful to avoid the "little boy is smarter than all the adults on Earth" theme I've despised since early childhood. Andy turns to adults--his parents, friends' parents, the government officials who make contact when Andy and some other humans get into a military installation--for help and guidance, but he is the one with whom Been'Tok talked first. His insistence on peace gives Been'Tok and the other worker drones time to reflect on why they're doing all the dirty work for the  "Big Head" rulers of their society, anyway. 

Would Wells have approved of this child's story inspired by his novel for adults? I don't know. It's a nice long challenging read that will get middle school students through lots of study periods, which I remember as a plus point. 

Placeholder Post

Thursday is the day for topics chosen and funded by readers. We have a series running, "Meet the Blog Roll," and one that's been proposed for launch on the Presidents of the United States. Readers have not funded either series or any other topic for today. 

Wednesday, June 24, 2026

Web Log for 6.23.26

Well, one web link and a lot of music while I ganked and downloaded.

Animals 

Mike Dunn insinuates cameras into the nests of a red-tailed hawk, a peregrine falcon, and an osprey and spies on private family meals.


Music 

Bob Dylan.




Tom Petty.




? and the Mysterians.


The Aqua Velvets.


Avishai Cohen.


Cream.

 
Weird Al Yankovic.


The Rolling Stones.


George Harrison.



Velvet Underground.


Ray Manzarek.


Book Review: Best Friends

Title: Best Friends 

Author: Cheryl DaVeiga

Date: May 2026 (I lost track of some review copies in the transition from Kindle to NetGalley Reader software; sorry!)

Publisher: Waterhole

ISBN: 978-1-958050-26-2

Quote: "For weeks, these messages pop up out of nowhere, always from different phone numbers I don't recognize. Always signed J." 

Orion is going through the shy stage of adolescence. She doesn't even want to be a Munchkin in the school's production of The Wizard of Oz because her worst friend might make fun of her. Orion likes music and likes an older boy called Jesse who sings in a band. Could he be the one sending her the mysterious messages, which are always encouraging?

Shyness helps Orion play it cool and be friendly, rather than making a fool of herself, when she actually gets a chance to jam with Jesse and they become friends. They write a song together called "Best Friends." "I would never do anything so stalker-ish," Jesse declares when he hears about the messages. It's up to Orion and Izzy, her best friend, to find out who sent the messages. 

This is a happy story with a sound track. Teenagers who like pop music should enjoy it. I could wish that Orion had learned something beyond the "just dare to be loud, be a fake extrovert who embarrasses everyone around you" message she seems to have heard somewhere. What works for her is daring to be her nice, quiet self, listening to and encouraging Jesse. She could try that with other people, too; even with parents and teachers. But kids like Orion don't always have to spell everything out. At her age, two best friends are probably enough.

Why I've Never Attended My High School Reunion

This week's Long & Short Reviews prompt is "Have you ever attended your high school reunion? Why or why not?"

I never did.

Regular readers will remember that I never properly graduated from high school. I never even properly finished the first half of grade eleven. During what would have been exam week, snow fell. School was closed. Some people went back and took the December exams in January, I suppose. I had to help occupy my Aunt Dotty's rental property in Florida. We stayed through January and February, giving me time to take the GED exam. I actually studied for the test, and passed it with grades high enough to get me into college. 

This was awkward because I was sixteen; the so-called sexual revolution was still going on--AIDS hadn't yet put an end to it--and only a few church colleges with single-sex dorms and curfews wanted to take responsibility for easing me from high school social life into the chaos of contemporary college social life. Some friends went to Berea. Berea wouldn't have me. I had a limited choice of church colleges. One of them was Huntsville, the Huntsville, which had just opened its doors to legally White people, of whom I might have been either the fourth or the fifth one they'd ever accepted. I thought that might have been sort of interesting. "The school in Washington is closer to home," my mother pointed out. I went to the church college in Washington.

Some planned time for studying and, if possible, doing a part-time job before I went to Washington turned into unplanned time for grief and mourning. I could legally have gone back to high school, and (instead of giving me a job) our lawyer said I should have done that, but I'd beaten everybody else's time getting through high school and didn't want to go back longer than it took to clean out my locker.

