Tuesday, July 1, 2025

Selling the More Natural Foods (Petfinder Post)

PK: "Cats, I have a confession to make. When Serena's deliveryman rolled up with our Pure Life water, he said I'd better go to Wal-Mart and see what I wanted to buy. He had a point. There didn't seem to be any of our regular Kitten Chow on the shelf. There was a great stack of the pricier "Kitten Naturals." They'd raised the price on Kitten Chow, but not (yet) on Kitten Naturals, so the difference was only a dollar more for only a pound less of the overpriced kibble.

Since youall seem to tolerate Kitten Chow, even thrive on it when it's supplemented with a little human-food-grade meat, and since I had to buy a lot of other things, including a towel to replace the one you deliberately..."

Serena: "The litter in that little box is never going to dry out, and you expect me to keep using it although you have a whole fresh bag! I did it to call your attention to the problem. You will please bear in mind that I chose an old hospital towel instead of anything you seem particularly fond of. You certainly have enough pieces of cloth to choose from."

PK: "I admit it. It's easier and often cheaper to buy a new piece from a nice charity store than it is to haul things to the laundry. I'm totally into the "buy good clothes in the first place, then wear them until they wear out" school of style. And I'm not a clothes hoarder; in fact I had started selling the separate pieces, which I'm too old to bother about putting together into fashion looks any more, in the Friday Market before COVID. I'm still willing to sell them, but not throw them away."

Serena: "So I soaked an old hospital towel you don't even hang in the bathroom any more. You might at least appreciate my taste."

PK: "I do, but you don't have to spend hours on end in the house any more. I only ask you to come into the office to tend your kitten or watch for mice--and I don't think we're going to have so many mice around the house, going forward. It does take skills and talent, however misused, to get away with as many lesser crimes as the Bad Neighbor committed before killing our Pastel, for as long as he did. I don't imagine a lot of people would try it, even if Bayer had started paying them. So you're an outdoor cat who has office privileges, just as you were before the office had a litter box."

Serena: "I like having a litter box. It's a privilege everyone else can see and smell! I want you to clean it so that the smell does not become unpleasant." 

PK: "Anyway, when I go to Wal-Mart I like to add up the prices of everything I buy just to make sure the chatter-cheaters don't get away with anything. I like to take in just about exactly the amount of cash I'm going to spend. If I do decide to buy something at an inflated price I like to know that I'm going to have to make an extra run out to the car, then back through the store. It helps me minimize the amount I spend in Wal-Mart. So, the prices added up just right if I bought the regular Kitten Chow. So I brought you that."

Serena: "It was fresh! We like fresh!"

PK: "You and Drudge like Kitten Chow but Traveller didn't exactly thrive on it. We'll never know what-all was wrong with poor little Traveller but I've wondered whether he might have done better on Kitten Naturals. He did seem to feel better the week someone sent us the really ridiculously overpriced kibble. Do you think it would have been worth paying for Kitten Naturals, before the price goes up anyway?"

Serena: "Smaller bags mean you have to buy more fresh kibble. We all like fresh. So I think you should have bought the Kitten Naturals to see how we like them. We did like the really ridiculous brand."

PK: "There is a man in Washington now, a man for whom I have some respect, who's trying to say that poor people should have to buy all of the "healthy choices" in the store. No chips, no candy, no soda pop, no "energy drinks," no "heat'n'eat"...I don't know how far he wants to go in the direction of really mandating that, if you get handout money from the government to buy food, you should be buying whole dried oldfashioned oats and whole dried beans, and spending hours cooking them. It's madly unpopular of course. People are saying, "Well obviously he's never been poor," and dredging up things out of his first life as a spoiled rich brat."

Serena: "Do rich brats like soda pop? I certainly don't. It smells like disgusting oranges and cherries and grapefruit and suchlike."

PK: "Most humans love oranges and cherries and...well, I love grapefruit. I used to have a school friend who used and reused a joke, "Don't do anything I wouldn't do. That leaves you just about anything short of murder, high treason, and eating grapefruit." The other things she said she wouldn't do varied, but eating grapefruit was always what they call the punchline. But I like grapefruit." 

Serena: "You are a strange species of dumb animal who can't hunt well enough to survive, so God gave you the ability to eat garbage instead. But at least you're useful."

PK: "Anyway, to answer your question, really rich brats like really stupid things, like taking drugs that nature intended us to use only once in a while, to save someone's life, but these rich brats take them just to see how the drugs will feel for them. Some of them make themselves very sick that way. Mr. Kennedy, who is now our Cabinet Secretary in charge of public health, damaged his throat and can hardly speak. But the experience helped him appreciate being healthy, and he's spent his adult life trying to make it possible for other people to be healthy. I respect that."

Serena: "It sounds good. Though how much do humans know about how to be healthy? Most of the ones we know don't seem to be. You've whined about having been poisoned for years before losing Pastel finally got you to stand up on your hind legs and run the Bad Neighbor out of the neighborhood..."

PK: "No, dear. It wasn't only me. It was the whole neighborhood. A lot of people lost dogs and cats, not to mention Jimmy Skunk, and Silver's possums..."

Serena: "Dare was an old possum, anyway, and Dasher was an idiot even as possums go. We have to change possums every year or two anyway. The new one seems to be all right. Even if nobody's going to teach it to walk up and beg for treats. But you should have dealt severely with that man long ago." 

PK: "I was handicapped by wanting to operate within the law. He wasn't. And it's only the last year or two that I've been the better marksman, anyway."

Serena: "A Real Queen doesn't have to be bigger or stronger than other animals. She just has to lay down the law with passionate intensity. My great-great-great-grandmother was a tiny cat but, in defense of her kittens, she rode a huge coy-dog half a mile uphill in the snow!"

PK: "And did anyone ever tell you who shot that coy-dog?" 

Serena: "Some human did."

PK: "It was the Bad Neighbor, before he'd poisoned himself. My father didn't approve of hunting but he did appreciate shooting as one of the gifts God had given him, and he would've had to agree that the Bad Neighbor used to have that talent too. Glyphosate destroyed the Bad Neighbor's talents. Which serves him right. He once could shoot a running coyote."

Serena: "Then there's the Nice Neighbor who complains of not being able to read without glasses, and the one who doesn't like to walk up the road any more..."

PK: "They were younger than my parents, but they're in that generation. They're closing in on eighty years old. Don't let's think about it. I don't want to be the head of the clan! I want elders!"

