Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Web Log for 5.26.26

California

Sacramento has a member of its city council who refuses to say the Pledge of Allegiance or salute our flag. Her name is Mai Vang. Her supporters know that her objection to our flag comes from her "Communist" politics. Since her family immigrated as refugees from so-called Communist abuses in Vietnam, most of her Hmong community find her politics disturbing. 


Worth clicking to enlarge. Anyway, apparently someone told Mai Vang to get out of Sacramento, and she interpreted that to mean she should go to Washington--as a member of Congress! 


I think she should adopt some children and be a full-time mother. Run the family economy like a socialist dictatorship. The more children, in her case, the better. They will all grow up either Republicans or Libertarians.

Ethics 

Catherine Salgado is confusing fetuses with babies again, while James Talarico is misrepresenting what the Bible actually says about fetuses. They have no "rights." They are parts of their mothers, who themselves are too often seen as parts of tribes. (The Old Testament writers didn't spend much time trying to unpick or correct tribalistic ethics. "All the men" in an entire tribe--clearly meaning all the fighting men, but still--were slaughtered in cases of rape; when rape was recognized as having occurred, it was clearly seen as a sin against God, against Life, more than merely a sin against the victim or her tribe. Dependent wives' and children's "vows," usually meaning sacrificial offerings, could be nullified by the head of the clan. Children had to marry or leave home, or not, at their parents' command. And so on.) Fetuses have value if they have two parents who affirm that the fetus has value for them: they are property. Even some Jewish groups now feel free to update the law as given by Moses...so there is no need to deny what it actually says. A fetus is not a living person; if you can see it, it's a dead or dying blob of glup. But it has some value to people who may have wanted a baby very much, who may spend hours grieving and trying to bring the disgusting little object to life. The feelings of those people have some objective value to society. Much as dogs and cats get their value from people who claim them as pets, much as bits of paper get their value from people who recognize them as money, fetuses get their value from people who hope (or hoped) to claim them as children.


Is God non-binary? Yes, in the sense that God is not bound to a body that has any physical sex. Was Jesus a radical feminist? Yes, in the sense that "in Christ there is neither...male nor female"; the spiritual life is not shaped by sex in the way the physical life is, and Jesus came to guide people into the spiritual life. Did Talarico realize that both of those claims would be heard in the wrong sense and taken to say things quite different from what they meant? Probably; he doesn't look all that stupid. He knows God is not a mixed-up depressive fourteen-year-old dweeb imagining that his life would be less miserable if he could be a girl. He knows Jesus never told full-time mothers they were doing something worse than welfare-cheating, or even than waiting tables. He was yanking the chains of people like Salgado, who unfortunately fell for his game, in public.

Music

Wu Fei.


R.E.M.


Trace Adkins. Warning: grief trigger.


Toby Keith. 


Elijah Bossenbroek. 


Travel 

Nostalgia time...How many have stayed in a motel like this one? How many would rather stay in a motel like this one than in a Yuppie Suites Chain hotel that costs ten times as much? How many w ould still take road trips if we could still count on finding a shabby but clean, locally owned, cheap motel?

Cheap because low overhead. Cheap because people still thought air conditioning and an unheated, unshaded, open-air swimming pool were luxuries, and did not expect 1500 Internet-streaming digital coor TV channels, fancy electronic door keys that work about half the time, room service, and a full spa. Cheap because they were for people who just wanted to stretch out on a bed or couch for six hours, take a shower, and hit the road again. Cheap because, if their guests planned to watch television at all, they wanted to know about road conditions, so the local channel in black-and-white was plenty. Cheap because they really cleaned up when some desperate family, as it might be the family of a teacher who would be paid at the end of September and it was still July, rented a suite with a double bed for the three children by the week. "Housing" for people who intended to rent, and probably would rent, a decent home if they stayed a few weeks. Because the world was less crowded; because nobody seriously thought that anybody would need to be, or choose to be, or tolerate being, stacked-and-packed in a "tower" building for life. 

Book Review: Eunice Gottlieb and the Unwhitewashed Truth About Life

Title: Eunice Gottlieb and the Unwhitewashed Truth About Life

Author: Tricia Springstubb

Date: 1987

Publisher: Delacorte

ISBN: 0-0385-29552-9

Length: 135 pages

Quote: “Why do we call our generous ideas illusions and the mean ones truth?”

Eunice, her best friend Joy, and her worst friend Reggie, are twelve years old. Eunice is the quiet, steady one. Joy is the intense, emotional one. Reggie is the lonely, needy, talkative one. The summer they try to upgrade the old lemonade stand game into a grown-up catering service, however, Eunice and Reggie start to feel emotional too (not that either can do “emotional” quite like Joy) and Joy starts to look like a teenager. Older men, even a guy in grade nine, start to notice Joy. Eunice and Reggie have to settle for each other as being “what they have for friends” while Joy explores the novelty of hanging out with teenagers.

The story of their summer is a cheerful, fast-paced primer on keeping emotions froms abotaging friendships. It’s almost as swift and smooth as a TV sitcom, and could probably be made into one. All three girls have psychological learning experiences. So do their siblings and boy friends. Everybody’s a more mature adolescent (or preadolescent) by the end of the book.

