Thursday, October 23, 2025

Book Review: Wedding Day Brews

Title: Wedding Day Brews

Author: Bella Colby

Date: 2023

Publisher: Beresford

ISBN: 978-1-913422-14-1

Quote: "My dog was talking to me. To passers-by it sounds like he whines a lot, but I understand every word he says."

Skye, a Scottish witch or psychic as seen on "Charmed," had mixed feelings about returning to the British coastal town that caught her eye. After her divorce she'd become involved with an environmentalist group but the terms of having charges dropped, after she helped sink a ship, specified that she stay in the UK for two years. She'll need a job, of course. Applying for the first job she's told about, she's passed over in favor of somebody's obnoxious niece, then finds the said niece dead in the parking lot. 

Skye has been to witch school but used only one spell even there. She'll use her spell, and rely on protection by her familiar dog, while solving the mystery but she will use logic, not magic, to find out whodunit. It's a fairly short, simple plot; if you guess whodunit (I did), there's still the suspense of finding out how Skye can prove it.  

This series was published in Britain before ChatGPT, and is much better written than the series-opening short mysteries I've been receiving since. I don't think Colby is really trying to write like Joan Aiken, Mary Stewart, or Peter Dickinson, but her voice may appeal to people who miss theirs. 

Meet the Blogroll: Barb Taub

If you don't already follow Barb Taub, this early reflection on whether or not to continue her blog might be a good place to e-meet her:


The title was a joke. Taub is one of the funnier writers in English today, and her blog and social media have been working for her for these twelve and a half years.

Another joke was the title of her retrospective comedy collection, Life Begins When the Kids Leave Home and the Dog Dies. It was "mom-com," about those moments in parenthood that become funny when they stop being infuriating. Reading it, I immediately recognized the heir to Erma Bombeck. Chortle for chortle; laugh out loud for laugh out loud.

So why did Bombeck's books sit at the top of the bestsellers lists for more than a year after each one was printed, while it's possible that you've never heard of Taub? I think the answer is trends. Publishers haven't been trying to market mom-com, or anything else that pertains to or might conceivably encourage parenthood, in recent years. Hello? Publishers are mostly found in New York City. People don't have to spend a lot of time there to find that their ideal of the perfect wife, or daughter, or female friend has become a mildly child-phobic yuppie, possibly a lesbian, or--because the nesting urge has been known to strike lesbians--a gender-dysphoric woman who's had herself spayed and likes to be referred to as "he" or "they."

But chill. Taub had children, in the past. She and her husband stayed close to the children and have adopted other dogs, but their years of adding to the population are safely over. The husband's job took him to the UK and Taub started writing about the expatriate experience as only the well paid know it. They lived in castles. She could afford yearly get-togethers with old school friends...in India. 

This web site raved not only over Life Begins but over Oh My Dog, which is mostly a reminiscence about living through the COVID panic with the dog Peri. Anyone who likes either humor or dogs needs this book. That some individual chapters were drafted on Taub's blog is gravy. But yes. The blog is where you get to read the first publishable drafts of parts of some great humorous essays. You will laugh at both book and blog...even though you may shed a tear at the inevitable aging and death of Peri. 

Taub is a Democrat and occasionally cracks a political joke, but never a really hateful one; her husband is a Republican. Mostly she's a writer of warmhearted funny stories and essays. R readers can enjoy her blog and books.

Wednesday, October 22, 2025

Book Review: The Accidental Witch the Half Witch

Title: The Accidental Witch Book 1 The Half Witch

Author: P.J. Tremblay

Date: 2023

Publisher: P.J. Tremblay

ISBN: 979-8223718871

Quote: "I'm an accidental witch. My parents are Normies, or non-magic folk."

That's how Lily Hawthorn, whose name isn't mentioned until the second half of chapter two, introduces herself in this series-launching cozy mystery. A disagreeable old woman called Abigail has died, there's evidence that a European botanical well known to witches was involved, and Lily has to clear her best school friend of suspicion. 

Neither magic nor logic really counts for as much as the feeling that characters are too nice to have Done It, but if you feel that there's just something about the convenient loss of a politician called Abigail, you'll enjoy this cozy and even mildly comic mystery. 

The trailers for additional books at the end aren't to be missed. In addition to a sequel about Lily, there's a series about a ghost detective and a couple of theological books by another member of the Tremblay family, a Christian minister. I don't know about the positions he takes but he's certainly not a victim of "satanic panic."  

Things That Scare Me

Writing this in May (I can't connect to the Internet today so I might as well write some planned posts in advance), I wonder how many people will post anything at all in response to the Long & Short Reviews prompt, "Things That Scare Me."

In between infancy, when we don't know enough to be scared of anything but loud noises or sudden drops, and middle age, when it's to be hoped we know enough to cope with most situations in a practical rather than emotional way, it's human to fear The Unknown. And when we're young, that category of "The Unknown" includes a lot.

When I was little, the fashionable idea was to rear children in a sweet, happy, safe fantasy of a "nursery world" where we wouldn't develop any phobias because we could feel secure that Mother and Daddy would keep us safe.

It didn't always work as planned. Parents also wanted to believe that that nursery world fantasy would keep us feeling secure when we were dragged from place to place, when we were threatened by things beyond Mother's and Daddy's control, when relatives died. And they also wanted to believe that they weren't supposed to take any real notice of how children felt about things that had moved from "The Unknown" to "The Loathed"--medications and even operations (sometimes unnecessary), nasty situations at school, Mother's difficult pregnancy, Daddy's disabling injury, Grandpa's dying...

For me and for the children I used to baby-sit, that was when the really ridiculous phobias started. Around the time my grandfather died, I developed a fear of public toilets. After a long-distance move, a child I knew thought a chip in the paint on the kitchen stove looked like a wolf's head, and avoided the kitchen. After her grandparents' house burned down, a child I baby-sat developed a fear of the sound of water gurgling in a culvert below a road she'd been walking all her life. While her mother was ill, another child I baby-sat described "bad dreams" about "horrible slippers, with eyes and a mouth that talks and whispers horrible things."

Yes, bunny slippers can look pretty horrible when your life in a whole world of The Unknown gets especially stressful. So did that silly blue Knickerbocker Toy (before the Beanie Babies there were Knickerbocker Toys, very similar) that was meant to be some sort of cartoon image of a paddling duck, that seemed to zoom around the room in a fever dream I had just before vomiting. I wasn't afraid of the duck when I was awake, before or after that dream, but I never have liked badly drawn, cartoonish toy animals.