Serena: "And the lot of Nephews that whine about one of them being allergic to cats. And the friend with the diabetes. And..."

PK: "Oh, stop. There's a breed of humans who live seventy or eighty years, and a breed who live ninety or a hundred years, if all goes well. Most of us in this town belong to the longer-lived breed, but not all. I don't know nearly enough people who are under age sixty. What made me sad was hearing a friend whose family definitely belong to the longer-lived breed say that she didn't care about living past age seventy. She doesn't want to admit that she has glyphosate reactions, but that way of thinking about the ones she has was part of them!"

Serena: "My point being that I don't see that humans know very much about their own health."

PK: "We don't, as a species. And we know even less about other people's health. Which is why I wish Mr. Kennedy would accept the original idea of the food stamp program.?"

Serena: "Food stamp? How does that work? You stamp on the ground and someone gives you food?"

PK: "God willing, I never will...but the idea was that instead of the government giving people food that was going to waste, which was usually not very good when it was fresh and usually not fresh when it was handed out to poor people, government would give people what were called stamps, or tickets, or coupons, to buy the same food everyone else ate. It was a good idea. My father was one of those calling for it, when I was just a kitten. He used to load up free food in boxes and have to count how many poor people didn't even want to take it. Then he'd bring it home so that it wouldn't be wasted, and Mother would try to invent ways to cook it so that people would want to eat it, which in some cases was impossible. Powdered egg! Oh, and there was the bitter nutritional yeast she cooked with the stale macaroni and reprocessed "cheese spread." We sat down and took one hopeful bite, and then with one accord we walked outside and scraped our dishes out for the chickens...and the chickens came up and took one hopeful bite, and then with one accord they all started wiping their beaks on the grass and asking us whether we thought that was funny. So Dad wrote to President Nixon about some sort of food tickets that could be used like money, but only to buy food. I didn't know how many other people wrote to President Nixon about the same thing. All I knew at the time was that President Nixon stopped the free food handouts, so Dad lost his main job in town, and that summer we used food stamps to buy our food. It was fun, getting to bake with interesting ingredients like El Molino carob powder and turbinado sugar instead of all those rejects! And Dad still said food stamps were a good idea and Nixon was not as bad as most people said."

Serena: "I've not heard anything about this Mr. Nixon lately."

PK: "He's been dead for years by now. But one thing everyone used to think he'd done right was the food stamp system. But of course some busybodies used to complain, and still do, that poor people don't choose the healthiest food. Of course this is partly an effect of being poor. Plain dried beans are a better bargain than canned beans, if you can stay at home and cook them on your wood stove all day. Whole raw potatoes are much better than potato chips, if you have the time and place to cut up the raw potatoes and cook them. Poor people often don't. They may not have kitchens at all; they may be renting rooms with only room to sleep in, or sleeping in their cars." 

Serena: "We don't know anyone like that, do we?"

PK: "Not very well. If we did, and being poor was the only reason why they didn't have kitchens, they could live here and help renovate ours, which still shows damage from the fire ten years ago. But then, of course, some people are poor because they're not very intelligent. A smart, frugal person who cooks at home, even if person doesn't have everything a kitchen should have, has food stamps left over at the end of the month; the government gives them enough. A less intelligent shopper buys food that's not such a good bargain and has month left over at the end of the food stamps. There are a food bank and a church kitchen in town for people like that. They don't starve, but they don't seem to learn how to use their food stamps, either. We now have a system where smart poor people have extra food to give to stupid poor people, which is fun for some of the smart poor people because they enjoy seeing how clever they are, but basically it means smart people are paying stupid people to stay ignorant. Some people complain about this."

Serena: "Why do you want to feed stupid people, anyway? If no one feeds them, won't they learn to hunt for themselves, or at least go away, like stray tomcats that nobody loves?"

PK: "There's a fear that they'd starve to death where they are. Stupid people aren't as clever as stray tomcats. We are not talking about the kind of stupidity that is involved when I don't think about bringing something with me and have to go back to the other room to get it, or the kind of craziness that is involved when you ruin a perfectly good cleaning rag to make a point. There's stupidity and stupidity. Anyway most poor people aren't stupid, but they soon learn that government programs don't reward them for not being stupid, that being slightly stupid is the way to keep the handouts coming...so they act stupid about things like trying to get work. Grandma Bonnie Peters found some examples of that, a year or two before I started blogging. They said things like "I don't want a job where I'd have to leave my child with strangers all day." GBP said, "You can bring your children to work as long as they stay out of the actual food-handling area," because she was manufacturing food. Or they'd say, "I can't go to work on time because I don't have a car." Maybe they could have walked but GBP said, "I'll take you to work with me in the van." Or they'd say, "I can't stand up and work because I have cramps every month." To me GBP said, "They have cramps because they eat the wrong food," but to them she said, "You don't have to stand up to work on the assembly line." And after all that, in the second week they quit work because they needed to stay on the handouts to get their dental work done. The state of Tennessee wasn't paying to do anyone's dental work right but those poor women would rather let the state provide them with inadequate dental work than work and earn the money to have their dental work done right."

Serena: "You're going to have to do one or the other, some time soon."

PK: "I'll have to scrape up the money, because we are not in Tennessee. My point was that Mr. Kennedy seems to think, because a lot of busybodies have been telling him, that poor people aren't intelligent enough to choose the right food. Well, some of them aren't, but it's not that they spend their food stamps foolishly the same way every month. The ones I've observed wanted to try a few special treat foods that were supposed to taste like something from a fancy restaurant, every month, and that didn't leave enough for a month's supply of rice and beans and peanut butter sandwiches. 

Your deliveryman and I got into a conversation, a few years ago by now. He was just making conversation as humans do. He said someone who worked at the store had been ranting, again, as she apparently often did, about the poor people who came into the store. This store is not near us; I don't often go in there, nor know those people, but I know where the store is and expected that the people went into the store to use conveniences like the faucet that's just right for refilling bottles with water, the water-flush toilets, or the quaint old phones, the same way Lisiwayu and I used to do when we were selling junk out of a warehouse near a different convenience store. Anyway the woman who actually kept the store was ranting, "They come in and fill shopping carts with soda pop, chocolate bars, potato chips, and energy drinks, and they pay for it with food stamps. How is that even possible? When my mother was disabled, and she was eighty-some years old, they only ever gave her..." some amount of money that was less than these people were spending, in one day, on junkfood.