What Springstubb accomplishes that’s unusual in thisr genre is a realistic look at Teen Romance. Sinking deeper into infatuation does not necessarrily equal a happy ending for teenagers. Stepping, back, taking a more realistic look at a whole crowd of friends and feeling more realistic, more compassionate good will toward all of them, might be an even happier ending—especially when, bra or no bra, one is still twelve years old. Springstubb restores Joy’s equilibrium credibly enough that readers shouldn’t feel cheated out of the kiss-in-the-sunset ending that marks too many novels as mere romances. Joy is not ready to marry Robert; she’s ready to integrate him into her crowd.

Do the satisfactory resolutions all round make the story seem contrived? Slightly. Nothing really unsatisfactory is likely to happen to these bland, rich, suburban kids, but my experience with whole crowds of kids is that their emotional dramas and happy endings don’t intermesh and coincide so neatly. But it’s fiction.

Would real twelve-year-olds, most of whom have become quite adept at being likable kids, prefer to read about aspects of teen and even adult life they don’t already understand? Sales figures for this witty, well narrated novel suggersrt that that may have been the case. This novel is for twelve-year-olds who are not in a great hurry to be fifteen.

Is it possible for either seventh grade girls or adults to enjoy Eunice Gottlieb? Absolutely yes. It’s a short, light read, no strain on the brain, definitely good enough to get you through a few study periods, bus rides, or rest periods after a picnic at the beach. It’s not a profound examination of the human psyche like Huckleberry Finn, a tour of a different world like The Grapes of Wrath, an historical study of a nation disguised as a romance like Gone with the Wind, or even a chase scene to end all chase scenes like Moby Dick, but then, it hardly aspires to be. It's fun.

Animals I Wish I Could Have as Pets

This week the Long & Short Reviews link-up asked for it. Animals I wish I could have as pets include most of the animals featured in the Petfinder photo contests, and many of the ones who just weren't photographed well enough. 

They are, of course, domestic pet species--dogs and cats, with occasionally a bird, gerbil, rabbit, horse, or ferret. The prompt might have been intended to ask about other species. Are there other kinds of animals reviewers would like to keep as pets?

There are. Cheetahs have actually been kept as pets. Their coats aren't soft and caressable like domestic cats', and they're not great snugglers, but they're seldom aggressive and can be led out hunting with their humans, like dogs. I've often thought it would be fun to keep a pack of cheetahs. Then I remember that I've never been hungry enough to take much interest in hunting.

From time to time someone tames one of the big felines and, while lions, tigers, and leopards present too much risk to humans for me, the medium-sized felines, bobcats and lynxes and British wild cats sometimes become real pets.

Wolves, American coyotes, and Australian dingos hybridize with domestic dogs easily enough to show that it's only tradition that counts them as separate species. It's an old American tradition, though. In our indigenous nature stories, Wolf is a leader and teacher, while Coyote is a trickster, troublemaker, and nuisance. I've never heard of a coyote becoming a pet. Coyotes seem to be mean and sneaky by nature. Wolves and dingos seem to be loved by those who live with them. They can kill humans in a fair fight, and if they're hungry enough they've been known to eat babies, but they seem to prefer to be humans' friends. I've never felt that I was in a position to give even a big dog a permanent home, but I have always liked big herding dogs. Wolves are basically the strongest and generally the most intelligent breed of herding dogs. People describe them as guardians and protectors when they keep wolves as pets.

One of the sisters once adopted a dumped-out goat. It was male. Male goats are notorious for sneaking up behind people and butting us with their heads. The goat was called Parkay because he was not a real butter. I liked Parkay. I've not gone out looking for a goat but I'd consider keeping a goat as a pet.

I have liked other people's pet ferrets. I've never thought seriously about keeping a mustelid as a pet, but I was fond of Pepe and Hepzibah, the resident skunks, and might consider keeping a ferret or a tame skunk if its human had died and left it to me. Mustelids are said to be clever animals who need a lot of attention and mental stimulation to suppress destructive impulses. I am probably not the ideal person to leave a ferret to. It would probably start to distract me from writing by gnawing on my shoes, or books, or legs.

Llamas and alpacas don't often thrive in my part of the world but they are adorable animals. It's hard to understand anyone not wanting to have a pet alpaca, until reality interferes and says that the alpaca would probably become ill. 

I never have felt any interest in having a pet monkey. With elephants I can understand the attraction, but exotic animals other than llamas and alpacas don't generally appeal to me.

Reptiles do not become real pets. They can become familiar with humans who feed them, and a harmless little gecko or chameleon can be very cute. And I did grow up in a house that had a resident snake; Gulegi has never been a pet, always kept out of humans' way, but living with him has taught me to think of snakes (if non-venomous) as friends. Not pets. I've gone to wildlife demonstrations where tame serpents were passed around for everyone to touch. I know that handling most snakes feels like handling a snakeskin purse--only with living muscles under the skin--maybe more like a snakeskin shoe. I just don't think there's any benefit to either species in training snakes to feel familiar with humans. Their brains aren't wired for love and loyalty. Most snakes don't grow big enough to start thinking of their humans as food, but the history of large pet snakes is not encouraging.

Birds, however, can become pets. People who live with parrots have often described what parrots did learn to say, how and when they said it, in a way that suggested that what the parrots really wanted to learn to say was "Take me back to my own country and help me find my family please." 