During Grandmother's last illness I remember silently praying that I wouldn't dream about an image that nobody had thought would upset me--a drawing in a comic book of humans walking away from a dead horse on the trail. It didn't take Freud to guess that, although nobody talked to me about Grandmother's condition and I didn't say or do anything that showed fear, some part of my mind saw the image of a blob of brown ink representing a dead horse as also representing all the real unhappiness I and everyone else was feeling about losing Grandmother. When she died there was actually some sense of relief...the drawing of the dead horse didn't scare me any more.

Adults usually look back on these things and either laugh, or empathize with the ridiculous phobias of the children we now know. I think of them as evidence that adults don't need to bother trying to keep children away from stories and images adults think might be too frightening. If a child really is happy in the nursery-world fantasy, Disney's wicked fairy turning into a dragon won't cause nightmares; if not, bunny slippers and chips in paint will figure in nightmares anyway. Don't blame the books, parents. Blame yourselves. Specifically blame the decisions you make to change the children's routine, uncovering that hole in the nursery world through which children fall down to The Unknown. If you don't want to deal with childhood phobias and nightmares, don't even think about changes of address, let alone divorce, and keep all the children's elders healthy until the children are at least thirteen.

By that age most of our fears are reasonable. Well...sort of.

Most spiders can bite, some inject enough venom to make the bitten place hurt, and most humans don't like the sensation of spiders walking across our skin in any case. Since spiders do not particularly want to be picked up and snuggled by humans either, it's reasonable that most of us don't want to touch a spider. I don't scream or faint if a spider runs across my hand (and I live in a place where a lot of spiders hunt down smaller insects by running madly about, trying to surprise them). I don't reach into a box where spider nests are, either.

Yet everyone seems to know a sensible, reasonable person who really can't stand spiders, who may look greenish if people even talk about spiders. I think Spider-Man cartoons may have helped some people cope with the fact that spiders share our planet. Still, many spider-phobics aren't triggered by Spider-Man, because he obviously has nothing to do with real spiders, and are triggered by harmless little animals who actually protect them from insect bites. Why do spiders invade people's beds? Because they like to eat gnats, flies, and mosquitoes, of course. Spiders will then bite us if we happen to crush them, and can they be blamed....but they're there to eat mosquitoes that intend to bite us.

Again, everyone who speaks or sings or performs for audiences in any other way feels some performance anxiety. Most of us don't talk about that adrenalin high having an addictive quality, but it does. But while most of us learn to deal with the feeling that we've not practiced enough (it's not possible to have practiced enough), even learn to improvise something the audience may think was part of the act if we forget the words, some people build up real performance phobias.

Usually people call attention to their phobias and try to elicit sympathy in their teens and twenties. In our thirties we usually realize that there are better ways to get attention, and work through our phobias. College students used to be shown an educational film in which a man who'd formed a phobia of rabbits modified his behavior to the point where he could enjoy the company of Playboy Bunnies. We all broke through our fears that people who were different from us wouldn't liiiike us, that we'd break the new office machine if we used it, that we'd literally die if anything happened to our beloved elders, and many more, too.

So at sixty I don't feel the emotion of fear very often any more. Fire? Deep water? Violent attacks? I've faced the danger, assessed it, and acted on a rational assessment of the situation. A fire is to fight. When throwing buckets of water on it is likely to help, I know I'll run toward the fire with buckets. When it's time to step aside and see whether a fire hose can do what buckets are failing to do, I know I'll do that. I know from experience. For a younger person these situations may still be part of The Unknown.

I've built up a history of bravery. This is a good thing. If some reader is thinking "I have a history of cowardice," ask yourself whether that thought is useful to you. Does someone special hold your hand in a nice way when you scream at the sight of a beetle? If not, it may be time to lose the beetle phobia. Meanwhile, I'd suggest, instead of identifying with a history of cowardice, thinking that you've not built up much of a history of bravery because you are young. The times to (take a swimming course and then) dive into deep water, (hire a local guide and then) walk into the rough neighborhood, (practice climbing and then) climb as high as the tree will hold your weight, are still ahead of you. All of The Nephews come from long lines of brave people and will probably do very well.

However, even if wailing to your friends and relatives about your phobia of birds is working nicely to get sympathy, reduce the phobia people feel because you are bigger than they are, etc., I don't recommend wailing about present-time phobias on the Internet. Well, especially not if you feel, as I do, that you don't want any evildoers attacking your loved ones as a way to hurt you.

Everybody has to have watched at least one movie scene...

"Tell us your secret (or agree to stop whistleblowing, or cooperate with our regime) or we'll shoot you."

"I certainly won't be in a position to do that if you do shoot me. Fire away!"

"We have your daughter. If you do as we tell you, we'll let her go. If not, we'll kill her. Bwahahaha."

"Eeek! Daddy! Daddy!"

In movies this is usually where Superman or Robin Hood or some character played by John Wayne comes in, kills the evildoer, and reunites the threatened family. Though, depending on the age and shape of the actress the producers could afford, the audience may have to watch her squirm and squeal for--several minutes, if she's about twenty years old and has a bosom that heaves well. If she really is one of the grown-up actors' daughter or niece, age six, one quick shot of her squealing "Daddy!" will do.

In real life I don't have any superheroes to count on. I do have anonymity. Because the web sites I use don't know where to find the writer known as Priscilla King, evildoers who track me through cyberspace don't know where to find The Nephews, either. Hello, did anyone really think I'm this much of a privacy fanatic merely because I don't like being interrupted by phone calls? Well, I don't like being interrupted by phone calls. It's not exactly a lie. And all anyone in cyberspace needs to know about The Nephews is that the group includes both sexes and several colors. If you feel that everyone on Earth deserves to see how adorable your grandchildren are, you might want to reconsider this...not that they're adorable, of course, but that everyone deserves to know it.

But there are milder levels of fear that are perfectly appropriate for book reviewers to tell the world about. "I fear it's not a good day for a picnic." "I'm afraid those things are more fun to look at than they are to own." Most relevant of all, there's the set of things that might make us say "I fear this book's not going to be much fun to read."

1. Very bad "mechanical" writing skills--spelling, grammar, punctuation. An occasional "they done" for "they'd done" or "Criminals Trump and Obama" for "Criminals, Trump, and Obama" can happen to anyone, but sometimes self-published books are hard to read.

2. A "correct" but vague and nondescript tone of writing "voice," suggesting that the book was written by plagiarism-ware. Those things are not "intelligence." Nor are they friends to writers. By all means run a manuscript through a spelling and grammar checking program--after you have written it--but don't let your computer try to do more than that.