In high school there were still divisions among grades based on when people started grade one, but nearly all actual classes were open to people in different grades. In most of the classes I'd enjoyed most, a majority of students had been in the class that started college when I did, and most of the people I'd found most interesting were in that class. I think of myself as having joined that class in grade nine, when most of my favorite people were in grade ten.

So when that class organized a ten-year reunion, I said I'd like to attend. The organizer of the reunion was not one of those favorite classmates and said, what a pity, all the invitations and reservations and arrangements had already blah blah blah. She knew and I knew that at least twenty people who'd said they'd be there wouldn't be. I figured life was too short to go to a gathering where someone didn't want me to be there.

Then a girl I had mostly avoided in high school called to say I could always come to the ten-year reunion of the class that had started grade one when I did. Well, it wasn't as if I'd spent two and a half years avoiding everyone who'd gone through the first eight grades with me. That particular girl had, in grade eight, once annoyed me enough that I sat down and wrote a list of the one hundred reasons why I didn't like her. Our parents had given up trying to make us friends by that time. I think the reason why she was still trying to act friendly might have been peer pressure about her claiming as a "boy friend" the little pest who had wanted to sit beside me in eighth grade physics to get mental inspiration from my test papers. I wasn't interested in "boy friends" and was actually glad that those two tiresome people had paired off, but some people might have thought I minded her distracting that boy from me. That would explain her trying to hang out with me when we were not and had never been real friends. In high school she signed up for all the easy courses and I signed up for the ones that promised a challenge, so I hardly ever saw her any more. I had other things to think about. Including boys who got their own A's on their own test papers.

(No, I don't remember the hundred reasons why, between grades five and eight, I had disliked that girl. I suppose they were all about the one thing: Introverts socialize differently from extroverts. I don't blame people for being extroverts, any more than I blame the lifeforms that, for whatever reason, God sent into this world as mosquitoes; I just try to minimize contact with both.)

So this woman called and immediately let fly a sneaky verbal attack. I thought, "Why would I want to spend a whole evening playing verbal abuse games with this person? That is sooo grade seven," and gave the second ten-year reunion a miss, too. 

From what I heard, enough people gave both reunions a miss that neither class bothered organizing another reunion. There are small high school classes that really are close-knit groups, even before everyone in the class is a seventy-year-old capital-S Survivor; people like this web site's late Oogesti really like spending an evening with ten or twenty people they knew well when they were in their teens. Then there are large high school classes where people may look forward to seeing ten of the hundred or two hundred people who might be invited to the reunion, prefer not to meet twenty more, and don't remember the others' names. The two classes with which I didn't graduate were large ones. 

I can imagine going to a fifty-year reunion, if anyone ever works out which one I should attend, just to see who's held up better than whom, putting together a photo album of "Now and Then" face pictures--but that doesn't seem like a particularly beneficial use of an evening.

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Book Review: Behind Every Murder

Title: Behind Every Murder

Author: J.D. Chantal

Date: 2026

Quote: "Crime fiction and real crime have always fed each other."

Margot, the English teacher, is a great developmental editor for crime stories. When someone starts stalking her, she knows who it is, and (though she won't admit it even to herself) she knows why. Does she know what to do to revise the story so that she's not the murderer's second victim?

That this short crime story is written in the way people learn and teach in writing clases is part of the fun of reading it. It's a fun read.

Petfinder Post: Boxer Dogs and Manx Cats

Next on our list of dogs the Bossyboots of Britain are saying ought to go extinct are the long-loved Boxer breed. Let's admit, up front, that I personally would not want a Boxer. But some people do.

What's wrong with Boxers? Well, for one thing, they're large--one of the smaller breeds in the German Mastiff group, but still, show-quality Boxers weigh at least 55 pounds, often 75 pounds. Much of this size is muscle. Boxers are ripped. People who like these dogs admire their musculature. They like having a big tough macho-looking dog, and say the breed's flattish, wrinkle-jowled face is cute rather than ugly. But Boxers can be hard to manage if not well trained. Bred to hunt down bulls, boars, and bears, they can kill livestock or humans if they feel like it.