I can't imagine parrots or even parakeets really wanting to live among humans in cages, though my parents often told the lost-and-found story of the parakeet who'd been their pet before they had children. He was a friendly little fellow, but sassy. He learned to state his name and address in a few weeks. He learned to say "You come here, you stinker, you!" after hearing it once. He didn't learn to say "Mommy loves the baby bird" for years. It was almost as if he knew he was a full-grown daddy bird, even if he and his mate hadn't built a nest. And one day during his regular free-flying time he flew out a window and lived on his own for a few days. Nobody could find him. The'rents had given up when a hurricane blew past. While people were clearing away the wreckage, a wet, bedraggled parakeet came back and tapped on the window. When the window was open, he went straight to Mother and said penitently, "Mommy loves the baby bird." Then he gave his name and address. He had observed that he wasn't likely to get back to Australia, and accepted his cage as home..

Wild native birds don't have any real need to bond with humans so they seldom do, but they do recognize familiar humans, by face and voice. One of the more memorable of many pleasant days when my husband and I watched the birds at local parks occurred in Bladensburg. A strep infection was going around at the school where he taught. My husband felt feverish and wanted to lie in the sun while I walked around our birdwatching route. I looked at the birds, taking mental notes to share with my husband, and the birds looked back at me. And as I left the park a gorgeous Rainbow Bunting perched on a hand rail, three or four yards ahead, and uttered a long, complex "song." 


Photo from All About Birds. Rainbow or Painted Buntings are a little smaller than cardinals. If he'd perched on my hand, my hand would have been longer than he was.

"He was saying 'What happened to your mate? Why is he not with you?'" I reported.

Wild birds tend to become ill from overfeeding and nutrient imbalances at parks where people feed them. I understand the point of trying to keep wild geese, swans, herons, etc., wild. And birds' instincts don't always make them ideal friends to have; one thinks of Audubon's friend who was proud of having bonded with a Great Blue Heron, then noticed the big bird eyeing the baby in a predatory way. And their habits and lifestyle aren't always very congenial with humans, either; tame hawks can be gentle and cuddly with their humans but it's generally a good idea to wear leather when working with hawks, and people who've bonded with crows report having found their hands covered with little black bird lice after first handling the birds. Nevertheless something about the idea of bonding with a wild bird has always appealed to me. 

For someone who was brought up and trained to help other people recognize differences among helpful and harmful insects instead of wanting to kill anything that has more than four legs, I don't really like insects or spiders. Not close up. I know which ones do and don't bite or sting. I don't like to touch or be touched by any of them.

The animals I've wished I could have, though, are animals that do well in my part of the world, but who are either too big or too small to be easy for me to keep. Chickens are too vulnerable. Horses and dogs need too much space, attention, and money. Even cats outside the family might not fit in as residents here. It has taken a long time for Serena to be willing to share my lap with her own docile daughter. 

Recently I saw another calico cat, a Manx who might have been bigger than Serena, apparently abandoned at the McDonald's that is so conveniently located beside the interstate highway--a real tourist trap. The cat bounded away in the direction cars were going, obviously thinking, "Where did my human get to? Must find my human," not heeding the voice of a stranger, not interested in food. I felt for the cat. Bring her home to stay with Serena? Even if she'd come when I called, I was thinking, ain't no way. Serena loves kittens and has liked some tomcats, but the fraction of her that is Manx is my Manx and feels, deep down, that as she's a one-human cat, so her human ought to be a one-cat human. 

There will never be another cat like Serena. (Thank goodness.) I will never bond with another cat in the way I've bonded with Serena. I like other cats, though, almost every day; care about them, wish them good homes. And I like dogs. 

Here are some animals who have been pets, in search of good homes, that I wish I could have as pets.

Chicken & Amber & Ember & Vespa from NYC 


Does not make it clear which kitten has been given which name or why, but actually I wouldn't mind being able to keep all four.

Meg from South Carolina by way of DC 


Daphne from Blountville 


Nectar from Chattanooga by way of Atlanta 


Dali from California by way of NYC 


The point of these Petfinder posts is to boost the signal of these animals' appeal for adoption, so it's a good point that he's in California. Dali is listed as an out-of-town pet who can be delivered to several places in the US and Canada. They'd probably add Mexico if the law allowed it. I don't want to inflict a week-long road trip or an airplane trip on a dog. I want some lurking reader in California to think "...but I really can adopt him, or foster him, or sponsor him for someone else to adopt." Anyway if I were in a position to adopt a dog, this dog appeals to me.

Alex from Texas by way of DC


Gia from Blountville 


Quinn from Hilton Head by way of Atlanta 


Says she is NOT good with cats, so she couldn't actually be my pet. Says she seems to need another dog for company. Somewhere Out There a dyed-in-the-wool dog person needs to meet this dog.

Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Web Log for 5.25.26

This web site officially hopes all its US readers had a happy Memorial Day. It was wet, here--badly needed rain--all night and in the morning, with a bit of sunshine for some relatives who came up to maintain their parents' graves. (Most of my elders didn't want to be buried near where people lived and raised crops, but a few of them reserved a small field for that purpose.) 

It's another day with lots and lots of e-mail, nearly all of it boiling down to "read my book," and more music links than any other kind.

Movie 

Free on YouTube, but probably not for long since Disney can still get money out of it, is Eddie Murphy's Distinguished Gentleman, a 1992 comedy about what might happen if some young people from a gritty city neighborhood happened to get into Congress. Eddie's character, Thomas Jefferson Johnson,  meets Congressman Jefferson Davis Johnson at a party where TJ and friends are working a scam on a rich older man. The party is a celebration of Congressman Johnson's successful surgery; whe he says "I never felt better," early 1990s audiences knew he'd be sicker or dead in the next scene. He's dead. Ballots with his name on them have already been printed. TJ obtains the Congressman's widow's blessing to campaign as"Jeff Johnson, the Name You Know." He wins. While he and his friends are frantically studying How a Bill Becomes a Law and other things most Washingtonians learned in grade twelve, young Jeff Johnson has to think hard about whether he's there to get rich, or to do good in a way that will impress a cute, earnest staffer.