3. Things that feed into hateful old stereotypes, especially about women. Women who venture out of "The Home" alone may be harassed in some way but the tone of your writing should leave no room for the suggestion that that's normal or acceptable. Women who may be twenty-five, but whose behavior would be noticed as unusually immature at fifteen, may deserve a romance but should get several chapters, or better yet volumes, to grow up before they marry anybody. We really did elect a President who imagined there could be peace while the Hamas goons who participated in the terrorist attack to years ago were alive, but we've lived and learned and will probably remember not to elect another one: No man should ever trust a man who abuses women, any more than women would do.

4. Painful p.c.-ism. In a story set in the 1980s it's authenticity, not hate, to mention the employers who are more concerned with a character's stockings or hairstyle than with whether the person can type. In a story set in the 1850s your characters don't need to be slaves or slavemasters--in fact the lives of free Black Americans at this period is one of the fresh, little explored chapters in US history, and my personal feeling is that most members of "Peace Churches" North or South, at this period, were more interesting than most slaves or slavemasters--but they will most definitely be aware that slavery still exists. In a story set in the 1650s your characters may not believe that God really cares which set of church-related words people use, but they have surely been notified, probably by physical abuse, that other English-speaking people care very much about this. (One can hope Addison was exaggerating when he described how the little boy found St Anne's Lane, but would he have claimed the story was true if it hadn't happened to someone?) If you let a character in the past spout ideas that belong to the present, you need historical evidence that the person or someone like the person really said whatever you want your foresighted character to say.

5. Self-contradiction happens in fiction. The storytelling mind says or writes that something happened in the springtime and then notices that it would work better in the story if it happened in the winter. The character's name changes in mid-conversation. I once wrote about a scene that actually happened in a Camaro, which has a vestigial back seat, and, while routinely blurring all details, changed the car and had a character in the back seat of a Corvette, which has no back seat. But writers are supposed to read their work and fix these things before they allow other people to see their stories.

6. Product placement. Until you've actually signed a contract that specifies that a character drives a Corvette, it's probably better to keep your options open, anyway. He drives a sports car.

7. Annoying word usage quirks. You want things to affect or impress people, not "impact" them. A computer is running or it's not, but it's not capable of "responding" and never will be. Characters sharing the stage might be speaking with each other, but characters talking privately are talking to, or with, each other. Though of course a character might misuse these words to show that the character is the sort of person who misuses them in real life.

8. Buying into the misbeliefs of a pressure group. If you're fantasizing about some future technology, show its bad and good points without partiality. If your characters are religious people, try to avoid having everything go splendidly for them and horribly for unbelievers. 

9. Redundancy. If you have not thought of an equally witty variation on "a face so face-like in its expression as to be absolutely facial," try to avoid using "face," "face-like,' and "facial' in the same paragraph. 

10. Romanticizing what is "different" or, conversely, familiar. Real people who have been in two very different places usually have lists of things they liked and disliked about each place. Even the Prisoner of Chillon regained his freedom with a sigh, because he'd formed emotional attachments to some things in the dungeon. You might have a character who believes that some sort of "social change" will make everything better for everyone but you, yourself, should not make such a mistake.

Tuesday, October 21, 2025

Web Log for 10.21.25

Food (Yum) 

Apparently Food Lion has had some difficulty selling lentils. They've been donated to food banks and circulated in trade. I'm not sure how that's possible. Maybe some people just aren't familiar with lentils and need some encouragement. Since I had no reaction to any chemical in the lentils I've taken in trade, let's pause for some fun facts about lentils and a French gourmet recipe link...

* Lentils got their name from the fact that they look like little lenses--round and flat. An older spelling of the word was "lentiles." At the time when this spelling was popular it was probably read as spelling "len-tills," just as we say it today. People who say "len-tiles" are probably being facetious.

* Lentils are goodness-gracious-good. Though the opinion of history has been that, when Esau sold his birthright for a bowl of lentil soup, he was going just a little too far. His shirt should have been enough.

* Lentils don't need hours to cook, as other dry beans and peas do. They soften in somewhere between a half-hour and an hour in water on low heat. They will cook over a wood fire. 

* Lentils are one legume that have a strong and pleasant flavor all by themselves, without flavoring, or with only salt and/or pepper.

* Lentils go well with rice, especially brown rice, which cooks in about the same time and way. Some people like to cook rice and lentils together; some like to cook them in separate pots with separate flavorings. 

* Lentils can be cooked with other beans. If cooked for the same amount of time they will dissolve and become a thickening agent. They'll add an interesting dimension of flavor to bean soup whether they remain visible or not.

* However, people around the world have confected recipes for lentils with all kinds of sweet or savory flavorings. Here is one. You don't need to bother with all those spices, but they're a nice Middle Eastern sort of combination that many people will enjoy.


Opposition, Knowing the 

I don't usually think of eco-blogger and poet Sherry Marr as The Opposition, but what does this COVID memories poem say to you?


I mean...here, from an earlier decade when Ds seemed more psychologically normal, is a typical D reaction to the kind of bureaucracy for which Ds work, everyone busily taking care of the citizen who's been exposed to a possibly rabid animal and that citizen showing an amount of gratitude approximately equal to the profits (for anyone but the bureaucrats) of maintaining a bureaucracy.


Politics 

D party leaders don't want to meet the human needs of the military and part-time clerical workers' families who are being deprived of wages by the Schumer Schutdown. Watch Hakeem Jeffries saying that. He wants to keep sailors' wives going to food banks for anything that may or may not maintain lactation while their babies are screaming for milk. He wants to see more part-time mail clerks lose their tacky little flats. The important thing is to keep those payouts to the insurance industry rolling on, for him. Never mind if his own student intern is living in a car...Actually I think Ds carefully select interns from among the better funded students at expensive universities, for just this reason.


Racist Outbreaks 

A rich White man who yelled slurs at Winsome Earle-Sears has been identified and dismissed from his prestigious job. Thus be it ever to haters.


Where did he get the idea that she had anything to do with Haiti, anyway? Mrs. Sears was one of the nice kind of immigrants who follow the legal rules. The easy way for a college girl to have stayed in the US after earning a degree (in English) would have been to have joined the Air Force. Our Winsome left that option available for someone who needed the easy way, and served in the Marines. She is American. Though born in Jamaica. Some people should perhaps visit those islands, or at least get to know people who've lived on them, and see how different they are. It was not just that the man who chose to embarrass his football-playing son wanted to yell something hateful at one person. It was that, to say what he said, while working where he worked--in Washington--he has to have been either completely friendless, or at least completely unpopular with the city's large and often prosperous Caribbean population. The only way I can imagine that being possible is for a person to be blatantly hateful. So, yes, he's a jerk and has been known to be one for a long time.