I said, "Well, she should talk! They are trying to be good customers, but what can they buy in that store with food stamps? The store sells gas, it sells conveniences like matches and work gloves, and it sells junkfood. What can they buy? Not a dozen eggs! Not a can of beans! Not a sack of potatoes! I don't remember even seeing things like Cheerios or sandwich bread in that store. Do they stock peanut butter? Baloney? Canned fruit?"

I was thinking of the convenience store near the church college I used to attend. We don't have one like that in my town. The one near the college was run by Koreans who had been refugees after the war, and they sold candy and chips and soda pop, of course. But they stocked some fancy local brands of candy and soda pop made with real fruit--for about the same price as the cheaper, junkier kinds. And they sold all of the soy-and-wheat meat analogues Seventh-Day Adventists eat. And they had an oldfashioned vegetable cooler, a device that cooled a whole aisle of fruit and vegetable bins; they filled that bin with fruit and vegetables every day. They bought wholegrain bread from the college bakery, which still existed back then. I don't remember their selling any fresh meat, but they sold milk and eggs. At that kind of convenience store people could choose lots of different things that could be considered healthy food, and that they could even eat on the street, or in a college dorm room. I wish we had a store like that in my town; the old QSQ, and Broadwater's, and Reed's store were like that, but we don't have one of that kind any more.

"Many's the time," I said, "when I've been willing to pay twice what I'd pay at Wal-Mart for the convenience of buying, at a local convenience store, what I buy at Wal-Mart. But it's not often been possible. When I go to Wal-Mart I buy rice, beans, chicken, mackerel, corn, tomatoes, peanuts, onions, garlic, and maybe ice cream or candy for a treat. When I stop at a local convenience store the only 'real food' they're likely to have is the peanuts, and some convenience stores don't even offer good deals on those. It feels as if I'm doing well if I find some kind of candy that has some food value, like M&Ms or those local oatmeal things, and some kind of gluten-free chips. Sometimes these stores don't even have baloney, other than pork. I don't eat wheat bread; a lot of people don't eat wheat bread; often these stores don't sell wheat bread. If they stock anything but candy, chips, pastries, soda pop, and tobacco products, and the non-food conveniences like batteries and sewing kits, they might have one rack with some odd mix of canned soup and canned veg that looks about a week away from being donated to the food bank. And if I can't buy the solid food I cook at your store, or the Addco in Gate City, or Citgo, Valero, BP, or whatever's replaced the Black Diamond store, with cash, how can anybody expect poor people to buy it with food stamps?"

The deliveryman, a nice person, listened to this rant. Then he went with me to Wal-Mart. A few weeks later I was in his store, and saw that an aisle had been stocked with things other than candy, chips, pastries, and soda pop. Those things included the brands of beans, corn, tomatoes, and mackerel that I buy at Wal-Mart. They cost twice as much in a convenience store. I bought some, anyway, that day and whenever I've been in that neighborhood since. I think most of the Addco stores now stock those things. I'm not sure about the bigger chains, and when I've been in the local Citgo store the selection of grown-up food has remained execrable, but from Addco I could get the makings of a decent grown-up meal.

Just making grown-up food available to poor people would improve the food choices some of them make, fast. The Obamas called to public attention, ten or fifteen years ago, the urban "food desert" neighborhoods where people would pay more for very limited selections of prepared food from locally owned snack wagons, or at best from 7-11 or similar junkfood-based convenience stores, because no Safeway or Kroger's or Whole Foods manager dared to go into those neighborhoods. Those neighborhoods used to exist. I think the Obamas may have encouraged some improvements. I hope so. I know that when my husband and I tutored in the DC schools, we were always being warned, "Bring your own lunch--there's not a decent place to buy lunch in the neighborhood," and wondering, "What about the students? Is lack of a decent lunch affecting their ability to learn?" The more promising students brought their lunches, and I knew they didn't just walk out to Giant, as I did, for a perfect piece of fruit and a package of fresh locally-packed nuts. If they had sandwiches and carrot sticks, somebody had spent an hour standing on a crowded Metrobus, holding grocery bags, to get bread and carrots and canned tuna and suchlike to where they lived.

But what if they don't choose grown-up food? Not all poor people are grown-ups, after all. Many are students. All of my Nephews enjoy certain advantages over many of your fellow students. Not the least of these is that you've learned to enjoy, and prepare, grown-up food. As occasional road food Fritos and Mountain Dew may be a better choice for some of us than whole-wheat toast and a sprayed apple would be, but it is a real advantage to have tomato or strawberry plants as your "indoor pets," to know a dozen or so favorites of the thousand known ways to cook dry beans, to know how to stir-fry your own Asian-inspired concoctions without the extra grease. Reading Olivia Graham's cookbooks reminds me how underprepared to feed themselves many of your classmates are. The difference between a Real Brain and a mere nerd is that a Real Brain will cook for friends, and thus teach them to cook, while a mere nerd will sit in the computer room and gloat because his classmates are so far behind him.

Then there are the more pathetic kind of poor people who shop for food, if they still eat food, while suffering from "the munchies" after drug trips. All they want is junkfood. They get brilliant trippy ideas like "Can I eat one of every kind of Little Debbie cookie in one day if I don't eat anything else?" or "What if I buy a box of cake mix, bake a cake, and just eat my way through the cake all day? Oh wait, the electricity's disconnected for non-payment again. What if I just buy a tub of pre-mixed frosting?" Or they look at some food, maybe something uninspiring like a tin of artichoke hearts that seemed like a good idea during the previous day's drug trip, and think, "I don't want food--I want more drugs," and they barter their food for drugs, or drug money. 

That kind of poor people, the addicts, are poorer than poor and really do need minders who will make sure they're supplied with nutrients until their brains start ticking over and making reasonable decisions about these things. Most poor people, however, do not need to be insulted by comparing them with addicts. Most poor people cannot be included in very many of the same sentences with addicts. 

Many poor people make food choices that seem foolish to busybodies for valid reasons. For example, if they're sensitive to glyphosate, they've learned that totally denatured substitutes-for-food like soda pop, which no one should consider food, are almost glyphosate-free and thus actually healthier than things that used to have some food value, like milk or orange juice. 

If they don't know how to cook, or if their trailer house heats up like an oven and everyone feels so hot and cross they're likely to maim anyone who mentions cooking, or if they have only an electric stove and the electricity's disconnected for non-payment, then they buy the junkfood they can eat right out of the package. Nature has provided all kinds of non-junk food that can be eaten right out of the package--apples, oranges, bananas, cherries, strawberries, lettuce, parsley, watercress, spinach, broccoli, tomatoes, cucumbers, melons, Vidalia onions, celery...but glyphosate has made it more toxic than some $7-a-dozen gluten-free chocolate-chip cookies, so that's where some people's food stamps go.