For Eddie Murphy it's a surprisingly clean script--Murphy was known for what might then have been fresh, creative use of formerly unprintable words. There are scenes where it's obvious that people are misbehaving, but it's a Disney movie. We see couples with their clothes on incompromising positions, but no bare skin and no serious hitting. TJ Johnson is about as good as his slinky female cousin at impersonating the "Girls of Many Nations" who get a dollar a minute for smutty phone chat and get even more by threatening to tell clients' wives about their calls, but we hear only a few silly, suggestive lines. 

It's a nostalgia trip, ofcourse. In the early 1990s movies premiered in theatres, and all Eddie Murphy movies stayed in theatres for months on end; everybody wanted to watch them. And maybe, just maybe, the nostalgia might remind some people who are in our Capitol...it's easy to be no worse, ethically, than some Congressmen and their staff have been in history, but it's also possible to use those offices to help people.


MAHA! Do it for your grandmother! (By the way, most readers have probably seen the trailers for the CHD documentary about military personnel who rejected those new, untested COVID vaccines. If you have a group that rents theatres, you might offer The Courage to Disobey as a feature and The Distinguished Gentleman as dessert for those who sat through the grim facts...)

Music 

Lee Greenwood.


George Harrison.



Sam the Sham.


Queen.


Wu Fei.


Mark Knopfler.


Bing Crosby.


Enya.


Glen Campbell.


Mannheim Steamroller.


Handel...I think the thought has more to do with Memorial Day than some want to admit.


Albert Hash.


Los Angeles Guitar Quartet.


Hillary Klug. I'm fairly sure the story is a tall tale.


Advertisement for a guitar teacher, I think.


The Weakerthans. Warning: some depressive people rate this one depressing.


Pentangle.


Buffy Sainte-Marie. Warning: if you listen to the words, this one really is depressing.


Sam Hinton.


Beethoven. Definitely not depressing. 


Isaac Harris.


Gordon Bok.


War Story 

This: 

Petfinder Post: Bergamascos and Other Very Hairy Pets

Next on the list of dog breeds the Busybodies of Britain would like to render extinct are the Bergamascos or Italian Sheepdogs. These dogs are so shaggy they're not always immediately recognizable as dogs. They look like very large wads of hair.


A show-quality Bergamasco. Photo from Google.

Although the object looks like a big wig, there is a dog inside the hair. Quite a large dog, in fact--show-quality females must weigh at least 55 pounds and males can weigh over 85 pounds. It doesn't look as if the dog could be healthy and happy inside such a mess but the consensus of veterinary opinion is that they are. The only hereditary health problem they're at all likely to have is weak joints. They are generally healthy dogs. Big dogs often have shorter lives, but Bergamascos often live longer than small dogs or cats, 13 to 15 years.

The long hair, which naturally forms felted dreadlocks, thrives on neglect. It helps the dogs survive the cold, harsh weather high up in the Alps. Breed experts say Bergamascos do best when they're not combed or bathed too often, and the coat should not be shaved. The felted hair doesn't shed! The hair starts to grow long when the logs are about a year old. When this happens, Bergamasco owners spend a few days "ripping" the matted hair into dreads. Then it's all done. New hair will grow into the existing strings and felt down so that it never sheds much, and the dog needs only two or three baths a year..

Bergamascos are typically less frantically energetic than some other shepherd-type breeds, but they do need a fair amount of exercise. According to the American Kennel Club they can't just be left in the back yard to burn off their energy. They were bred for a tendency to bond with one man and want to exercise with him, if not climbing the Alps together at least walking, running, and playing with toys together in a big yard or park. 

Bred to guard sheep rather than guide them, Bergamascos aren't usually entered in the athletic events in which some shepherd-type dogs compete. They can and should be trained in basic "good dog" behavior like walking at heel and using a designated "toilet" space. They are usually said to make good family pets, patient and protective, but even those who love these dogs say they see themselves as part of their master's family, peers rather than pets of his parents, wife, and children. They seldom attack anybody but growl and threaten outsiders who approach their home.

So, if the dogs typically have long healthy lives and seldom attack other animals or humans, what's these people's problem with the breed? Well...the Bergamasco doesn't look like their fantasy of how dogs ought to have evolved, or be evolving. These people may place faith in evolution as their God but they don't trust it enough not to try to control it. If the Bergamasco has adapted to survive in the Alps, they fume, it can't be well suited to exist in England. 

The dogs' need for veterinary care is usually minimal. The busybodies' need for help...hey, nobody's claimed that they can be helped, but there ought to be humane ways of keeping them from making themselves tedious to the rest of society.

There are not and don't need to be a lot of Bergamascos in the United States. As a result there aren't a lot of Bergamascos in shelters. Petfinder doesn't even have a category for this breed. This week's photo contest is for large shaggy animals, both dogs and cats. In the US neither species' ancestors are likely to include Italian Sheepdogs but shelters do offer opportunities for anyone who fancies the Bergamasco to live with an animal that has an abundance of fur.