Meanwhile, for those who've seen the ad where Candidate Sears reduces Candidate Spanberger to spastic face-pulling by asking what it would take for Spanberger to drop Candidate Jones as running mate, the position of this web site is that Our Winsome exercised commendable restraint and tact. The Spambucket's speechless twitching showed weakness. Anyone whose sadism was honed in Virginia's public schools would have simply kept on looking at her and asking more pointed questions, "Abigail? ... Abigail? ... Abigail?" and probably reduced the blonde to tears in five minutes or so. And that kind of weakness is not what we want in an elected official, so, though inhumane and unchristian, that treatment would have been justified.

Spambucket's idea of campaigning is to try to keep her own stress-frazzled, prematurely "aged," pallid and sallow face away from cameras and deploy lots of photos of Candidate Sears (a) on a bad hair day, (b) in ways that call attention to her naturally full lips. Hello, how much money have women of Spamburger's type spent adding either paint or collagen to their lips in the hope of getting a similar "sensuous" look? I think the "Worst of Winsome" photo gallery is just standard fighting-like-a-girl...but it does add up to "so-called campaigning by stressing the message, 'She's Black, I'm White, vote for me'," which is...you know.


I think Clarence Thomas's phrase for this variety of racism was excessively pungent, coined in the heat of emotional stress, but if the shoe fits, Abigail...Let's get this straight, Ds. I am not Black. But when the melanin-deprived hate on Black people, the small and superficial part of me that is Cherokee figures they hate me too, so they are walking on the fighting side of me. My weapon is a blog that gets on average a few thousand views a day. It can be made to feel like a hatchet, Abigail. A hatchet chopping supporters away from you, Abigail!

Web Log for 10.19-20.25

I didn't plan for this to be Arts & Crafts Day. It just happened...

Art 

Since some readers read my poem about the original painting, some readers may be interested in Tom Cox's father's revisiting of a classic English painting...


He sent that "time-travelling cat" into other historical paintings from around the world. To see the series, and buy postcard-sized prints, go to 


Visual art seems to run in TC's family; some pieces by father, mother, and son are at


Craft 

Summer before last I inherited someone's yarn stash. It was a real knitter's time warp with oddments of yarns from the 1960s on. This summer I set out on a project to make one hat from each skein, using leftovers from large skeins to add to small skeins in multicolor hats. And someone with a decent cell phone camera kindly photographed the hat collection, spreading out handfuls of hats on a jacket on the back of her car:


They're all fairly simple hats created by plugging Annette Mitchell's stitch patterns, which range from simple to basic, into the basic 72-stitch hat pattern. 


Yes, the pink ribbed cap that draws in and looks like a mitten, and the red-green-white-and-brown garter stitch cap that draws up like a beanie, were made with the same number of stitches and rows...and they'll fit the same heads. Almost everyone will be able to wear the ribbed caps though they will fit snugly and crush hairstyles.


The autumn-leaves-on-pavement colors cap used up two small skeins.


Knitted lace caps are a lot warmer than people expect. The "holes" provide some ventilation but the thick fabric still traps lots of air inside your hair where your body heat warms it. If you wear a lace cap in falling snow, the snow will form a crust over the lace.


Sometimes plain ribbing along the border spreads out below a tighter rib stitchabove; someetimes it pulls in below plain stitch or lace stitches above.


The black, brown, and white pattern is a detail from a larger pictorial pattern that wouldn't fit onto a hat. 


Yes, you can tell by my interest in football when a friend's child is on a team. Go Big Blue! That blue cap would be good to wear to a game.


You wouldn't believe the narrow pink cap at the top right will fit the same person who could wear the red and blue caps below, but it will.

There's more yarn in the stash so, as these hats are sold, there will be more hats. They cost $10 each. 

Book Review: Mazes and Misfits

Title: Mazes and Misfits

Author: Morgan Vale

Date: 2020

Quote: "The hedge maze tournament. Everyone in town gathers together at the entrance...and we race each other toward the center."

It's another short story meant to attract readers to a series! Kat Sullivan has a magical gift that would help her reach the center of the maze, but it attracts compensating challenges. Will she win the thousand-dollar prize or help a newcomer to her town who's managed to get her foot caught under a rock in the newly disturbed ground that forms the maze?

I think I can survive without the rest of the series, but fans of "Charmed" and Harry Potter will probably want the rest.  

Petfinder Post: October is Adopt a Shelter Dog Month

This web site knows, of course, that most of its readers already live with as many animals as they feel able to keep. This is understandable. What this web site asks readers who already live with dogs (and/or cats) to do is to share Petfinder adoptable dog (and cat) photos--ours, or pick your own--and help us Picture Them Homes. 

Here are three cats and three dogs. Although their pictures win this week's photo contest they are unfortunately only a few of dozens of adoptable pets in their metropoles, or metropolises. If you visit the shelters or foster homes you're quite likely to find other animals even more adorable in real life. This web site encourages appreciation of the lovable qualities of homeless animals.

Zipcode 10101: Sunkist from NYC


Just another repeat of the same old story: Somebody didn't care enough to have an adult cat sterilized, didn't care enough to rear the kittens. Sunkist and three siblings can be adopted in pairs, or separately as companions for other young cats. They are described as typical kittens. Eat, play, sleep, and they especially like to be picked up and petted. They have been in a "foster home" with other cats and got along well with those cats. 

Zipcode 20202: Dolly Parton from South Carolina via DC


This senior cat has spent too much time in a shelter where the staff couldn't bear to kill her, but nobody adopted her, either. They warn that she may seem wary...but admit it: she's adorable.

Zipcode 30303: Jammy from Atlanta 


Maine Coon cats are valuable--the closest most of us will ever get to knowing a Norwegian Forest cat, majestic long-haired animals who often grow close to their ancestral twenty- or thirty-healthy-pound size. They start out as normal-looking kittens and fairly normal-looking young cats, except that between the ages of two and five some of them keep on growing. They are said to be loyal and intelligent, and good hunters. 

Nevertheless, whether because he's not purebred or because somebody just realized per house didn't have room for more cats, Jammy was dumped out at a shelter. Handsome, fluffy, and described as being a purr-box more than having one, he buddied up with another abandoned kitten called Percy. Though not physically related, they consider themselves brothers and must be adopted together.

Zipcode 10101: Kania from Florida and/or NYC


Remember the Queen of England with her pack of corgis? Kania is part spaniel and part corgi. She weighs thirteen pounds and has probably reached her full adult size. She wants to be somebody's spoiled only pet. 