If they don't have a kitchen sink, as it might be because they're living in a storage bin or in a car, they'll pick pastries or candies over fresh fruit every time. Pastries and candies can be eaten out of a nice dry wrapper, all crumbs rolled up tight inside the wrapper, the whole thing stuffed into a pocket until it can be thrown away, without attracting vermin or calling attention to the fact that food is being consumed in a storage barn. (Which might call attention to the fact that a person is remaining in the storage barn, sitting very quietly between boxes, after closing time.) Fruit and vegetables might taste better, but the peelings would bring in trails of ants. Some poor people are in fact afraid of rats and roaches. Rich people think all poor people have grown up on intimate terms with rats and roaches; they are wrong. Only the ones who come from federal housing projects are particularly likely to be accustomed to living with rats and roaches.

If they know more about their food tolerances than any flippin' floppin' social worker, they'll reject "healthy" food (for someone else) when it's offered to them and make a meal of junkfood right in the donor's face, because who the BLEEP does this donor think person is, anyway, and by the way this donor's dog is probably the dumbest dog in town, too. You can tell because it stayed with the donor.

And if they're aware of a busybody acting as if they weren't competent to make their own food choices, all bets are off. They feel no real appetite because they're more interested in scoring off the busybody, making person feel stupid, than they are in eating. 

In any situation of this kind there is one intelligent thing the person who wants to help can do: SHUT UP AND TRY TO LEARN SOMETHING. Learn, specifically, that when people lose their jobs they do not necessarily lose their minds, and when their homes have been smashed by natural disasters they do not lose the ability, or the desire, to smash the ego--and probably the nose--of people who think that being better off makes them better human beings. 

I don't know what any particular individual, rich or poor, ought to eat but I know it ought to be something the person wants to eat, as determined by the person, not by me. 

Nor by Mr. Kennedy.

Nor by any of the busybody social workers who've been whinnying for years that the food stamp program is all wrong because it doesn't give them control of what poor people eat."

Serena: "Have you finished? Has any of this anything to do with us at the Cat Sanctuary? Are you planning to buy food with food stamps?"

PK: "No. But when people praise Mr. Kennedy for going after waste, I think of how much food other people have thought I ought to want, and I didn't, so I wasted it. I remember my mother going overboard at the health food store and buying us so many different vitamin pills that my brother and I, who had a rose competition going on that year, quietly took outside and fed to our rosebushes. Then I remember wastes of life like the man who managed to be homeless even in Gate City for a few years, who was skinny because he would hardly ever eat food but only trade it for drugs. There was some chance of him actually eating a "treat" food now and then, but no chance of his eating any of the stale slop that was handed out at the food bank. Letting people eat what they like may be a waste of money in the sense that, if they're going to be wastes of life, the taxpayer pays for the junkfood on which they get sick and then pays for the medicine that keeps them sick longer, but trying to force them to eat what we like is even more of a waste if they're not going to eat it. Or if it's going to make them sicker, anyway, because of glyphosate."

Serena: "Does this have anything at all to do with the cats and dogs?"

PK: "It has this: I asked you whether you'd want to try Kitten Naturals. Your behavior has clearly indicated that you would, so if the prices haven't changed I'll pick that brand the next time I'm in Wal-Mart. If you prefer regular Kitten Chow, I'll get that the next time, and so on."

Here, Gentle Readers, are this week's most appealing photos of adoptable cats and dogs. Most of them will thrive on ordinary Purina kibble, as indicated for their species. Some may need fancier food but there's no need to waste money on super-expensive brands of kibble. Seriously, it'd be cheaper, and probably make more of an impression on your pet, to share whatever you eat that is species-appropriate with your pet.

Zipcode 10101: Sienna and Moonie from NYC 


I think somebody didn't realize that "sienna" is a color. Siena a place name, but "sienna" entered the English language first as the name for paint colored by minerals dug at Siena, meaning a yellowish to reddish brown. This cat called Sienna is, if anything, a silvery shade of grey. Anyway, she's a mother cat who's bonded closely with her last remaining kitten. They must be adopted together. Moonie, the kitten, is the darker grey one on the left.

Zipcode 20202: Batwing from South Carolina by way of DC 


Batwing has more white fur, and is an older kitten, but he reminds me of Serena's kitten. (The kitten had nothing to say about food because he still "eats" only milk. He's alive and well, quite a little handful, and I'm afraid that just by trying to help him get enough exercise I've become His Human.) Batwing has a real white stripe on his nose instead of a few white hairs, complete white forepaws instead of only white toes, and two white boots instead of one behind. In their sturdy body shape and also apparently in their schedule of bouncing manically about, then coming back to snuggle up to their humans, they're very similar.

Zipcode 30303: Harvey, Not from Atlanta 


...is either a very new page, or scammy. But he looks quite a lot like Serena's kitten. No information is available about Harvey.

Zipcode 10101: Amber from NYC 


It's not the most informative web page. I don't think they expect Amber to need one. Remember those old photos of the Queen of England with those little dogs scampering around her feet? They were Corgis. Amber is a CORGI. Someone will want her. She has received the sort of royal veterinary care, and no doubt comes with the sort of royal vet bill, proper to a breed that's been associated with the last really great monarch of our era.

Zipcode 20202: Hannah from Texas by way of DC 


Hannah is two years old and weighs 50 pounds, a compromise between the usually larger Weimaraner and the usually smaller Staffordshire Terrier. She had puppies; the puppies have been adopted, now it's the mother dog's turn. She is a large, energetic young dog who likes to exercise her human. 

Zipcode 30303: Daphne from Atlanta 


Her web page indicates that this sub-optimal dog who has a variety of health and behavior issues is in the optimal shelter pet situation. She's in a foster home, will stay there until a permanent home is found, and has had the adoption fee pre-paid. 

Though very cute, this eight-year-old, rather pudgy beagle mix suffers from separation anxiety and may panic if she's left at home alone. She also has to eat a special diet. She's learned to sit, stay, walk at heel, and go to bed, but she really wants to be her human's little shadow. 

If you can be kind but firm with a sweet, clingy, old-lady beagle, Daphne is for you. She may have seven or more years left to live. Make them good years.

Book Review: 2 Qt Small Air Fryer Cookbook for One

Title: 2 Qt Small Air Fryer Cookbook for One

Author: no information is given, but it reads like Olivia Graham

Quote: "This book is all about air frying for one."