Zipcode 10101: Shiloh from Houston by way of NYC


Rescued from a hoarder, called Shiloh because he is shy, this big friendly mutt doesn't want to hurt or scare anybody and acts scared as a submissive display until he gets to know people. He has put up with abuse from smaller dogs. He needs a home where the senior dog, if there is one, will play nice. They think his ancestors include terriers, retrievers, poodles, and who knows what else. His healthy weight is over 80 pounds. 

Akuna from West Nyack 


Yes, that's her sister's paw kneading her flank. The two Maine Coon cats grew up together and were put up for adoption when someone suddenly developed allergies. Probably the cats were blamed for triggering reactions to one of the poisons in the current version of "Roundup." Anyway they're a large fluffy breed so they're big shaggy cats, well behaved, used to being house pets.

Zipcode 20202: Felicity from Texas by way of DC



Felicity's ancestors include Great Pyrenees (like Huck) and probably Golden Retrievers (like Marley). She likes to play and might get to like other animals, but she wants to have a loving home and may cling to a human whose pet she wants to be. Being in a cooler climate seems less important to her than being a house pet again. The shelter staff sound a bit like control freaks--instead of talking about fostering to find out how this dog might fit into your family, they brag about their ability to place dogs with people who say the dog they've rescued is a perfect match, possibly because that's easier than going through the shelter's "screening process" again. However, if you want a big shaggy sweetie-pie of a dog, this is one. Felicity's base adoption fee is high, as if she were a purebred Great Pyrenees, and a fee will be added for transportation depending on mileage and, by the look of things, whether the driver wants to visit your city. 

Honor from Stafford 



Honor and her sister Freedom have separate pages so you can fall in love with one cat's photo, but they're a package deal. They are not for everyone and come with low price tags but fair warnings: They are wary of new people and especially wary of men, children, and dogs. A home without small children or dogs would be best. Honor is the bold sister who likes to park her considerable weight (each cat's healthy weight is in the 12-15 pounds range) on top of her human, lick skin, and drool to show affection. Freedom is the shy sister for whom staying in the same room with you means she's getting to like you. They like to nap on, under, and among blankets and quilts. Apparently they grew up in an all-female home and would acclimate most easily to another all-female home. 

Zipcode 30303: Zoe from Tennessee by way of Atlanta 


Great Pyrenees dogs have a lot of hair. Strangers come up to their humans and tell them earnestly that it's not good for dogs to be obese, when the dogs are healthy and well exercised under their thick heavy coats. Like other very hairy dogs bred in cold climates, the dogs get some insulation from their coats but may still overheat easily and do best in colder parts of the US. In the South they tend to like lying in front of the air conditioner.

Zoe's ancestors probably include Great Pyrenees and Australian Shepherd, and other things. Somebody fell in love with her big hair and found that there was too much dog underneath for some lazy body to handle. Zoe and her sister were rescued from a house where they were kept chained up outside all the time. She does need a large yard with a high board fence, not a chain-link fence--she likes to climb on and over chain-link fences. She needs attention and walks and games and love. Zoe is cautious about new people and situations, but affectionate with the right people. 

Reginald from Fort Oglethorpe 


Thought to be part Maine Coon, Reginald's healthy weight is in the 12-15 pounds range. He is about ten years old and has outlived his original human. He's friendly, but set in his ways and likely to take his time about bonding. 

Book Review: Mystic Brews and Malice

Title: Mystic Brews and Malice

Author: Karen McSpade

Date: May 26, 2026

Quote: "For a second, I thought I heard someone singing."

Samara Snow is just starting to enjoy the second half of her life in Winter Haven, Maine, but doesn't feel really "settled." Her "first perfect feeling" there arrives on a date with Jack. But Jack is a Mundane, a Muggle--isn't he?--and Samara is a psychic witch, as featured in TV sitcoms. How will Jack be able to handle his relative lack of contro?

That'd be telling. Anyway, first things first. They have to find out whether a local politician murdered his campaign opponent, and find and lay to rest the Siren who's been leading ships astray.

Samara doesn't know it for sure yet, but she has "come home" to a town that accepts witches, friends who will become her family, and a Partner for Life. She's even bonded with her familiar, Pumpkin, a cat who speaks English. She enjoys having a tea shop, though she's not learned to bake her own tea cakes yet. And it's lucky that she's a good sailor, because a substantial part of the action in this story takes place in boats.

Not all of it, though. While challenging the wicked witch of Winter Haven, Samra will learn to fly. She learns although that traditional English witches never flew on broomsticks, a broomstick is like training wheels for a beginner...and onto her broomstick and off to the fray she goes. 

If you're going to be an escape fantasy trope, it always helps to be a nice one. Samara is as easy to like as Sidney Grace, the witch in this author's earlier popular series set on Flroida, only at the other end of life and the other end of the United States' Atlantic coast. You'll enjoy the slow steady realistic pace of her relationship with Jack and her willingness to face danger to keep her townsfolk, even the ones she doesn't like much, from being unfairly condemned. 

Monday, May 25, 2026

New Book Review: Murder and the Coffee Bean Betrayal

Title: Murder and the Coffee Bean Betrayal

Author: Andi Cane

Date: May 25, 2026

Quote: "This is not what was ordered."

The coffee beans ordered in big heavy sacks have included sacks of what used to be called Hollow Roast--sacks with inner pockets that concealed smuggled goods, in this case collectible silver medallions. Hattie thinks that was just an historical curiosity until the man who's pronounced a sack "not what was ordered" is found dead. 

