It takes a lot of practice
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A friend asked: “If you had the chance to ask three different people
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The one req...
Teach the Young: A Frank-ly Kind Act
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This story was brought to my attention by our esteemed alumnus, Roger
Green. This is the story of youngsters thwarted in their initial forays
into small bu...
Faded road markings cause concern
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Q: Can someone at New York state tell me why the DOT doesn’t use a better
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Double and last
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Hi all members of our ABC-Wednesday-family.
This will be the last birthdaypost on this url... because in 2 days ABC
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Alan Moore's Twilight Proposal
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Introduction by Alan David Doane:
Honestly I didn't intend the irony, but this week's FMF, looking at Alan
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Letter to the Editor
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To the Editor,
Suppose that early in your employment you decided to set up 401(k) or IRA
pension plans, contributing to them with each paycheck in the ...
The Best Films of 2023
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Martin Scorsese, left, Lily Gladstone, and Robert DeNiro all received Oscar
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snubbe...
Eagle Scout Project
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Rutherford neighbor Krish Soni is getting started on his Eagle Scout
project on Saturday, October 26. He will be labeling storm drains in the
neighborhood ...
February Thaw
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My friend Phil and I have a tradition of meeting outside his building and
going for a walk around his block once a month. Last Wednesday was a great
day fo...
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Just now, Marge and I are doing a bit of adventuring. The next adventure
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See you i...
It Changes
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Living with Lupus and Fibro and Asthma is often not so much 'one day at a
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This...
Goodbye, goodbye, goodbye…
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Well, kids, this is it. I’m leaving first thing tomorrow morning. My visits
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exclusive...
Spring is here?
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As far as the pro peloton goes, it’s on! I watched the Tour of Flanders
today, and it was one of the best races I’ve ever seen. “Looking back, you
get a b...
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With the recent attention given to Ronald Searle's 90th birthday and new
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The book is titled Modern Ty...
New year, old problems
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This year has barely begun, and already old problems are repeating.
Fortunately, none of them are my fault, but that fact doesn’t make them any
less annoyi...
AmeriNZ 417 – Happy New Year
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Happy New Year! This is my first podcast of 2025, and I begin by telling
you about my holidays and some of what I got up to. As usual I have a few
side sto...
US-to-UK Word of the Year 2024: landslide
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I've been struck by the lack of election-related 2024 Words of the Year
from the English dictionaries (for a list, see November's newsletter). So
I am h...
December Photo Challenge: Holly Jolly
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Here it is at the end of December 2024 and PJ’s theme for the month is
Holly Jolly. The holidays are always a mixed bag for me. December has its
ups and do...
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Saturday November 2nd.
The viewings on the Saturday went well. Monday morning the Estate Agents
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1, 2, 3, 4: You Can Count On It
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Up the stairs, count the steps1, 2, 3, 41, 2, 3, 41, 2, 3…Crap, it didn’t
come out even, it’s eleven But 1-2-3-4-1/ 2 /3-4-1-2-3 will have to do; the
middl...
This is The End (a follow-up)
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I wrote yesterday about my possibly retiring this space in favor of
migrating all of my blogging to ForgottenStars.net, because of Reasons. I
am now pul...
Sunday Round-up
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Wash your mouth out
In these ultra-hygienic days, Russian artist Yulia Popova has come into her
own by making models of foodstuffs out of soap. What makes y...
Where We Remain Undeveloped
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One implication of the Son of God being born as one of us is that the
fullness of God was present in the undeveloped state of a baby, which
further means t...
The long, LONG saga of Mia's new chair
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I've been wanting to write about Mia's new chair for a while, because it's
something that we hope will help her out a lot. However, I didn't want to
write ...
Tough Day
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A few weeks ago, I turned 38, and I am still under the scrutiny of
strangers in public. One would think that once you're out of grade school,
middle school...
Change
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Group Reading “The only thing we have in this world that is utterly and
intrinsically ours is our integrity.” ~ Mira Grant One- to find the
universal eleme...
Retro Y'all
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Been doing a lot of jumping lately, but feel I don't have much to show for
it. Oh well. At least I'm still getting my clothes on the right way.
Seriously...
Spring is in the air.
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After a few wonderful, sunny days we are back to a somewhat grey and rainy
day. Yesterday all doors back and front, were open all day long. The
central he...
U is for UNDER and UP
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I had no idea what to post for this week's celebration of the letter *U*.
It took a lot of looking through all my photos to come *UP* with an idea.
So ...
Song of the Week: "Whispering Your Name"
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I just got this into my head a while back. This is Alison Moyet, from her
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Becca...