For large dogs they have a reasonably long life expectancy, 10-12 years on average. Large dogs are generally not efficient biological machines but Boxers can live as long as cats. However, the last years of a Boxer can be hard to watch. The flattened faces don't make it easy for the dogs to breathe. Add smog and chemical sprays and local warming to the mix and you get a dog who coughs and wheezes like an asthmatic human. Impaired ability to breathe can lead to heart disorders and arguably makes Boxers extra-vulnerable to cancer; they are the dog breed most likely to die from cancer. They are also prone to neurological diseases that feature paralysis and seizures. 

Unrelated to their faces, but related to their size, is the incidence of death from vehicle-related "trauma" in Boxers. Because they are big, strong, heavy, and also prone to bounce about in what their humans normally consider an adorable way, these dogs seem to be in danger any time they are near a motor vehicle. They chase cars and sometimes catch one. They bounce around the inside of a car during a crash, out of control, if they're not in the kind of secure crates that don't fit inside most cars; the dogs can be killed by being thrown around during a car crash, and are also heavy enough to endanger their humans. If you have a Boxer you should probably have a pickup truck in which its travel crate can be secured.

You may also need liability insurance. Boxers can be aggressive with other people's beloved pets, few of whom win in a confrontation. Even when their jumping up to put their paws on people's shoulders and drool on their faces is clearly meant to be friendly play, they can injure people. 

Along with so many smaller, less problematic dogs who are loved for their high energy and eagerness to do jobs, Boxers need lots of exercise; a big yard with a big solid fence, of course, but also a good bit of exercise with their humans. They're often described as "hyperactive." They want something to do and, if not adequately entertained by humans, are likely to find something--"killing" their humans' shoes, or killing the neighbors' chickens. They drool copiously, too. Their short coats shed all year and the shed hairs stick to everything.

But if you have, not necessarily through any fault of your own, produced extrovert offspring who whir around the house making messes...Boxers don't mix well with children too young to outweigh the dogs, and they are still stronger than humans who weigh twice as much as the dogs do, but they can be soulmates to restless, annoying, extrovert teenagers. There is that. Also, if you are troubled with frequent visits from bears, buffalo, javelinas, etc., there's a lot to be said for a dog who will attack these animals for you. 

Otherwise? Even a yappy Chihuahua can raise the alarm if your home is intruded. A medium-sized dog can injure or kill an intruder if he attacks anyone. To me, Boxers seem like more dog than I'd ever be likely to need. 

But does that mean they should go extinct? I'm not sure about that. I think the idea that no Boxers should ever exist, given that their life expectancy is not in fact all that short for their size, is coming less from concern about the dogs' well-being than from a desire to make law-abiding people less able to defend themselves. Such a desire is well documented among the enemies of the US and UK, and they are a less desirable, less endearing, species than Boxers.

Boxers are a breed that is easy to find in shelters. If people give up Australian Shepherds, German Shepherds, Retrievers, and Collies because these good-sized, active dogs are too much for their lazy humans to keep up with, you know people are going to fail with Boxers. Perhaps the surprising thing is that so many of the Boxers have not done anything antisocial and can be offered for adoption. 

Boxers are normally born with tails--long, strong tails loaded with dense bones and solid muscles, which whack when they wag their tails against their humans' legs. Traditionally the tails are at least shortened in the US, and completely cut off in other countries, so the dogs' handlers don't have to worry about being whacked with the dogs' tails. Healthy Boxers are cheerful creatures, wag their tails often, and can lose the hair and damage the skin on their tails by whacking the tails against things.

A cat breed that goes with Boxers might, therefore, be Manx. We've not featured adoptable Manx cats recently. These cats are afflicted with a dominant gene that causes them to be born with stumps of tails or no tails and extra-long hind legs. Other genes give Manx cats a broad, muscular build and a thick  short coat, which are likely to make people refer to them as "big fat cats" when they're not fat, and a tendency to revert to their full ancesral size; most Manx cats' healthy weight is in the "normal" 10-15 pound range for house pets, but some grow to 30 pounds of solid bone and lean muscle.