This is not the chatty, charming sort of cozy mystery where recipes and cute animals play an important role. Hattie learns a fair bit about coffee, collectibles, and smuggling, and sweats over a plan to make people willing to believe who committed the murder. It's not really a "hard-boiled" story, with only one murder solved by a little old lady and a few friends, but neither is it the kind you revisit after solving the mystery just for the pleasure of the characters' company. 


Web Log for 5.24.26

One of those days when it looked as if it were about to rain, but hardly a drop fell, all...day...long.

Animals 

In Greek literature Calliope was a woman's name. In English it's a musical instrument, but it's also a species of hummingbird found in some Western States. 


Photo from https://roadsendnaturalist.com/2026/05/22/calliope/ , which has more photos and live video of the little guy stretching his wing and tail feathers. 

A flamboyance of flamingos:


Book 

For snark aficionados: A memorable moment in the history of a copy of Andrei Codrescu's book Bibliodeath, which this web site warmly recommended more than ten years ago, and recommends still. 


Christian 

C.S. Lewis fans will remember that, in his writing about the pure essence of friendship, Lewis often seemed to have in mind his admiration for one of the Inklings in particular: a younger Christian writer called Charles Williams, who died before most of the older Inklings did. I've not seen a copy of Williams' nonfiction Christian book yet, though I have read his brilliantly strange fantasy fiction. (Once the background reading's been done the fiction makes sense. Not before.) Here, anyway, is a selection from a US edition of The Descent of the Dove that may still be in stores.


Conspiracy Theories 

A right-wing correspondent reports that people are voluntarily wearing face masks again. Is it a new conspiracy to revive the COVID panic? 

Save your fear energy, right-wingers. Some of my other correspondents are freely discussing their use of face masks. (No link, because nobody needs to harass these people.) It's what's called a dry season. Great for people with mold allergies; not so good for people with pollen and dust allergies. Rain's not dampening down the pollen and dust. Nor is it washing down the chemical pollution that I suspect really causes the reactions that pollen and dust merely trigger. Some people find that by wearing masks they can enjoy more sunshine before they start coughing and sneezing.

Really.

Not that it might not be a good thing to address the pandemic of government dependency, which has reached such dysfunctional depths that people actually imagine that governments should somehow be able to manage diseases. Not that it might not be useful to lock down government offices, reduce the government workforce by two-thirds, raise the cost of regulations to a level where anything less life-and-death urgent than a glyphosate ban could end a bureaucrat's career, and generally bring government budgets down in proportion with the way the COVID panic brought the economy down. Not that non-essential, not-really-even-government organizations like WHO shouldn't go the way of your neighborhood ethnic restaurant.

But what's with this sexist bigotry of blaming (mostly women) for trying to cope with their own allergies in their own harmless way? Isn't that the old coward instinct to attack what appears to be a weak target and never mind whether it has anything to do with the actual threat?

Funny 

Well, I chortled.


Arguably this should go under "Politics," but when the "politician" in question is the bad boy character from a scripted "reality TV" program of years gone by, and the opposition is coming from the sister-in-law of a has-been comedian whose show was cancelled for making groundless accusations of murder...


Memorial Day 

As regular readers know, I don't have a lot of patience with the idea of decorating graves. If people were worth remembering, and of course they were, it was for what they did, for what they gave to this world. Remember that. Carry it on. In whatever tiny, inept, unworthy way, carry on a little of what your departed friends and relatives did.

I'm not claiming that I, personally, have a lot to build on the foundations my departed friends laid while they were alive. I don't. All I'm saying is that I think whatever I can do toward their goals is a better memorial to them than a lot of flowers left on a grave. It's good to maintain some reminder of where graves are, so that people don't inadvertently dig them up; there's no need to be mawkish about it.

But it's worth remembering, too, that Memorial Day started out as a day to remember the war dead. 

This link is to a grim, gruesome, disgusting war story. I think Dennis Santaniello timed this story for this weekend for a reason. I think it's appropriate to reflect on those killed in wars, and how they died, and what they died for. The characters in this story died in what they were told was a war to end all wars. 

What have we done toward that goal?


Music 

Not many music links today, but here's Wings.


John Scalzi...has done much better "covers."


Obituary 

Vince Staten remembers Frank Gibson.


Weddings 

According to actual scientific studies, it may be best for the marriage if a wedding party skimps on decorations and goes wild on invitations. Apparently, the investment that really shows commitment is not the biggest diamond or longest skirt, but the number of relatives who gather to celebrate. 


In line with which, a party idea I've always liked specifies that bridesmaids must wear skirts (provided) and groomsmen must wear bow ties (provided). This allows the bride to pick a color scheme and enforce it without anyone having to spend a lot of money on a dress or suit that the person considers unflattering, overpriced, or itchy. 

Butterfly of the Week: Tabora Lady

Or Miombo Lady, or Tabora or Miombo White Lady, Swordtail, Swallowtail... Graphium taboranus looks very similar to Graphium arisbe, Graphium schaffgotschi, Graphium morania, and others, so some authorities don't even list them as separate species. Some sources list Graphium arisbe taboranus or Graphium taboranus morania or some other combination as if these are only subspecies. This view may be fully accepted some day. Scientists have yet to gather enough facts about these butterflies to  debate intelligently.

There are also scientists who want to split the Graphium genus, which certainly has a lot of species in it, and use Arisbe as the genus name. I only report these things.