Zipcode 20202: Esther from Texas by way of DC 


Some horrid person dumped a litter of puppies out beside the road because they had a contagious disease. Some people do that. Sometimes if treated humanely but firmly they can become decent human beings. Sometimes it's not that they hate local people and their dogs enough to want to spread diseases, but simply that they took in a stray dog and, when her pups became ill, they panicked. Sometimes they didn't even take in the dog; she might have been a stray who latched on to the nearest available human when she saw that her pups were ill.

Anyway that was last spring. Esther survived. She's certified free of parvovirus, which was what the puppies had when they were dumped, and several other dog diseases. She has run up a substantial vet bill, but when you consider how much veterinary care she's had, and needed, and also that they expect to have to transport her from Texas to Washington, her outrageous "adoption fee" seems less unreasonable. 

She is mostly police dog and, though not very big, will have a big appetite, a lot of energy, and a tendency to intimidate people even if well trained. 

Zipcode 30303: Aspen from Atlanta 


German Shepherd rescue? Right. Aspen is one of a litter of cute, fluffy little puppies who are thought to have had one German Shepherd grandparent. Their mother was smaller and fluffier than a proper "Shep" and their father was a Shih Tzu, a lapdog. They are still likely to weigh 30 or 40 pounds when grown up. They may have long hair, and the shelter staff want you to promise that they can be indoor pets. All of the puppies are described as healthy, friendly, cheerful and social. The whole "A team" of puppies look especially adorable; Aspen was picked as the one who shows most evidence of the potential to become more watchdog than lapdog. 

Monday, October 20, 2025

New Book Review: Blood Debts

Title: Blood Debts

Author: E.G. Ellory

Date: 2025

Quote: "It's the nature of the game, centred around minimal information and violent strikes."

It's another installment in the glamorous life of Solomon Stone, spy, suppressing his personal life to be an agent of whatever-it-is the organization is trying to do with him. He thinks he's bringing international criminals to justice but he can't ask questions. In this volume (Book 4 of his series) he meets, again, two female spies with whom he's worked before; he's attracted to both of them but is not allowed to get closer to either, though he takes the chance of meeting one of them for coffee on his own time, knowing they'll be watched so that neither dares to do much more than confirm that the other one is still alive. 

If it's not specifically about Halloween, you might agree that this kind of life is scary. Some people enjoy reading this kind of "thriller," though, so here is a book for them.

Butterfly of the Week Meek's Graphium

Found on New Guinea and a few nearby islands, Graphium meeki is one of the more recently named Graphiums whose names honored living people. It sis rare and threatened; museum-quality specimens are sold for high prices because, now that we know how easily this species could be "collected" to extinction, people can't go out and "collect" more.


Photo from Wikipedia. Depending on the light, it iridesces brown and cream, black and white, or black and aquamarine. Males have fuzzy scent folds along the inside edge of each hind wing; otherwise males and females look very much alike. They are fairly large, with wingspans typically over four inches.

The species was described by Walter Rothschild and named for a naturalist called Albert Stewart Meek, who had sent Rothschild specimens of many formerly unknown lifeforms, all dead and dried. There is a subspecies, Graphium meeki inexpectatum, which makes the subspecies first described G.m. meeki

The early life of this butterfly remains to be discovered. Eggs are said to be yellowish and caterpillars solid black. What they eat, how many generations they have in a year, when and where and how they pupate, are unknown. This means that how endangered this butterfly may really be is unknown. Probably, like many of the Swallowtails, it's meant to be somewhat rare. It does not seem to join even mixed flocks at puddles.

Images of this butterfly are popular for wall art and on postage. 

[International Stamp Exhibition "Philakorea '94" - Seoul, Korea - Butterflies, type ]

Stamps showing this butterfly's image are more often seen than the living animal. 

Some think "farming" this appealing species might benefit both the species and the island economies, at least more than logging does. This is debatable. Everyone has some use for wood; most people have no use for butterfly carcasses. "Eco-tourism," however, can be profitable. People will pay to spend time in a natural wilderness environment. Over twenty years the profit from maintaining such an environment might be greater than the profit from logging.

Sunday, October 19, 2025

Sunday Book Review: Show and Tell

Book Review: Show and Tell

Author: Leo Van Dolson

Date: 1998

Publisher: Pacific Press

ISBN: 0-8163-1681-3

Length: 124 pages

Quote: “God...shows (through revelation) and tells (through inspiration) everything that we can grasp about His infinite nature.”

There’s a tip-off: Van Dolson has not learned one message about God that seems to have been important in Bible days. We are not to make images of God. In English words like “he” or “she” suggest limiting images. The Hebrew Bible teaches that God is not limited to a physical body with a gender or even a number; some names used for God in the Bible are definitely feminine, some are plural, and the Sacred Name is ambiguous and seems to have been understood as a verb form rather than a noun.

I don’t usually labor this point when discussing books by older churchmen, so why now? Because one of Van Dolson’s main points is that “it is absurd to degrade God to the image of a created being.” Churchmen who think that introducing “Goddess” language into Christian prayers would be blasphemous get no argument from me. Nevertheless, God is no more a “He” than a “She”: God is God. Van Dolson, who violates what he is in the process of preaching as a rule, is a prime example of how degrading it is to misidentify anyone as a “he.”

Show and Tell is unsatisfactory in many other ways. Where does one begin? A chapter on prophecy begins with a discussion of Amos, whose prophecy mentions an episode in which he said, “I am neither a prophet nor the son of a prophet.” He meant that, as a laborer, he had not attended a “school of prophets,” who had memorized the books of Moses and used divination to offer guidance on more specific questions than the law covered. Amos had left his regular fruit-picking job, because more comfortable people didn’t dare, to rebuke the shameful behavior of his rich neighbors, who were accumulating luxuries for themselves while poor people went hungry. The Bible is a Semitic artefact; it doesn’t teach that “property is theft”; it teaches that the main benefit of being rich is to win honor through generosity, an idea that’s still expressed at least in word studies of all Semitic languages. Wealth was good, but being greedy or miserly about wealth was shameful.

After a century of Marxist harangues, many churches have polarized into two groups: left-wing Christians think that helping those in need is something we need big government to set up expensive programs to do; right-wing Christians seem to think that helping those in need is optional. What we’ve lost here is the idea of individual mutual help, the idea that the have-less may have other things to offer the have-more, the idea that the have-more need to invest in their own communities. Some resistance to this toxic thinking can be observed in some Black churches, which is one reason why, if you are not a member and get an opportunity to visit a Black American church, you need to take it.

Readers might be prepared for Van Dolson to mention Amos as an odd character and then shift into the usual consideration of clichés and platitudes, as many lazy-minded preachers do. They could hardly be prepared for what Van Dolson does...which is to shift into a family story about how his great-grandfather joined the Seventh-Day Adventist church after meeting Ellen White and convincing himself that she was a prophet! (Ellen White, though famous for her dramatic healing visions, rejected the label of “prophet,” preferring to use her celebrity status to add prestige to her preferred title of “pastor’s wife.”) 