And so it is. I don't have the new contraption for which this book was written, and can't test the recipes, but they'll fit into a bowl that fits loosely into the two-quart fryer, anyway. 

The recipes are a selection of the snacky kind of thing bachelors and students tend to eat, including egg things for breakfast, fried vegetable snacks, meats, a few trendy alternatives to meat (a cauliflower "steak" cut, mushrooms, tofu), and several desserts. One shortcut to the "lava cake" effect is explained: air-fry a marshmallow and other things in puff pastry. 

This book seems more carefully edited than some others from the same source. Recipes that specify cut carrots or three of something are still accompanied with photos that show whole carrots or six of whatever, but each recipe does seem to be at least adapted from the one photographed. Instructions spell out how to make sure things are done inside--stab a pick or a fork into veg or desserts, a thermometer into meats.

If your approach to cooking for one involves a special device that cooks single servings, this book is for you. Mine tends to involve making full-sized batches of things and eating the leftovers or sharing them with others, including the cats. Cooking single servings is fun and cute but it does involve things like using one slice of the tomato or even half or a quarter of one egg, so you still need a refrigerator, if not a freezer, to use this book. If you have an air fryer and also have friends, you've got it made with this book--just make one of every dish for every person, and you should be able to use up the tomato and the egg while they're still fit to eat. 

If your school allows air fryers to be used in dorm rooms, using this book should guarantee instant friends. Of course most of them are merely hungry, not really compatible, but it's worth doing a little extra work for extra cash to give growing students an alternative to chips and candy anyway.

Monday, June 30, 2025

Book Review: It's My First Time Getting Old

Title: It's My First Time Getting Old

Author: ChatGPT as "Charles Pemberton" 

Date: 2023

Quote: "The book you're holding in your hands is the book Dr. Pemberton would have written. If he wasn't a fictional character..."

And he's a likable character; he's familiar with all baby-boomers' favorite songs, books, and movies. And that's because he's the product of plagiarism. His book consists of unacknowledged quotes from other people's writings, remixed, without payment. 

Do not pay for this book. If it's offered free, it's a great playlist for a Youtube binge...but I wouldn't have let it clutter my computer if I'd known it was written by ChatGPT.

Butterfly of the Week: Graphium Idaeoides

This week's butterfly is large, rare, threatened, and confusing. Graphium idaeoides, sometimes called the Giant Graphium, looks almost exactly like Idea leuconoe, the Giant White butterfly, and resembles other species in the genus Idea enough to confuse even humans looking at still images. The Giant White is much more toxic to animals that eat it than Graphium idaeoides is. These "giants" have wingspans of 4 to 5 inches--or more.


Museum specimen from March for Agusan Marsh, a conservation project from 2015.

Photos of this butterfly alive are rare on the Internet. Stijn de Win snapped some that are recognizable, though at odd angles, but then requested that nobody copy or link to them. 

How do humans tell these species apart? This page, with museum specimens of Graphium idaeoides above and Idea leuconoe below, shows some differences. The most reliable difference is probably that Graphium idaeoides has scalloped edges on its wings, with whte along the outermost edge, and Idea leuconoe has plain round edges with black around the outermost edge. The markings can be almost identical. Individuals of both species can look creamy white or yellow rather than flat white, especially in the  inside corners of the wings.

https://forum.insectnet.com/viewtopic.php?t=284

In order to be listed as "threatened" a species must have had a good deal written about it. Much of that information is, or should be, available to the public online. Greedheads at Google, however, won't show it, because they've made commitments (1) to show us only about one-tenth of what's available and (2) to prioritize paying commercial sites above academic, social, specialists', or individuals' sites. Most people searching for a living creature by its scientific name may want to know on what grounds it was ruled a threatened species (if it was), but Google has degenerated into a site that tries to distract you from that question with more and more "information" about sites that sell images or carcasses, rather than information about what Graphium idaeoides eats (as distinct from general blather about its being a "rain forest species"). 

Schools and teachers need to be aware of this, and require students to use only printed documents for research until such time as (1) Google searches are 100% clean of robotic plagiarism, (2) Google searches aren't cut off at any arbitrary point but will crawl on through 100,000 links if there are 100,000 links, and (3) Google searches consistently prioritize all academic information above any "shopping" information.

There is nothing wrong with painting pictures of butterflies, or putting pictures of butterflies on postage stamps, or reconstructing pictures of butterflies with toy blocks. Graphium idaeoides has been commemorated on a coin, on a Lego block, and in many drawings and paintings. There is something wrong with shoving these commercial images at people who are looking for scientific information about the real world.

Pardon me, Gentle Readers. I become grumpy when I have to go to Yahoo for information. 

Anyway, Graphium idaeoides (or ideaoides, but idaeoides is the standard spelling) is most likely to be found on the eastern sides only of certain Philippine islands: Luzon, Samar, Leyte, and all around the south side of Mindanao. It is almost always seen in March. 


Professor Jumalon wrote more than this about the Swallowtail species of the Philippines, and his children and grandchildren have chosen to honor his memory by maintaining a Butterfly Sanctuary in Basak:


Apparently they have not been able to determine what Graphium idaeoides eats. 

Sunday, June 29, 2025

Web Log Weekender: 6.27-28.25

It's still hot, despite storms that break the heat for a few hours at a time, and I've still been using more Internet time on writing articles than on hunting links. Nevertheless:

Economy, The 

For years all the news from Britain sounded a bit like this song. Their economy was ravaged by the wars and, no matter how many British imports we bought, it seemed hopeless. Then for the first ten years or so they screamed that PM Thatcher was only making everything worse--though she may have deserved credit for breaking the downward spiral. 

And now? The Waste Age in the 1950s and the dot-com boom in the 1990s were temporary booms. We've still mechanized away too many jobs and had too many babies The Economy does not need. We could impose artificial bans--taxing businesses ten times as much for each robot cashier as they'd pay a human, putting lethal tariffs on companies that contract to have all the parts for "American" products built and put together in foreign sweatshops--so that all the "millennials" can go to work and recover from socialism the way we did. We could have simply had fewer babies, but for my generation it's too late to make that choice now. I do recommend it to the "millennials," though. One child or none until everybody is working and everybody can afford a decent house, no apartments after marriage, with a vegetable garden.


Education 

"The question presented is: Do public schools burden parents' religious exercise when they compel elementary school children to participate in instruction on gender and sexuality against their parents' religious convictions and with-out notice or opportunity to opt out?"