Anyway Graphium taboranus, which for our present purposes we shall accept as a species, is found near a mountain called Tabora, and in and near a forest called Miombo, and in several places in sub-Saharan Africa. Is the species endangered, or is it just that some local populations have declined sharply? How could you tell? Even experts who dissect dead butterflies aren't too positive about identifying the White Lady species. They're not exactly alike, but casual visitors to nature parks can't be sure which is which when the butterflies are flapping their wings.

Graphium taboranus is reported from Zambia to the Democratic Republic of the Congo. It has a wide range. It's not uncommon or thought to be endangered, but is believed to be less common than the look-alike species that share its range. In Angola, Malawi, Tanzania, and Zambia, it is probably active for most or all of the year. It is believed to live on trees in the genus Annona, small trees that typically have toxic leaves but bear edible fruit. 

As a result of this confusion, there aren't a lot of photos of living Graphium taboranus on the Internet. It's popular--it's featured on postage stamps--but all people know for sure is that it looks like other butterflies that share its range. There are no photos of this species on sites like Inaturalist. Of 189 links  Google pulled up in a search for this species, over 150 were just checklists of all the Graphium species.


At the time of writing, one of these Botswana stamps was for sale for $7 on EBay: 


Taboranus means "of or from Tabora" and doesn't sound like either of the two English words it can be broken into. When words Caesar never heard are "Latinized" there's room for legitimate differences of opinion about how they ought to sound. Not this one. In English, at least, it's ta-BOR-an-us. 



Photo by Adalbert Seitz, 1924, public domain.

Photos ofa female museum specimen, top and bottom views,are at the bottom of page 19 of


Graphium taboranus could and may hybridize with look-alike species arisbe, endochus, morania, ridleyanus, and schaffgotschi. Filling in the records of how these butterflies are alike and different, how they live, and whether they are especially valuable to humans or merely an important part of the ecosystem, are still wide-open opportunities for Africans to become famous.

The life cycle is currently undocumented. By now regular readers can guess what the egg, caterpillar, and chrysalis will be found to look like. It remains for Africans to confirm or disprove our guesses.

Sunday, May 24, 2026

Web Log Weekender for 5.22-23.26

I didn't spend much time link hunting this weekend. Too much reality kept going on.

Advertising, Vile


Found on the Meow, credited to Look magazine, 1966. Thank goodness I never saw THAT ad. Mother was just about to purge white sugar from the house. I minded. Even in 1966 I was capable of planning a campaign of intolerable brattiness...

Some people undoubtedly planned such campaigns and succeeded. They're the ones still telling farmers that the farmers need "pesticides."

Music 

Another Schneeman bowed psaltery demonstration.


The Beatles.


Jakob Longfield.


Politics 

The majority of Americans are not, never were, and never will be Loony Left globalists. The majority of politicians' biggest donors are Loony Left globalists. That's why it's important that even the Bright Young Things lapping up the attention to their petty fights need to stop with the in-fighting. We can disagree; we don't need to attack one another.


Shared by Robert L. Malone, whom some of us need to stop attacking. He's not perfect, he may be wrong about some things, but stop with the hysterical leftist language about it. If you don't agree with him, state your case without any screeching about how he's a traitor, he's a horse thief, he probably molested your grandmother when she was ten years old, blah blah blah on--no doing the haters' job for them. Anyway Lens traces the meme to somebody called Curejoy Inspirations on F******k.

Book Review: The Strong-Willed Child

Title: The Strong-Willed Child

Author: James Dobson

Date: 1978

Publisher: Tyndale

ISBN: 0-8423-6661-X

Length: 240 pages

Quote: “Most parents have at least one such youngster who seems to be born with a clear idea of how he wants the world to be operated.”

It’s James Dobson, so you know what to expect, right? Religious Right? Right! Dobson may be remembered as an advocate of physical correction for children.

I personally believe that parents have a right to use reasonable physical correction on children. I was spanked as a child, by other older people as well as my own parents, and I don't think it did me a bit of harm. In fact one of the more loving things my father ever did for me, as a child, was to knock me down flat...before I could step on a venomous snake. I'd hope I'd be able to do that for a child today. However, apart from a few obvious correctives like "Don't step on that snake" or "Don't play with matches" or "You're not allowed to hit other people," I don't remember spanking doing me any good, either. It didn't leave physical or psychic scars but it completely failed to teach me what adults wanted me to do instead of whatever I'd been doing. Before trying to justify slapping a little hand, adults need to consider what we want the child to learn. If it's "Keep the house clean," then instead of slapping the child who carelessly spills food on the floor, it makes more sense to direct the child to clean up the mess. Venting emotions at children may or may not scare them; it does distract them from absorbing information. It teaches them "Teacher doesn't like me" instead of "Kicking the back of the seat ahead of me is rude."

If you have a reasonable level of tolerance for Dobson’s school of thought, there’s still room for doubt about how useful a book about rearing children can be. Dobson can’t even claim extensive firsthand experience with being the parent of a strong-willed child; according to him, the member of his household who best exemplified this trait was a dog. Dobson is an expert on applying Bible teachings to family matters, but in this book he is admittedly out of his field, and it shows. Strong-willed children can be introverts or extroverts and this is one case where the distinction is crucial: the way adults relate to an introvert child’s will needs to be almost opposite from the way they relate to an extrovert child’s will. Dobson’s approach is geared only toward extroverts.

