Glens Falls (NY) Online Book Discussion Group discussion
ABOUT BOOKS AND READING
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What are you reading or what books have you read or heard about? (Part TWELVE) Ongoing general thread.

Instead, I'm reading the January edition of the Oprah magazine which I received for Christmas. An easy read, learn a little, learn nothing, look through pages, find out about a new product. Relaxes me. Sometimes I just want something to read that's very very simple.


https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...



The link to my review is right there in my comment, Nina, but here it is again.
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

That's a great price. Mine copy is a battered old paperback. I probably bought it used back in the 70s or 80s. It's still in amazingly good shape. Funny how some stick together & others fall completely apart. I still have a few paperbacks from my father in the 50s, but most are dead. Many sat in unheated storage for years & that did them in.

My husband's birthday today - Christmas day.
Merry Christmas Everyone!

And, I'm still not reading anything other than my Oprah magazine!! Funny how some days you just want to read something short.

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

https://www.livescience.com/61287-new...

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


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I expect that any word which designates a group can be good or bad & probably changes over time. IIRC, a cracker was originally a southern cowboy, possibly specific to Florida, but later evolved into a slur. Rednecks, those who wore red handkerchiefs, were once a proud symbol of the coal miners revolt in the early 1900s, but is more often associated with poor southern farmers due to having sunburned necks. It's often a synonym for cracker.
IIRC, Negro comes from Spanish which means black. Sometime in the 18th century, 'nigger' became the a common term in the US. Given the status of blacks at the time, I'd guess it always was derogatory. Jim seemed fine with the appellation in The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1884), but Twain & most of his readers were white. Besides, it was set in the rural south where it would have been common usage.
It was commonly used in rural Maryland when I was a kid living on the Eastern Shore, but it was bad then. I remember asking a friend's mother whether the term 'black' or 'colored' was polite since she was black & I was confused by the news at the time. She gravely told me that 'colored' was just fine with her. It was the mid 60s, I was about 7, & Mom didn't know.
We were clueless since there were few blacks where we grew up on Long Island. Most of us were 2d or 3d generation off the boat. A lot of the first generation had lived in Brooklyn & our parents had made good, so they moved out on the Island into neighborhoods that were a real mix of ethnicity, but Greeks or Italians were the darkest skinned in any quantity that I recall. I remember a lot of ethnic jokes, but they were told in good humor. We ran all around & through everyone else's houses & got yelled at in a lot of languages, although the hand signals (spanks) were all the same.
I remember the food the most & I'm no gourmet. It was just that good. Wherever we were playing, we were fattened up. Mrs. Muchimichi made the best spaghetti & Artie always had bushels of clams & oysters. George's mother was Greek (Papa-something) & made some sort of honey cake to die for. Grandma Meyer made spaetzle & sauerbraten. Kowalski's mom made wonderful perogies. Miss Muriel (Irish) was the queen of pies & her husband (Mr. Perkins) owned a restaurant with Australian cuisine. (Their son Jonathan was the red-headed Campbell's soup kid of the 60s & now owns his own restaurant in partnership with my aunt.) The Lins had Chinese place, but I don't think they were exactly. Their sweet & sour spoiled everyone else's for me. The Goldmans had a deli. Arnie still had it last time I was there a decade or so ago. Hot pastrami dripping with grease on rye. Yum! Those were just a few. (I just gained 10 lbs thinking about it.)
It was completely different on the Eastern Shore of Maryland.
Most had been there forever, both black & white, but had been completely segregated until recently. It was very rural & conservative, to put it politely. My black friend, Jonathan, was never comfortable eating at our house & I only remember eating lunch at his a couple of times. There was always a wall there which I didn't understand for a long time.
He hurt me one time when we were playing. (I think he hit a baseball that bloodied my nose or something.) His mother was terrified & took me home begging my mother for forgiveness. My mother was completely mystified, as was I. It was no big deal to either of us, but I'll never forget how scared that poor lady was. It was scary. Mom told me not to ever tell anyone about the incident. I never did, but I don't recall playing with Jonathan after that, either. Sad.

I didn't. Neat. They were somewhat friendly in the play.

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Our sewer is clogged up and rather than coming back up into the sink it is going down through a pipe leakage into our basement finished bedroom wall. We might be facing major construction if the wall has to be taken down.
Also, my daughter's horse has something bad in it's leg and might have to be put down if the medical treatment doesn't work.They aren't hopeful and also she has been boarding another horse for a friend and has greatly improved that horse's condition since boarding him and now that owner says if Megan puts her horse she will put that one down also. Megan feels terrible about this but can't do anything about it. Enough bad news for tonight.


Short Science Fiction Collection vol. 008 is devoted to Alan E. Nourse. Usually these Librivox collections have as many different authors as stories, so this was a nice change of pace. Nourse had quite the imagination, too. I gave it a 4 star review here:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Empire of the East by Fred Saberhagen is a fantasy set in a post apocalyptic SF world, a nice blend & a precursor to his 'Swords' series. I haven't read it for years & thought it aged very well. I gave it a 4 star review here:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Death of a Gossip is the first of the Hamish MacBeth cozy mysteries by M.C. Beaton. It was short & fun. I gave it a 3 star review here:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

A lot going on for you and your husband. Keeping my fingers crossed that if needed - home insurance will cover and prayers for Megan's horse.

I too get disappointed when not giving all the information to be able to solve the mystery. Sometimes I just shrug and move on. Other times, I find myself saying why couldn't such and such be mentioned then end up saying "oh well."
Like - "cozy mysteries."




https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
I really enjoyed the first 10 lectures or so, but I think SF grew beyond the constraints after that. For instance, his discussion of sex, gender, & feminism was incomplete & muddled since they're squished into one 30 minute lecture. Each could have easily filled their own. Still, it was quite a trip. Highly recommended.

Will do.


https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
I look forward to reading more of the series.

I gave it a 4 star review here:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Med Ship Man is by Murray Leinster back when he was still writing good stuff for the pulps rather than novelizations for awful SF TV shows. I gave it 4 stars here:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
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A nice Christmas present indeed.