The Manx gene is lethal. The viable cats are born with amusing spinal deformities. Many Manx kittens are not viable. Breeders say that kittens who get two "strong" copies of the lethal gene are not born at all but simply reabsorbed into the mothers' bodies, so the cat never looks pregnant, although she was. Be that as it may (I don't recommend allowing Manx cats to breed), many Manx kittens are born with just "strong" enough copies of the lethal gene to inherit "Manx Syndrome," in which vital organs fail to develop as kittens mature. They may die shortly after birth, or during the second week when their eyes open and they try to scamper about like viable kittens, or during the second month when they are weaned...like our wretched Zakitty, so named because his last days resembled those of a poster boy for malnutrition whose middle name was Zakaria. Zakitty seemed to be growing big and strong on his mother's milk. Then his mother naturally started to produce less milk as Zakitty started to need more food. Nature intended him to start eating solid food but poor Zakitty was unable to digest any solid food, and starved to death despite being offered both kibble and human-grade meat.

However, Manx cats who get only one copy of the lethal gene can be healthy cats and lead normal lives. Apart from looking amusing they are known for a tendency to be especially devoted pets, often friendly to everyone in a calm and gracious way even while they make it clear that one specific person is their human and nobody else can come close to that person in their estimation. 

My resident cat Serena is, at most, one-eighth Manx. She has s normal British body shape, a "big fat cat" beside the American Shorthair and Siamese crossbreeds in the neighborhood, though she's never carried any surplus weight. Knowing that her grandmother had suffered through the loss of several kittens with short tails or none, I was planning to have Serena spayed when she surprised me by giving birth before it seemed possible that she could be pregnant. She had constructed a well insulated little den on the porch and, in a year when we weren't targets for drive-by glyphosate spraying, she gave birth to four attractive, healthy kittens, all with slim body shapes and long tails.

I've not done a conversation-with-an-animal post lately. I owe you readers one, just to tease the people who quibble about them. I write these things in a state of complete sobriety, with just a bit of Irish whimsy, based on what animals' behavior really does nonverbally tell me. 

So, although in literal fact Serena is on the porch eating kibble, a Cat Interview with Serena:

Serena: "I'm sure you're sorry now that you sent two of those kittens away at such an unreasonably early age."

PK: "The person who adopted them was very old and had cancer. She did not have many days to wait to enjoy the company of kittens."

Serena: "That's as may be. I had many days remaining when I was entitled to enjoy the company of my kittens. And now Swimmer's dead and Silver's the only one of my beautiful babies who's still here."

PK: "I'm told Stache is still living with the cancer patient's daughter."

Serena: "But they're a long way from here and we don't know them well."

PK: "Anyway, your kittens showed no indication that any of them had the Manx gene, and they were so extraordinarily well behaved..."

Serena: "Of course! They were my babies weren't they?"

PK: "They were. And they had been so gently and intelligently brought up that they lined up for medicine when they were sick, and lined up to go indoors to bed at sundown. Nobody had ever seen or heard of such a thing. So...you've not been spayed."

Serena: "And if people would stop spraying poison into the air I would have had many kittens by now. I've had several who showed no sign of any Manx genes, but showed the Seralini Effect, which is what you humans call the way I don't seem to react to the poison in the air the way you do, but then when my kittens come along they...well, for one thing, they get one whiff of what you call 'Roundup' and die."

PK: "Usually, but not always, one breath of that evil wind seemed to blow their lives out like little candles. And you've been lucky--being cats. A human who kills another human's pet cat can spend a year in prison. A human who kills a wild creature, even a doe out of deer hunting season, usually only has to pay a fine, which our Bad Neighbor could afford. Before your time, Serena, when the Bad Neighbor was in the process of making that nicer neighbor feel so troubled and want to stay in the city so much, we could hardly go up or down the road without finding a dead body in the road. The Bad Neighbor was a great shooter in those days, and killed all kinds of wild animals."

Serena: "Why don't you just kill him and be done with it?!"

PK: "Humans do better when we appeal to the law and get everyone to agree when a human has gone bad and needs killing. In times before we did that, people would take sides and kill each other until two whole families were gone. Now some people like to say that a human who has gone bad is sick and needs to be cared for. Others say that that's a weak-minded, foolish, wasteful way of thinking...but our Bad Neighbor deserves to suffer and, if he has to spend his last days being 'cared for' and 'helped' by a lot of White Men from Town, he will." 

Serena: "What exactly do you mean by 'White Men from Town'?"