Later in the book Van Dolson tells the sad story of a young parishioner whose name, he says, was Colson (he doesn’t mention any relationship to Charles Colson). This Colson wanted to minister to the needy, so she picked up hitchhikers. Having no personal experience to share, the older church members could only say that “we did not feel it safe for a young woman to pick up hitchhikers.” Possibly they were too old to realize that, while picking up hitchhikers is always a calculated risk, trying to bully today’s young women with vaguely ominous remarks about what’s “not safe for a young woman” amounts to participating in terrorism. The bullying had the effect a woman-hating terrorist might have wanted. Colson locked into a belief that she had to prove she wasn’t offering sexual favors by refusing to turn off a “religious tape” even while she was preaching at a passenger. This verbal abuse probably caused most pedestrians who heard about her to decline any offer of a lift with Colson; it made one hitchhiker angry enough to beat her to death. He wasn’t interested in her “as a young woman,” and she had nothing he wanted to steal, but he wanted to shut off the harangue by any means necessary.

Van Dolson obviously expects readers to sigh, “Yes, that’s what can be expected when young women go outside alone.” Meanwhile, if the reader has taken time to analyze some of the things Adventists typically say to young women, and thus train young women to say to other people...I can empathize with the hitchhiker. Many Adventists struggle with a belief that they’re perceived as misfits among other Protestants, and, apparently as a reaction to this defensiveness, they seem to lose the ability to recognize differences among people in ways that don’t indirectly say “Obviously I am better than you are in every way. In fact, if God wants you to learn anything, it’s probable that God would send that message to you by way of me, because I am so much holier, healthier, happier, and more spiritual than you are, and you are such an ignorant un-spiritual clod.” If Colson’s elders had ever tried to learn, and teach their young, a less obnoxious style of communication, Colson would probably be alive today.

Van Dolson is in fact writing for Seventh-Day Adventists, although he doesn’t seem aware of it. “Dictionaries and commentaries, such as The Seventh-Day Adventist Bible Commentary, are helpful,” he advises those who want to study the Bible daily. There are other commentaries; I find no evidence in this book that Van Dolson is aware of them. The advantages of a Christian writer addressing only one denomination have never been obvious to me. Anyone who joins the Seventh-Day Adventist church has been led through a series of Bible studies explaining why Adventists interpret certain texts as they do. Anyone who goes to an Adventist school learns, if nothing else, how to lead others through those studies. Large parts of Show and Tell consist of rehashes of those old standby Bible studies. The benefit of reviewing teachings that are familiar to everyone in the denomination would be to explain those teachings to the rest of the world—but Van Dolson is not noticeably addressing, or aware of, the rest of the world.

What Show and Tell has to offer, therefore, is fairly well limited to the legend about Van Dolson’s great-grandfather, and a few other personal anecdotes. This book is therefore warmly recommended to any Seventh-Day Adventist who is interested in the life and genealogy of Leo Van Dolson. For the rest of the world...well, this book may help fill in the time on a long train ride. 

Web Log for 10.17-18.25

Christian 


Cybersecurity

How this laptop is coping with Microsoft's ceasing to update it? No change. Microsoft isn't ceasing to update it. Microsoft is as annoying as it's always been.

We still need laws requiring one basic security upgrade for all computers: If they're owned by a company with a special license for COMPANY use under which anyone using them is being paid by the company, then the company may interrupt what the computer is being ordered to do through the keyboard. If they're sold to private people through retailers without that special license for COMPANY use, then, starting one second after a keystroke (or mouse click) and continuing for one hour after the last keystroke (or click), they must sort input as coming from one of three sources:

1. First party input comes from the keyboard (or mouse) and must be OBEYED INSTANTLY.

2. Second party input comes from an interactive site recognized through keyboard (or mouse) commands and may be processed efficiently until the site is closed by the first party through the keyboard (or mouse). Second party input may include advertisements (some people, like our Yona, work for retail stores and actually like studying TV commercials) but they must be controlled by buttons computer owners use to filter out ads in obnoxious formats, ads for unwanted businesses or products, or repetition of the same ad on the same computer. 

3. Third party input comes from any other source, such as Microsoft, Google, or other corporations, and must be kept on hold for one hour after the last keystroke (or click), during which time the FCC may inspect it for anything suggesting spyware, such as (in the US) any fields containing strings of 9 or 10 digits, any command that could allow a third party to activate a camera or microphone, any type of biometric information, any "cookies" that do anything beyond storing the history of visitor activity at a site, etc., and penalize the company if anything resembling spyware is found. "Updates" may run when the computer is inactive provided that they contain no spyware.

4. Any company that stores or scans individuals' content, public or private, for use in what we all need to start calling PLAGIARISM PROGRAMS, is automatically required to pay the producer of the content a reasonable fee per word or pixel. This information would be automatically collected by the FCC. There would be no appeal. Companies' only recourse would be to pay up front for anything they want to feed into plagiarism programs. (And let's all stop calling those things "artificial intelligence." They may be automated, but they are plagiarism--the camouflage of stupidity.)

There should be a clear intention to reward companies that publicize their products through individual interactions among humans, and penalize those that spew out TV-type advertisements or use bots to imitate human interactions. Companies should receive a consistent message that the way to use the Internet to boost sales is to show more, not less, respect to the individual customer. 

And I'd like to add a provision that corporations that have failed to support absolute freedom of speech, specifically including online "speech" that might reduce product sales, should be banned from having any identifiable corporate access to the Internet for seven years. Employees of those companies could surf the'Net from home and have anonymous social media accounts, but nothing that could be used to promote their companies or products in any way. And this would include the Democratic Party--and, if they don't condemn censorship unanimously and vigorously, the Republican Party too.

Marketing

It should be established by now: Go "woke," go broke. Commercial viability has a precipice, and the Loony Left have lockstepped over it. However, things are less clear in Europe, where feudal barons' heirs are still floundering desperately for control of their peasants, and, tragically, most of the major commercial publishing houses in the US are now controlled by a corporation based in Germany, where Nazionalsozialism may be dead but tyranny unfortunately is not. This means that censorship is being done by publishers themselves, and, though done in the name of demographic "sensitivity" rather than "modesty" or "chastity," the corporate publishers are no less censorious than they were in Boston in the 1850s. 


Here's how to sell "poetry" to the big publishers these days. It was prose in German and it's not been translated into very good English; it doesn't sound like much of anything in any language, but it's the thought that counts. "Governments with international supervision" is music to their doctrinaire ears. And then they wonder why people don't pay for "poetry."