No parallel
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Get a good look at these: Whence they came: After seeing that incredible
glow-in-the-dark Zac Posen dress that Claire Danes wore at the 2016 Met
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ABC Wednesday: The Importance of Being Bored
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When I was growing up, you being bored was your problem that you were
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Parenting Tips
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Posting for the first time in a while to share some parenting advice. So
last year, one of my twin daughters mocked a handicapped kid at school,
grabbed a ...
Save Up to Half!
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This has got to be my new favorite classic comic book ad. Accordions? Was
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all th...
Berowne's 294
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(Also for Three Word Wednesday and ABC Wednesday: "S" is for "shrewish")
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After watching part of the clown show the other night it's a safe bet none
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Age is a State of Mind, Somewhere Near Nebraska
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What a year it has been! After surviving the odometer rolling over to 40, I
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The End of a Long Day
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You know those days where all you really want to do is change into your
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#Freaking Out -AND!
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Calmly completely freaking out about my move. AND! I quit smoking. I feel
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Gaze Upon My Works and Snicker, Part 53.
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[image: DP700-F365028]
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[image: ants solving a puzzle]
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The ‘Do of ’72
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“My mom cut my bangs for picture day, 1972.” (submitted by IG @keciadeveney)
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One by one, Ken goes over the many issues the WGA is fighting for and why
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Quackle!
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I was happy to discover that the best scrabble simulation software,
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The 119th Congress was just sworn in—and Democrats are already plotting how
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by Thomas Reifer At the height of global demonstrations against Israel’s
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This episode was delayed, yet again, because Arthur didn’t have enough
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Monday, October 01, 2007
Book Quiz!
Jaquandor did this quiz around the time a couple months ago when people were shocked, SHOCKED that Americans aren't reading books like they used to. Actually, I do sympathize. I joined a book club through my [former] church for about a decade (1986-1996), and that forced me to read 10 books a year. Not only that, I was required to read genres that I wouldn't have necessarily read on my own, such as fantasy or home improvement, instead of my usual non-fiction selections of biographies and books about music, movies, sports and history. Now I read maybe 3 or 4 books a year, and the year Lydia was born, quite possibly only the Bradley method book.
I mean, in my job, I read all the time, but it's not whole books. It's reports, book sections and reference material.
Of course, I'm taking this to mean books I read for myself. I read lots of books to Lydia, at least a couple per day.
What are you reading right now?
The Genius of Impeachment: The Founders' Cure for Royalism by John Nichols.
Do you have any idea what you’ll read when you’re done with that?
Probably A Day Apart: How Jews, Christians and Muslims find freedom, and joy on the Sabbath by Christopher D. Ringwald, who I know. But I still need to get back to Shrub by Molly Ivins, which I was reading before I read that Stax book, Soulville, U.S.A.
What magazines do you have in your bathroom right now?
At any give time, Newsweek, Entertainment Weekly or Jet, though my wife and my daughter are always bringing them out and giving them to me. when I was growing up, we ALWAYS had magazines in the bathroom, a wicker basket with my mother's Ladies' Home Journal; I always used to read "Can this marriage be saved?"
What’s the worst thing you were ever forced to read?
Don't know that it was the worst, but Johnny Tremain, a junior high assignment, sticks in my mind. So does Ivanhoe.
What’s the one book you always recommend to just about everyone?
I don't recommend books.
Admit it, the librarians at your library know you on a first name basis, don’t they?
Well, yeah, but it's mostly because I bring Lydia to the library to get videos and books. Also, because I'm on the board of The Friends of the Albany Public Library.
Is there a book you absolutely love, but for some reason, people never think it sounds interesting, or maybe they read it and don’t like it at all?
You mean, besides the World Almanac, which I find utterly fascinating?
Do you read books while you eat?
No, maybe newspapers or magazines. I don't want food to get on the book.
While you bathe?
No, but I shower, so it seems impractical.
While you watch movies or TV?
Not movies. TV- rarely; usually periodicals during baseball.
While you listen to music?
Yes.
While you’re on the computer?
Only if engaged in downloading or uploading something that will take a while.
While you’re having sex?
What?
While you’re driving?
No.
When you were little, did other children tease you about your reading habits?
Yes, and not just children. My own family who labeled me Mr. Encyclopedia. People used to come visit my parents, so I would dutifully come out of my room, say hello, then go back to my room to read. My sister once insisted that if the house were on fire, I wouldn't notice because I was so busy reading. This was not true; the power would probably go off, and I would have noticed that.
Whereas the kids in school, some of whom I still know, seemed to have valued the written word.
What’s the last thing you stayed up half the night reading because it was so good you couldn’t put it down?
2 comments:
http://tinyurl.com/yvl246 Book Banning Efforts Bring on Title Fights
"Utterly fascinating"? Thanks!
--
C. Alan Joyce
Editorial Director
World Almanac Books
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