Multiple choice: 

a. Yes
b. Yes!
c. Bleep yes!

If children aren't allowed to opt out of listening to stories "designed to disrupt [their sense of gender] normativity," well, I think they're still allowed freedom of expression on T-shirts. To disrupt any sense that the children's parents' beliefs are being suppressed, stigmatized, de-normalized, shamed, etc., the children should logically have a right to wear little T-shirts saying "WHAT A PITY [the writers and/or characters in these stories] are going to BURN"...And yes,. the kids who don't join in "shaming" the teachers who read these stories to the class should be conspicuously un-invited to a few after-school parties. I'm sooo sorry if that hurts somebody's little feelings, but the political issue here goes beyond the feelings about "popularity" we all need to outgrow and the sooner the better. The Montgomery County schools need to pull a 180. Complaints of hurt feelings among the children of the few super-rich parents who send their kids to public school are the most efficient way to make them do what's necessary. Hurt feelings about "popularity" in primary school heal easily.

Because public school attendance is mandatory, anything teachers say that is controversial can be construed as an attack by a government agent on a student's or family's religious freedom. That means the controversies teachers raise in the classroom should be limited to topics like "I enjoy springtime more than autumn." That means the schools have a responsibility to present the biological facts about the reproductive process, but nothing whatsoever about "sexuality," even after students are old enough that they might have some sense of their own sexuality. This is what makes babies. Anything else people may do is their own business. Class dismissed.


Extroversion, Consequences of Treating as Normal 

Until we stop electing extroverts who look charming on television and start voting based on people's records of wise decisions and good character, we can expect political news like this:


The Minister for Children's personal relationship with a teenager might be considered a political statement, but that petty thief...!

Book Review: Back Side of Calvary

Title (as printed, surely a typo): The Backside of Calvary

Author: Rod Parsley

Date: 1991

Publisher: Harrison House

ISBN: 0-89274-897-4

Length: 110 pages

Illustrations: black and white graphics presumably by the author

Quote: “Sin-infected humanity needed the kind of transfusion that only God could provide. And the only way such a divine exchange could be made was if God Himself provided the blood.”

With “backside” in the title and a blurry rear view of a crucifixion on the cover, I wondered whether this was some sort of parody of evangelical Christian books. It’s not, although it contains some other infelicitous phrasing. Rod Parsley has not become a famous writer but he was apparently a real minister.

Well...if he’d put this work of soteriology on a blog, I would have read it without comments. Christian writers are always feeling a need to write the gospel message in our own words. I always think the Bible writers did a better job than I have. I feel that way about the gospel according to Parsley, too.

If you want a book to share with unbelievers, Mere Christianity and Basic Christianity are the classic summaries of what we believe. Backside seems to have been written for that purpose but I don’t recommend it for that purpose. It’s too easy for uncharitable, unchristian spirits to ridicule.

If you want a devotional book that lingers on the core of a faith you earnestly believe, you can read this one in the spirit in which it seems to have been written.

If you challenge, “How can you recommend a book about the Christian gospel that’s less than the best? Doesn’t such a sacred topic deserve the very best literary treatment?” you’re right, but this book has something to say to you. The next time you catch yourself wondering why some writers, who are Christians, write anything and everything but evangelical books...read Backside, and you will understand.

Perfect Afternoon

Prompted by Rommy Cortez-Driks at Poets & Storytellers United:


Components of a perfect afternoon
begin with a day's work early begun,
done singlemindedly, thus finished soon,
before the heat at zenith of the sun.

This perfect afternoon is shared by more
than one, though not all human need to be.
(Hens always have their days' work done before
midday, so mostly afternoons are free.)

A garden's always better than a lawn
and much can be said for a cherry tree
as place to rest and take one's ease upon;
the breeze is cool, a sound like distant sea.

A view of water, somewhere, anyway
adds something to the perfect afternoon,
whether viewed from the garden as in May,
or waded into in the heat of June.

There should be children, if they can be found.
There should be board games, tennis games, or boats.
There should be cold food eaten on the ground
and old songs with precisely rendered notes.

Perfection's not required every day;
pursuit of it is tedious, in fact,
but satisfactory afternooning may
be sought in every morning's conscious act.

Friday, June 27, 2025

Web Log for 6.25-26.25

It's been hot. The laptop has had some siesta time. I've spent some time in town. I found only two links, both at the same place.

Glyphosate Awareness 

Sasha Latypova presents an interesting corrective to the frankly stupid "if anything is dangerous it must be dangerous because it's the SOLE and WHOLE cause of cancer" version of Glyphosate Awareness. Nothing is the sole and whole cause of cancer, though many things, including glyphosate, are pro-cancer factors. Many people who've used DDT never got cancer. Many people who smoked cigarettes all their lives didn't get cancer. Many people who had X-ray scans daily didn't get cancer. And apparently, in some places, the pro-cancer factors in town cause more cancer faster than the "pesticides," hormones, and antibiotics on the farm.

(And yes, glyphosate is classified as an antibiotic, though it's not used as such since it's likely to make more patients sicker than the bacteria would do. It promotes the growth of fungi and reduces resistance to virus and, apparently, to intestinal worms, but it does kill some bacteria. Your body can kill bacteria more efficiently without some "antibiotics.")


Latypova's link still gives only the abstract and some "snippets" of an important glyphosate study; that's more than the last report I found online. If you can get this report free of charge at school, I recommend printing copies.

Book Review: She's Having a Baby

Title: She's Having a Baby 

Author: Suzanne Jenkins 

Date: 2019 

Quote: "They hiked for miles with Mike still over Devon's shoulder, to a rescue truck from a different squad." 

This is volume 1 in a series about the lives and loves of San Diego fire fighters. Mike and Devon are lifelong friends. Both are badly burned in a fire. Devon survives. Is it right for him to marry his best buddy's widow? 

Need one ask? It's a romance novel. Other characters and plot lines develop but this book is mainly about how Devon marries his buddy's widow; or, if you can stand to watch a woman giving birth in a bathtub while waiting to be taken to the hospital, you can stand anything and might as well marry her. It's about brave, goodhearted people who subject themselves to a lot of emotional stress and find relief in a lot of emotional sex.

Enough details about romance, sex, and babies are spelled out to attract bad things to a computer, so if you buy this series, buy printed copies.

Thursday, June 26, 2025

Book Review: Breaking Up Is Hard to Do

Title: Breaking Up Is Hard to Do 

Author: Mary Keliikoa 

Quote: "My wife, Meghan, left me last week. I want you to find her." 