Dobson’s dog was never very well trained, but it did eventually learn to obey “a few simple commands.” One day, after years of obeying “Go to your bed,” the dog defied Dobson and wanted to spend the night on the fluffy toilet lid cover near the heater. It growled, snapped, tried to bite. “That tiny dog and I had the most vicious fight ever staged between man and beast” before Dobson moved the dog into its bed. The next night, when told “Go to your bed,” the dog went. Dobson reports that during the next four years it didn’t challenge Dobson again.

Strong-willed children, Dobson is saying, are like his little “alpha dog.” They challenge adults. A young father whose idea of quality time with his child was to take a three-year-old to a basketball game told the kid, “don’t go past this line.” “He had no sooner returned to his seat than the toddler scurried in the direction of the forbidden territory...and deliberately placed one foot over the line.”

The archetypal, or Archie-Bunker-typal, right-wingers in Dobson’s intended audience clearly believed that parents and others who work with children need to be “tough enough to make [the children] obey.” Those who believe that humans should “obey” other humans only in the sense of respecting others’ rights and boundaries, that the way to teach children math or manners or morals is to call their attention to our examples when necessary, may not like this book.

The strong-willed or Type A personality trait is sometimes considered basically an extrovert trait—the only functional personality trait that is correlated with extroversion. That may account for Dobson’s neglect of introvert children. However, the trait is independent of extroversion. In fact Type A’s who don’t show the more fully developed neurological “wiring” of true introverts still tend to be high-functioning extroverts, who “like to get things done, whether with others or alone,” and while they like to take control of their environment they don’t compulsively clamor for control of other people’s attention. To assume that “the strong-willed child” is an extrovert is probably a mistake. 

Introverts are not shy so much as inner-directed; if what they want to do can be better done with a group, they can organize and lead the group without showing any interest whatsoever in maintaining “social leadership” as a form of ongoing control of other people. The “natural leader” of one activity may, in the absence of personal hostility, prefer to let someone else be the “natural leader” of another activity. It’s possible for Type A’s who identify as extroverts to be survivors of twentieth century America’s cultural war on introversion, during which we were told things like “You aren’t, or don’t want to be, an introvert—you’re not shy, you’re attractive, persuasive, a natural leader when you choose to be...” Neurological tests might quantify how many Americans who consider themselves to be extroverts are, in fact, no such thing. It would be interesting to know the results of neurological studies on many celebrity politicians, movie stars, athletes, and business leaders. Successful musicians are typically introverts; I suspect successful people in other fields may be strong-willed introverts too.

Little introverts may or may not be particularly strong-willed, but when they are, it’s unlikely that even the human version of a “vicious fight” will do them much good. Unlike dogs, children grow bigger and stronger, and see that adults grow less strong, every year. A strong-willed introvert child who is subdued for the moment by forcible correction will eventually hit back. On the other hand introverts have that inner sense of “rightness” that, if the child is not battered, will naturally teach the child that hitting other people is as wrong as singing off key, coloring outside the lines, or leaving a mess on the floor. Parents can recruit the strong will of an introvert child. This is the child who may need occasional correction, but generally behaves reasonably. Misbehavior is usually best corrected by addressing the reason for it. Attempts to “break” a strong-willed introvert child can be physically dangerous to the adult, or to a younger or slower-witted child on whom a child like Charles Schultz’s “Lucy” may dump emotions. This child must be reasoned with.

Practical rewards and punishments for these two types of children are almost mirror images. Almost all children perceive candy as a reward and beating as a punishment, but obviously neither candy nor beating can be used every day. What introverts want in social relationships is the kind of respect that backs off and allows them to do things by themselves; they don’t particularly want attention, and may perceive group attention as a punishment. What extroverts want is control of as many people’s attention as possible; they like to be liked or respected, but they’d rather start a fight and lose it than be left to do something by themselves. Parents can use their attention to reward and punish specific behavior. Introvert children respond well to directives like “When you’ve accomplished X, you earn points toward (money, computer time, etc.).” Extrovert children may need directives like “When you’ve been completely quiet for one hour, then I’ll listen to you for five minutes.”

Confusion is understandable since strong-willed Type A’s are the ones who invented the idea of “ambiverts.” Either they have introverts’ neurological assets or they don’t. Mostly they don't but, given adequate motivation, they can be comfortable either working alone or organizing groups of people to focus on the tasks of their choice. Usually they’re intelligent enough to see the advantages of working well with others, so after the toddler tantrum stage they develop good, often charming, social manners. Their strong personalities can easily seem to have both introvert and extrovert “personality strength.” They tend to like this idea; they like to think they’re in full control of their own personalities. However, for purposes of behavior modification, it will help adults to know which a child really is.

While Dobson is probably right about it being good for young children to know that their parents’ wills are even stronger than theirs, the image of a “vicious fight” may still be inappropriate. Type A’s can perceive their ability to laugh off punishments as desirable enough that they actively invite punishments. While some Type A’s internalize the idea of not only strict but harsh physical discipline, and grow up to be child abusers, others convince themselves that they’ve been martyrs for their “cause” of sloppiness, irreverence, profanity, sexual self-indulgence, or disrespect of their elders. The prudent adult will use insight into their temperament to reinforce desirable behavior with positive rewards. Type A’s respect a firm consistent stand longer than they do a “vicious fight.”

By overlooking neurological differences, Dobson produced yet another twentieth century book that may be useful to parents of extroverts, but drifts in and out of touch with reality as introverts know it. By 1978 the world didn’t need any more of those.