What can be done about this? Oh, it'll be fun. In the name of opposition to censorship, we stop buying anything new from the likes of Penguin, Random House, Harper, Doubleday, McClelland & Stewart, Bantam, Dell, Atheneum, Delacorte, Simon & Schuster, even Rodale Press, and buy only books from small independent publishers and self-published authors. We can still get the big publishers' books from public libraries. The books we buy new should come from writers who dare to speak their truth. Every character doesn't need to be a fan of Musk or Trump or even Milei; characters can live in worlds like ours where people of different political stripes may or may not win games or solve mysteries or find Romantic Love. The best writers who mention politics, like Giovanni Guareschi, can convince us that even the character created to spout bad ideas is a good person. Still, points if characters are religious, are entrepreneurs, are classicists, and extra points if they observe that the corruption of government increases with the size and so global government will never deserve serious consideration, or that nobody "becomes a woman" without having been a girl, or that when an idea bankrupts everybody who's tried it the logical response is not to screech that that's because everybody needs to try it and all go bankrupt together. Let the big publishers sit on their truckloads of "woke" books nobody wants to read. And sit. And sit. And sit. And, if they have any intelligence at all, admit that it takes more than a potty-mouth voice to write uncensored books that interest adults in the free world. Admit that that just might be why so few European writers, even if translated, are actually read in the US.

"But aren't books more interesting when their modern city scenes are as 'diverse' as the populations of modern cities are, and doesn't that mean, in the name of authenticity, consulting readers from different backgrounds to help us get the 'diverse' characters right?" Of course they are and of course it does but that's no reason to send every story to Loony Left La La Land. Choose your "diversity consultants" from people you know. Compensate them well, in cash, barter, or favors as they deem appropriate. If you don't have any friends who belong to a certain demographic, it might be best for your speaking characters not to belong to that demographic either.

Mental Health

It gets better. These Brits cite studies that show that feel-good pills don't do significantly more than placebos, or counselling, or nothing at all, does for "mild depression." That doesn't mean the pills don't make some people feel good. They do, although they make other people feel terrible. It means that most people with "mild depression" are going to feel better, soon, in any case

This has not actually changed since I was in college, but doctors paid per prescription by pharmaceutical companies have found it profitable to publicize the rather small possibility that "untreated" depression may "worsen." 

It doesn't. "Mild depression" is a symptom of a physical condition that's not what it should be. When that condition worsens, nearly all patients consult a professional who's not a psychiatrist and, even if the real problem isn't solved, they focus on their physical condition rather than the "depression." In most cases, people simply feel better.

Every undergraduate used to be taught that.


Politics, US Generally 

Poor old Senator Fetterman! He disagrees with Trump like a good party-line Democrat, but he's out of favor with the Loony Left because he doesn't hate Trump enough. He can tell that Trump's not Hitler. He's not in favor of murder. He's a D, and a representative of the Uglo-American community, and a good example of working around physical disabilities...but he's just too decent a human being for the Loony Left.


Meanwhile US Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene has a point, but she just lost a bunch of Southern Lady points by making it in such an egregious and, yes, ugly way. It is not as if the world had seen R men in Congress crying and trembling at their constituents on Twitter when they had an opportunity to be seen defending their elders. We saw Ds do that during the Censorship Riot but, if Rs didn't form a solid ring around the senior Ds the rioters had specifically threatened, at least they were quiet about it. I don't recall hearing about Rs acting particularly cowardly the day Senator Scalise was shot, either. I don't know firsthand but I think Congressman Griffith would be of some use in a crisis. But why call them weak, dear Mrs. Greene, when nature so obviously intended you to guide and goad them to be strong? 


Weather


Chilly mornings...Serena is enjoying the status symbol of coming inside for part of the night. Sometimes she wakes me. More often she lingers in the warm office room. She has her heat-soaking spots in the not-a-lawn; feels no need to come online with me, but she seems to like the luxury of getting up, looking toward the door, then going to another snoozing spot and snoozing for another five or ten minutes in a different position. And another, and another...

Saturday, October 18, 2025

Unmentionable Punch

Does an unmentionable punch
Sometimes, but unpredictably,
Destroy hours from breakfast to lunch,
Or lunch to supper, it may be?
Are you enslaved to a tyranny
That never dares to speak its name
In respectable company?
Is Bayer or Lilly or Merck to blame?

Have you sought medical advice
For other chronic malady
And heard, for a tremendous price,
"A nutrient deficiency"?
Have those expensive dietary
Supplements vanished as in flame,
Without one benefit you see?
Is Bayer or Lilly or Merck to blame?

Do you avoid Thanksgiving's feast?
O'er restaurant dates choose celibacy?
Last Christmas party, called a priest?
Are you doomed to misanthropy
When even undipped chips, you see,
Lead only to disgust and shame?
And so must social eating be?
Is Bayer or Lilly or Merck to blame?

Political chicanery
These days seems hardly cause for shame,
But--Trump must unchain Kennedy!
Is Bayer or Lilly or Merck to blame?

My first thought, when Rommy Cortez-Driks asked for poems using one of the Words This Web Site Does Not Use, was "Why not just pretend I missed this one?"

Then I opened another Youtube video and heard another profoundly obnoxious ad for a product that purports to cover up, at least temporarily, the symptoms of reactions people commonly have to either or both of:

(a) certain medications most of them probably don't need to use, notably including antidepressants and heavy-duty painkillers; or

(b) glyphosate. (Or glufosinate.)

In an ideal world, people advertising this kind of less-than-helpful products would be required to create advertisements that told the truth about the situation. This particular patent remedy is known for a little chant that repeats the product's four-syllable name three times. So the manufacturer might, for example, have to pay for ads that say "If you've been paying for patent medicines to treat internal bleeding conditions that may have been diagnosed as Crohn's Disease or ulcerative colitis, have you tried treating the original problem? Internal bleeding is often a chemical reaction, most commonly to glyphosate and next most often to serotonin-boosting antidepressants! If your symptoms have either improved, or become much stranger and harder to predict, this year, it's probably the former! If you take antidepressants, it's probably the latter! (It could be BOTH!) By saving your money, YOU can also SAVE YOUR COLON! Stop poisoning stop poisoning stop POI-SON-INGGGGG!