PK: "I mean what Stephen King meant by the characters he called that in some of his movies. A White Man from Town feels some attraction to a more natural way of life, may care about some people who live more naturally as friends, probably does mean well, and wants to live at least the way White people in the country live. But he just doesn't have what it takes. He might try farming, or hunting, or prospecting for a few weeks and then go back to town."

Serena: "Can humans be white? By 'a White man' do you mean somebody like the Elder Neighbors, who have white hair on their heads? How can humans be described by color words when you change your coat colors every day?"

PK: "It makes very little literal sense but some human families are called White, while others are Black or Red or Brown. The humans you know best are White. The humans in one of those houses where Silver spent a few cold nights, last year, with Wild Rose and Wild Thyme, are Black."

Serena: "It makes no literal sense at all. But if it helps to remove the Bad Neighbor from the neighborhood it's all good. I would like to have other kittens I could enjoy and be proud of, like Silver."

PK "You had Crayola and Pastel..."

Serena: "They had inferior qualities from their father's side, and didn't live long."

PK: "Pastel was poisoned."

Serena: "She was weak and succumbed easily."

PK: "She gave us Drudge, and also Dilbert, Dora, and Diego, while she was alive."

Serena: "Drudge is a fine fellow, isn't he? Of course, I was the one who reared him. I'm not proud of what I did, that year, after so many of our friends died...having kittens with a Manx tomcat. I've always avoided Manx tomcats--but I was lonely, and he was lonely, and we had no choice. So I had the two kittens who died right away, and poor little Zakitty who lived long enough to want to be your pet."

PK: "All cats who look Manx should be spayed or neutered as early as possible so that they don't have unfortunate babies like Zakitty." 

Serena: "While you were looking up information about Boxer dogs I gav e birth to some more kittens. Did you notice?"

PK: "They came out so quietly I was surprised to see that they were breathing."

Serena: "Well, you've been very grumpy about playing games lately, and you'd been sick yesterday morning. I didn't want to make you feel worse. I told them to be quiet as they could be. Which, of course, they did, because I am SERENITY, the one and only cat like me there ever was, and my kittens do as I tell them."

PK: "You are indeed amazing. Given the amount of glyphosate and other vile stuff in the air over the weekend, I'm surprised the kittens came out able to draw breath, but if they can keep it up for a few weeks and bring some new life into the office I'll be pleased."

Now, on to the adoptable dogs and cats: no tails, but lots of love for the right person:

Zipcode 10101: Mia from NYC 


Does she look puppyish to you? She's an adult dog, though. Thought to be a mix of Boxer, Black Mouth Cur, and other things, Mia weighs only 35 pounds and has a slightly more normal face shape, so she may be healthier for longer than some purebred Boxers. She has the high energy and goofy sense of humor/fun/play that are typical of Boxers, they say, but she's not aggressive; she does well with other dogs and cats. 

Wallace from Tuscaloosa by way of Connecticut


Listed as an out-of-town pet on several Petfinder pages, Wallace is one of four homeless sibling kittens who can be adopted with or without his sister Rose. (The other two kittens can only be adopted together.) They are thought to have some Russian Blue ancestry as well as Manx. Some have complete but short tails, some have none: the typical Manx litter.

Zipcode 20202: Dolly from DC 


Boxer and Mountain Cur, and perhaps other things, Dolly should look like a serious dog to evildoers, but they say she loves to play and snuggle with her own humans. Her healthy adult weight is about 45 pounds.

Rumpy from Silver Spring


They're sure that Stumpy and Longy, which are traditional Manx names for the three types of Manx kittens, are male. About Rumpy's gender there's still some confusion. If you don't already live with a kitten you need to take at least two of the three. Manx kittens are similar to other kittens: eat, bounce, snuggle, nap, repeat, and if one of them decides it's your kitten you'll know.

Zipcode 30303: Liko from Chattanooga by way of Atlanta 


Her original humans tried to kill her. Her first adopters brought her back to the shelter. No real reason, either time. Liko is about two years old, in the 26 to 60 pounds range, nice with other animals but on the clingy side and happiest with a human of her very own. She completed basic training easily. Her foster family say she's a very good dog.

Red (and Khloe, Kix, and Max) from Buford


Take two, they're small. Just some more surplus kittens who were born because somebody was too lazy to have that operation done.