Tuesday, October 15, 2024

Featured Links - October 15, 2024

Links to things I found interesting but didn't want to do a full blog post about.

The moon over Frenchman's Bay

Saturday, October 12, 2024

Happy Canadian Thanksgiving

It's Thanksgiving weekend up here in the Great White North. We're not quite white yet, but nights are getting down to the freezing point so it won't be long. I'm taking the weekend off from blogging. Regular posts will resume on Tuesday. In the meantime, enjoy these fall flowers.

Fall flowers

 

Friday, October 11, 2024

A Journey Across a Divided America

There's always been division and polarization in US politics, but I'm not sure if there's been a time since the Civil War when the country has been so evenly divided. Most of the coverage of current politics seems to focus on the politicians and the "chattering classes", but not what's going on in the lives of average Americans.

Recently, author and journalist Ian Brown spent two weeks riding a Greyhound bus across the US from Los Angeles to New York followed by Pulitzer Prize winning photographer Barbara Davidson. He writes about the trip and the people he encountered in this long article in the Globe and Mail. 

“On a plane, you have first-class and economy,” a rider would say to me on the first day of the trip. “On a bus, you have no idea who’s on there with you.”

The bus is also the last truly democratic way to get from here to there, at a time when a critical slice of Americans can’t decide which road to take. There were 168 million registered American voters in the last presidential election. Polls suggest they are deadlocked between Donald Trump and Kamala Harris. The election will be decided by an estimated three million undecided voters in swing states – among them Nevada, Arizona, Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania, all places I plan to debus for a glance around before I reach New York City. (Georgia and North Carolina are also swing states, but I have only two weeks, so they’re off the itinerary.)

All of which is to explain why, on a Saturday in late summer, I was standing in the doorway of a four-person tent pitched on a sidewalk in downtown Los Angeles’s Skid Row, a short walk from my hotel and the nearby Greyhound station.

It's a brilliant, sharp piece of writing coupled with memorable photos and I strongly encourage you to take the time to read it. (It's a gift link from my subscription, so no paywall. Articles like this are why I subscribe to the Globe and a few other newspapers). 

Monday, October 07, 2024

Featured Links - October 7, 2024

Links to things I found interesting but didn't want to do a full blog post about.

The Scarborough bluffs

Sunday, October 06, 2024

Photo of the Week - October 6, 2024

It's fall, which means time to harvest. We have a garden in the backyard and this year planted tomatoes, zucchini, squash, beets, cucumbers, peppers, and garlic. Most of the flowering/climbing plants were a disaster. The tomato plants didn't produce and the cucumbers and beets got eaten (despite having chicken wire fencing around the garden). We did get a couple of small peppers and squash and a few zucchini.. 

The garlic, which we planted last fall, and the potatoes turned out well. (The potatoes were in planters). 

The last crop wasn't strictly a garden crop. We've had Jerusalem artichokes growing along the fences for several years and have harvested them before. You can mash them just like potatoes. This year we got a bumper crop.

I roasted some for supper, following this recipe, and they were delicious.

This week's photo is in honour of our final harvest. It wasn't such a bad year after all.

Jerusalem artichokes




Saturday, October 05, 2024

Saturday Sounds - Ringo Starr and His All-Starr Band - 2024/09/22 - Fallsview Casino, Niagara Falls, ON

This week's musical treat is a concert that I wish I could have been at: Ringo Starr and His All-Starr Band at the Fallsview Casino in Niagara Falls Ontario on Septermber 22nd.  Ringo has played in the area several times over the years, often kicking off his tours at Fallsview or Casino Rama, but I've never managed to get to one. 

Per Wikipedia, the current lineup of the band is:

  • Ringo Starr – vocals, drums, piano (1989–present)[5]
  • Colin Hay – guitar, harmonica, vocals (2003, 2008, 2018–present)[6]
  • Hamish Stuart – bass, guitar, vocals (2006–2008, 2019–present)
  • Buck Johnson (musician) – Keyboards, guitar, vocals (2024–present)
  • Gregg Bissonette – drums, percussion, trumpet, backing vocals (2008–present)
  • Steve Lukather – guitars, bass, vocals (2012–present)
  • Warren Ham – saxophone, percussion, keyboards, harmonica, vocals (2014–present) 
As is typical for his shows, the songs include some classic rock numbers, songs from Ringo's post-Beatles career, and a few Beatles hits. The concert video is a fan production with stable video and decent sound. I hope I'm in as good shape at 84 as Ringo is now. Enjoy.

Wednesday, October 02, 2024

The Last Dangerous Visions Is Finally Published

The Last Dangerous Visions is probably the most famous book that (almost) never was. The third in a series of legendary anthologies edited by Harlan Ellison was supposed to be published in 1974, but the publication date kept slipping, Ellison died in 2018 and the anthology has finally been published thanks to the efforts of Ellison's friend and literary executor, J. Michael Straczynski (the creator of Babylon 5, among many other things). 

I can still remember the impact that reading Dangerous Visions had on me as a teenager and I'm certainly not alone in that. It's unlikely that The Last Dangerous Visions will have the same impact, but it's still an important book and deserves ntoice. In Rolling Stone, Jason Sheehan writes about the book's history and why it still matters. (archive.ph link)

That original Dangerous Visions was legendary. It featured new writers alongside famous ones (a collaborative model more or less unheard of at the time), took on topics like race and god and war and freaky space sex. It celebrated the New Wave movement in science fiction that would go on to invent the future we’re living in today, and stuck sparklers and road flares in it so no one could possibly claim they didn’t see it coming. The book was kinked to the frequency of chaos and revolution at a time when mainstream writers were afraid to speak truth to power lest it upset their ability to eat, and publishers were afraid to take chances on new voices. And since we find ourselves again in a similar moment, it’s only fitting that this final installment of Harlan’s anthology comes to the table with the same kind of blood on its teeth.

So here, now, in this cursed year, at history’s dumbest inflection point, we have the capstone to Harlan’s 50-year project. The Last Dangerous Visions gives us Stephen Robinett doing a school kid’s “What I Did Over The Summer” essay on the nightmare warehousing of the elderly and Max Brooks’s epistolary document on the asymetric warfare of hunger and panic. There’s stochastic, structural weirdness from John Morressy; a short, sharp wake-up call from all the things we refuse to see by David Brin; Cory Doctorow on forgiveness and robots; and Cecil Castellucci’s tale of a galactic food critic arriving at a terrible conclusion about how one might come to truly appreciate a culture through their food. With TLDV, Joe followed the model originally established by Harlan — new voices right next to the established ones, young outlaws and old masters together. From the universe of stories that Harlan selected for inclusion in TLDV (in all of its various iterations), Joe kept 24, plus a four-page introduction to Ed Bryant’s trippy “War Stories” written by Harlan himself and never before published. He then added seven more stories, newly commissioned for this publication — including “Binary System” by Kayo Hartenbaum which is about isolation, the loss of definition in the absence of societal constructs, and the conditional immortality of being useful to capitalism. It’s the first story that Kayo ever sold, and that, too, is in keeping with Harlan’s model because, 50 years ago, Harlan bought a story about torture and resistance called “Leveled Best” from a then-19-year-old unpublished writer named Steve Herbst that was supposed to be included in the original, non-existent 1974 edition. Joe included that one in TLDV, too.