In our world, we have a President who is extremely controversial, extremely divisive, and extremely old for his job, who won the election by teaming up with an activist who was on a mission to tell the world about this kind of thing. The corporate lobbyists were not pleased. Admittedly the President and the activist made a deal that, the first year, our activist Secretary of Public Health would spare the corporations with which the President has been involved--not Bayer, but a competitor that cashed in on glyphosate, being high on the list--and stick to nagging people about "health" advice that annoys more people than it startles. "Be careful crossing streets! Oooh! Oooh! Don't eat sweets! Oooh! Oooh!" is a very old song government officials have no business singing to their employers the taxpayers. Kennedy has a mandate that is more important than that. He's not forgotten it. Nor has Trump. Kennedy's not going after Bayer, Lilly, Merck, and the other corporations that sell "pesticide" sprays and antidepressant pills, merely makes both him and Trump look weak. 

Granted, his going after the corporations might easily get either of them killed. Granted, the corporations have sacrificed all ethical constraints to profiteer on products that have caused a lot of deaths, and probably would stoop to violence to preserve those profits. I do understand these men's situation, firsthand, and personally. We're old, we're bold...but there are so many other things we want to do before becoming martyrs...!

Does this situation warrant a snarky take on a classical poetic form? Well, yes, actually it does. And hold your ears if it bothers you--I feel rhymes that mix unstressed "-y" and stressed "ee" vowels coming on. Blame it on the product name using Y to spell the short I sound inside a syllable.

Friday, October 17, 2025

Book Review: Witchful Thinking

Title: Witchful Thinking

Author: Amelia Ross

Date: 2024

Quote: "I had no idea who the dead person was or how I wound up here in the first place."

Audrey Rose is destined to inherit special psychic talents, but it takes her a while to identify them because they look like incredibly bad luck. She has Banshee magic. She's drawn to the scenes of murders and, if not locked up as a suspect, has the ability to enchant a crystal to identify the murderer. Unhappy about living in a city where she's solved a few murders, she moves to a small town with a low murder rate, but right away she finds herself compulsively going out alone to the bar outside which she'll soon compulsively go out to see the body still bleeding on the ground.

Audrey doesn't know how to solve mysteries in a way that makes them interesting brain teasers. This is strictly a story about a TV-sitcom-type witch, or psychic, not at all a good detective story. Audrey does, however, persuade a real detective to share her cottage for security. Some readers might want the series of longer stories about them for which they'll have to pay, just to see whether Audrey and Detective Clayton ever stop snapping at each other and acknowledge a mutual attraction. 

Thursday, October 16, 2025

Web Log for 10.15.25

Things I Learned at School 

This would have been in grade four, the only year I went to a school that had a playground.


Fair use of cartoons by Bill Watterson, digitized by Joe Jackson.

Music 

A.J. Wilson has written a Halloween song...sort of a parody of "The Highwayman" and "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow," together...



Book Review: Lenore

Title: Lenore

Author: Eric Williford

Date: 2024

Quote: "The Polycarbonate case rustles, against the wood with constant hum..."

Everyone knows Edgar Allan Poe's superbly constructed, deliciously spooky poem "The Raven." Crows and ravens can learn to use human words, and Poe's narrator, grieving for a recently deceased friend, is wondering if he can at least hope to be with her again in Heaven, when in comes a raven who seems to have learned only the one word "Nevermore." Is it only making a noise someone used to reward it for making, or does it know something? The man doesn't dare chase the raven out of the house, and it is still, he tells us, sitting in his house muttering "Nevermore." 

Eric Williford has written a parody of this poem in which a phone mysteriously vibrates and displays the text "Nevermore." 

As an editor, I think it would have been funnier if he'd worked a little longer on getting the rhymes and metre as perfect as Poe did.

As a reader, I smiled. 

Meet the Blogroll: Asexual Artists

AsexualArtists.wordpress.com has been on indefinite hiatus since 2021 because it was catching so much hate and harassment. 

Some people don't believe our culture persecutes aces. Some might say that Christianity, a religion whose sacred texts are mostly ascribed to two well-known celibates, has been supportive of asexuality. Historically this was true--sort of; enough of the early Christians were hermits that the largest Christian denominations have officially supported monasteries for people who didn't want to center their lives around sexuality. (Most of those people were not ace, or even postsexual; this led to problems.) However, most American Christians don't have monasteries and many churches overtly disrespect single adults...and in cyberspace...

Asexuality was feared, in the twentieth century, because Freud noted that classic schizophrenics are asexual. Which is like noting that classic schizophrenics are young. Most young people are at no risk for classic schizophrenia and so are most aces. 

There is, however, a correlation between asexuality and a milder form of mental illness: Temporary asexuality is one of the most common side effects of antidepressants. 

Asexuality usually is temporary. We all start out ace--we start out as children. Some young people remain ace because their hormones haven't changed this. Usually the change from asexual, or presexual, to heterosexual simply arrives later than usual. If not the most common cause of sexuality, this is the most common reason why people identify as ace. People who become asexual later in life usually identify as whatever their hormones indicated that they were going to be when they were seventeen, although their spouses identify them as asexual, often in bitter and misinformed terms.

Other causes of asexuality are more concerning, including long lists of drugs and disease conditions, before midlife, when the usual cause is that hormone levels simply drop. In all cases, asexuality is a physical condition people couldn't have chosen if they'd wanted to. It does no harm to anyone else. It's not incompatible with Christian morality. There's no reason why people should harass asexuals. There's every reasons why parents, teachers, churches, and even employers should support asexuals: Aces spread no diseases, don't contribute to overpopulation, don't threaten other people's marriages, and can do more with less money because sexual activity costs money. Aces have no trouble obeying the seventh Commandment, though they may have trouble with the tenth.

Relatively few people are true lifelong aces. When they are the causes can include rare genetic patterns, some of which do no harm at all to the individual apart from the individual's sterility, and the individuals may benefit from having more time and energy for their work. Twentieth century artists Dare Wright and Edward Gorey appear to have been lifelong asexuals.

However, those who harass asexuals seem to believe that if only asexuals didn't have any social support they'd be as lust-ridden as the harassers. Testosterone poisoning is a real thing.

(Asexuals do feel attractions and attachments to other people, sometimes described as "romantic" or "semiromantic." Sometimes these "pure" friendships break up, because one person finds someone to marry or just because people drift apart over time. Sometimes they devolve into sexual relationships and can include marriage. A cutesy-wutesy term for aces who, after a few years, become sexually attracted to an opposite-sex friend and marry person in the usual way, is "Ace of Hearts.")

During the 2010s the AsexualArtists blog introduced hundreds of young artists, some of whom may be successors to Wright and Gorey. Some of their interviews with these artists were linked at this web site. I've not heard more about their career breakthroughs, during these dire years of COVID panic and automated plagiarism. But I hope that one day we all will. It would be a very fine thing if, regardless of how many of the group remained asexual, AsexualArtists became a social site that supported long-distance, long-term friendships.