Kevin, who is female, accepts payment to find Meghan for her husband Jacob. But which of the couple is nastier? If they find each other, who will murder whom?

This very short story represents the "hard-boiled" murder mystery genre, where nobody is very nice and anyone may murder anyone else on or off stage. 

Product Review: King Arthur's Gluten-Free Baking Mixes

Gluten-free food is seldom cheap. I found some King Arthur's brand gluten-free baking mixes on a half-price sale, the week before the price went up, and decided to test them. Only torture-test them. Baking mixes are formulated for use in full-size stoves. I used a saucepan inside an old "electric skillet" as a mini-stove, or primary office heating unit on baking days. 

Glyphosate Awareness has had to bash, lash, and trash this company for using gluten-free, glyphosate-soaked flour, in the past. Even sneer..."Bleep has flour to do with King Arthur? King Alfred was the one whose legendary history features baking...silly name!" I'm glad to report that they have indeed learned about this. I believe these mixes are glyphosate- and glufosinate-free. That does not mean they'll necessarily work for any particular person. It's not that "celiacs may have multiple food allergies, because celiac disease is a very mysterious and complicated disease that nobody can fully control, so we all need to ask our doctors for prescriptions for patent medicines to suppress the symptoms" blah blah. It's that other ingredients may contain different chemical residues to which we may be sensitive in a different way. Anyway, the company has cleaned up its act enough to deserve a fair review of four of its products.

I should mention that, although this review is scheduled to appear in June, the baking experiments took place in early spring, whenever the morning felt chilly enough to justify using the electric skillet to heat up the office. As I recall, I baked the chocolate cake before the Internet Failure in March, the others during the nine weeks of Internet Failure in April and May. And this was a La Nina year when we had some refrigerator-cool nights in the first week of June...In a normal year, I would have tried to time this experiment in winter, but this year it worked in spring.

1. Gluten-Free Chocolate Cake Mix


[You can buy all four mixes shown online, and some other flavors I didn't see in my local grocery store, if they're not in a local grocery store near you: 

Totally did not work for me. The big cake mix did not bake evenly in the small saucepan, which is to be expected and should not put off people who bake enough to keep a full-size stove, or bake in their wood stove. What should put you off is that some ingredient, I suspect the cocoa, didn't trigger a celiac reaction but did trigger some sort of unpleasant reaction. I felt queasy most of the day after I tested this product. The possum got most of it. 

2. Gluten-Free Classic Yellow Cake Mix


Surprisingly, this one did work for me. There's enough flour in the box to bake a 9x13" sheet cake or 8" or 9" two-layer cake, but the mix did bake evenly and produce a thick cake, like two 8" layers stacked up together without frosting in between, even in the saucepan. That mix has to be idiot-proof. The cake tasted like cake and was good enough that I kept it around for a few days, eating my way through it. 

"Yellow" cake, as distinct from mineral yellowcake, is a US baking tradition. It tastes like butter and eggs and milk and vanilla and sugar. It's not quite as easy to add flavoring to as "white" cake, which tastes like vanilla and sugar without the protein-rich farm food mixed in, but it takes most alternative flavorings well; you could add carob, pecans, cinnamon, banana, orange, pineapple, lemon, coconut, even grated carrots and raisins, or most other flavors anyone would add to cake. Of course some of these flavoring agents would affect the texture and baking method more than others.

3. Gluten-Free Ultimate Fudge Brownie Mix


Well...if you like fudgelike brownies, you might like this mix. It baked fairly well and tasted fairly good in the saucepan; it'd probably bake perfectly in a brownie pan. Brownies are tricky because of their high fat and sugar content. When the flour in the middle of the pan doesn't scream "raw," the edges of the pan tend to have reached a consistency that reminds people of bricks. To avoid wasting either middles or edges of a pan of brownies it's good to use a thick pan in which the batter forms a thin layer and bake at a low temperature. You can't expect a traditional brownie mix to bake well in a saucepan. Again, no celiac reaction, but the cocoa didn't seem to want to stay down. 

4. Gluten-Free Banana Bread Mix


This baked well, even in the saucepan. I cheated by enhancing it with about half a bag of whole pecans. It rose and cohered well enough to make a good bread, even with the pecans, and even though I carelessly let the bottom scorch. With the pecans it was delicious

These mixes are expensive when they're not on sale, and I don't plan to heat up the house by baking again till September or October in any case. However, the banana bread mix is terrific. I believe it would work, with traditional spices and mixed fruit, for a fruitcake-that-people-will-actually-eat such as Grandma Bonnie Peters used to make. If people expected edible fruitcake from me I would start experimenting in September to get the right proportions of fruit and nuts to this batter, but it's well mixed and could probably carry almost as much fruit and nuts as a wheat-based fruitcake batter. If your family like fruity, nutty baked goods, this mix may be worth its price.

Wednesday, June 25, 2025

Web Log for 6.24.25

Economy, The 

It would be pleasant to see the free market tried.


Health News 

More things to worry about? It's all connected. Wheat and grain products generally tend to be contaminated with lots of things--"pesticide" residues, mold, weevil body parts, plain old rancid oil, and tiny particles of plastic from their biodegradable plastic wrappings. Glyphosate is the one aggravating celiac reactions and producing pseudo-celiac reactions, I'm 99.999% certain--partly because it'd be so easy for Bayer to fund a test that would not support this conclusion as resoundingly as all the anecdotal data I've ever found does, and they don't dare, which tells us something. That doesn't mean the other nasties aren't contributing to some of the chronic illness some people have. Glufosinate, which some corporations are substituting for glyphosate in "herbicides," is chemically similar to glyphosate and gives me reactions that are similar to glyphosate reactions but nastier. I've not noticed any reaction whatsoever that might be associated with plastic waste; that doesn't mean that people won't notice such reactions if we continue using biodegradable plastic at current levels of profligacy. The US government has made it possible that the "organic" label does NOT mean that food may not contain enough glyphosate to produce symptoms. "Organically grown" food packaged in plastic can contain plastic waste, too.


Music 

No actual train here, though the musical composition may recall the composer's "duet with a freight train" stunt from a previous summer. 


Weather 

The heat wave is not as bad as some people urged us to overprepare for, but it does lend this joke relevance...



Book Review: Chucky's Pride

Title: Chucky's Pride 

Author: Marissa Ann 

Date: 2021 

Quote: "The first week on vacation I stayed in Memphis with my best friend Rae. After all the nights spent trying to drink all the Jack Daniels in the area, I am completely surprised my liver is still working properly. She and I spent most nights partying down on Beale Street, which is where I got my tongue pierced." 

Right. This very short "steamy romance" is the first of a set of fantasies about the "Night Howlers Motorcycle Club." Occasionally some of the men seem to do a legitimate job like delivering or working on a motorcycle, but they run drugs and brawl a good deal too. The women, too, may have jobs like tattooing, but mostly they waste whatever they have in riotous living. They have lots of sex, too. They have foul mouths. They are adults who've dedicated their lives to doing what seemed cool when they were in high school, even now that some of them have children. 

There are Christian motorcycle clubs for adults who are married to their children's other parents, who have jobs during the week and use their "hawgs" like cars, only burning less gas. I think I'd rather read about one of them.

If you want to read about aging kids who think the coolest way to live is one step ahead of the law, you will enjoy these stories. Despite the author's deft use of words to set the scene, quoted above, the stories are short--more than half the words in Chucky's Pride are first chapters of other e-books in the series--and most of the action takes place in beds, or in other places that are pressed into service as alternatives to beds, like, in Chucky's Pride, the girl's family's trampoline. Lots of explicit sex, likely to attract very bad things to computers. Lock these books in a storage barn before any children visit the house.

Do You Follow Celebrity Gossip?

This week's Long & Short Reviews prompt asks: Do you follow celebrity gossip? 

Not really. 

Why not? 

Because so many other topics are more interesting. A man I used to date could make a case for celebrity gossip having redeeming social value. Celebrity gossip gives people ways to find out who shares their beliefs before they risk discussing opinions about things about which they might feel more intensely, was the idea.

Right. If people who feel that way want to talk to me, they usually have lots of tidbits about actors' divorces and politicians' pasts to share, and I'll listen. But when I'm scanning news headlines, I don't click on the celebrity gossip. I don't care a great deal about how long some actor can hold on to the role of wife or husband or how badly some overnight-success musician was cheated on a real estate deal.

Belated Petfinder Post: Kitten Takes Over the House

Well, the kitten took over the house, so how could I get this post up on time? Easily, if I'd set my mind to it. People should not use kittens as excuses. 

Serena's kitten-who-shouldn't-be-alive now stretches out to 14" from fore paws to hind paws. He spends a lot of time sleeping and growing. He spends the rest of the time romping and chomping, preferring the latter. Serena has been feeding and tending him by fits and starts, apparently to limit consumption and get her milk production back into reasonable proportion to having one kitten, and now she's leading him around the office, making him work for his dinner. He would probably get more exercise if he had an adoptive sibling.

Kittens reach a stage where they really can't be left alone in a room that humans use, and benefit from having a special cat playroom if they can't be simply turned out in the yard all day. This one's not quite there yet, but soon will be.

Here are some of the most adorable, adoptable kittens and puppies in the Eastern States.

Zipcode 10101: Kanga & Roo from NYC


Technically it's Kanga's page, but these brothers are a package deal. Kanga has a slightly darker coat and more energetic temperament. Roo is mellower. Yes, this whole post is going to be an overdose of cuteness. Deal with it.

Zipcode 20202: Barbie and Skipper from South Carolina by way of DC 


This is Barbie. Skipper is also a Dilute Tortoiseshell, or grayzel, kitten but she has a distinct stripe of tan straight along her nose, so they'll be easy to tell apart. They're babies who can hardly be said to have purrsonalities yet. (They are old enough to be adopted. They're about the same size as Serena's month-old giant freak.) They're described as confident kittens who like to explore. Build that cat playroom.

Zipcode 30303: All That and Chips from Atlanta 


Chips is the brother, All That is the sister. Both are gray tabbies. They're a bonded pair who should be adopted together. 

Zipcode 10101: Princess Apricot from NYC 


She was getting along with her humans just fine until their mean old landlord made them put her up for adoption. You might want to get to know her former family and arrange visits if you like children as well as puppies. This little Princess is thought to be mostly Pomeranian, partly something larger. She likes to snuggle in laps and be carried as if she were a tiny purebred Pom. She's cautious and respectful of strangers but enjoys having children and other dogs as friends. The shelter want to wait until she's been spayed to send her to live with you. They recommend her especially to families with another dog and a fenced yard.

Zipcode 20202: Denali from Maryland by way of DC



The adoption fee is ridiculous. Haggle. This hound pup already weighs 35 pounds. He's still growing. There will be a substantial vet bill, which is probably included in the adoption fee; that would bring it a little closer to reasonableness. 

Zipcode 30303: Johnny from South Carolina by way of Atlanta 


Johnny and a sister, June, who seems to have been adopted already, were left in the woods to fend for themselves. Some people have very unrealistic ideas about what dogs, especially puppies, are capable of doing. It's not clear whether Johnny is really a German Shepherd, a Labrador Retriever, and/or some sort of mixed-breed coon hound. He does seem likely to be a large dog. He likes being indoors and they want you to promise that he can be an indoor pet. (Right.) He's described as a "100% sweet love bug" who likes to be petted and be close to humans. 

Tuesday, June 24, 2025

Web Log for 6.23.25

Pretty pictures, and a warning...

Animals 

British butterflies, and some of the flowers they pollinate.


Vietnamese butterflies.


Glyphosate Awareness 


Is he sure it's not a glyphosate reaction? It's a common one!


Book Review: Ashes of Gold

Title: Ashes of Gold 

Author: Valena D'Angelis 

Date: 2021 

Publisher: Fabledink 

Quote: "Bravoure was supposed to be the kingdom where freedom reigned and dreams came true." 

But this is the short story of how it fell. I'm not sure why this fantasy world, populated by elves and dragons and magi and so on, should be called Terra, but it is. This short prequel enters the consciousness of a long-dead queen having her throat cut by the tyrant king of the evil forces. To follow are several stories about how subsequent generations int his fantasy world fight to reclaim Bravoure.

For those who like high fantasy, this series may be a joy to discover.

Monday, June 23, 2025

Book Review: The Ficus

Title: The Ficus 

Author: Jennifer Kyrnin 

Quote: "The Ficus was more important than listening to The Mom." 

Is Jameson merely "a dull male child" who's not able to love his parents, but has projected some sort of bond onto their potted plant? Or...can boys be dryads?

Even for Amazon this is a short story but it's the kind that gets printed in magazines: well written, short, sharp, and painful.