Saturday, September 25, 2010
Tuesday, September 21, 2010
Ramona

My rating: 5 of 5 stars
This book was first published in 1893. I think I read it before I went to college but I am not sure. What I am sure of is how it has hung in my memory. I think I saw recently that TTN had a movie version with Loretta Young playing Ramona.
What did I learned from this book? About prejudice. About why I need to watch out for it within. Looking without I am sadden to feel that much has not changed in 100 years.
I do remember thinking it a good love story.
I think I would like reading it again.
View all my reviews
Elmer Gantry

My rating: 2 of 5 stars
drat rat it! i had a lovely well thought out review that the computer gods ate up! so now all you get is the condensed version: my dad banned me from seeing the movie...'might destroy what religious beliefs you have!' college, first review assignment...grabbed.
piffle! may have effected him but ...he had to be kidding.
recommend...no. oh, it is well written but not a mind bender...well, not mine anyway.
FYI, this is the summary GoodReads posted:
Today universally recognized as a landmark in American literature, Elmer Gantry scandalized readers when it was first published, causing Sinclair Lewis to be "invited" to a jail cell in New Hampshire and to his own lynching in Virginia. His portrait of a golden-tongued evangelist who rises to power within his church - a saver of souls who lives a life of hypocrisy, sensuality, and ruthless self-indulgence - is also the record of a period, a reign of grotesque vulgarity, which but for Lewis would have left no record of itself. Elmber Gantry has been called the greatest, most vital, and most penetrating study of hyposcriy that has been written since Voltaire.
View all my reviews
Saturday, September 18, 2010
A true story
We were traveling down to the Panama Canal Zone by boat as that was where my father was stationed (by the way, his 3 daughters were born there during two earlier tours of duty). As I did not remember any childhood boat trips, I was excited and curious to find out if I would be subject to "mal de mer".
Turns out I was not. My problem was the boat not only went up and down, it rolled side to side at the same time! For a person with little sense of balance to start with, this was a challenge!
Baby sister (newly graduated from high school) was victimized. As the dutiful 'big sister' (OK, so she is way taller than my 4'8"), I got her as settled as I could with a damp cloth on her head and trash can close by the bed before going to find my father, THE DOCTOR.
Given some Dramamine, I returned to save the green sister. Ah, magic! Not long after taking said pill, her green hue turned back to its normal porcelain beauty and she dozed off to sleep.
I returned to the report the good news to my father, THE DOCTOR. Happy parent proceeded to give me the same medicine!
"But Daddy, I am not sea sick!"
"Ah, but preventative medicine is a good thing."
In obedience, I returned below to take said pill, recheck sister's comfort, and read.
That, good friends, was about the last thing I remember until shortly before we landed. No joke, I slept for 3 days and 3 nights (trip took 4 days). (Little sister was never again sea sick. And I missed a lot of really, really good food!)
Moral: Sometimes my father,THE DOCTOR, was fallible. Sometimes preventative medicine is not a good thing. I dearly love my father, THE DOCTOR stories! ('Just wish he was still alive to share the laugh.)
Turns out I was not. My problem was the boat not only went up and down, it rolled side to side at the same time! For a person with little sense of balance to start with, this was a challenge!
Baby sister (newly graduated from high school) was victimized. As the dutiful 'big sister' (OK, so she is way taller than my 4'8"), I got her as settled as I could with a damp cloth on her head and trash can close by the bed before going to find my father, THE DOCTOR.
Given some Dramamine, I returned to save the green sister. Ah, magic! Not long after taking said pill, her green hue turned back to its normal porcelain beauty and she dozed off to sleep.
I returned to the report the good news to my father, THE DOCTOR. Happy parent proceeded to give me the same medicine!
"But Daddy, I am not sea sick!"
"Ah, but preventative medicine is a good thing."
In obedience, I returned below to take said pill, recheck sister's comfort, and read.
That, good friends, was about the last thing I remember until shortly before we landed. No joke, I slept for 3 days and 3 nights (trip took 4 days). (Little sister was never again sea sick. And I missed a lot of really, really good food!)
Moral: Sometimes my father,THE DOCTOR, was fallible. Sometimes preventative medicine is not a good thing. I dearly love my father, THE DOCTOR stories! ('Just wish he was still alive to share the laugh.)
My Father, the doctor
He said "preventative medicine is a good thing." I know, you didn't have a father to say this. You've read it. You've heard it. So why am I talking about it? Because they are talking about it right now on TV.
I have probably lived 35 years past my father's best expectation because I listened to him. I found good doctors that will communicate with me.
The number one killer of women is heart disease. It took my grandfather and father. I've had high blood pressure since my early 30s and have been treating it that long. I never could check my blood pressure with a cuff and stethoscope but when my doctor told me about new machines that didn't require a stethoscope, I got one. I used to use it daily. Now I listen to my body all the time and know when I need to check it daily and keep a record for my doctor.
Ah, they just said it....listen to your body and push your doctor to hear what it's saying. If you have a doctor that does not listen to you, FIRE THE DOCTOR! The program is called "Speak up to save lives". That's your job, to speak up.
Did you know that women do not exhibit the symptoms you have so often heard? Check it out! Knowledge can save your life. DO NOT LET ANYONE TELL YOU, YOU ARE TOO YOUNG TO THINK ABOUT IT! My dad's first heart attack was in his early 30s.
Take care of yourself! And share what you learn with your family and friends!
I have probably lived 35 years past my father's best expectation because I listened to him. I found good doctors that will communicate with me.
The number one killer of women is heart disease. It took my grandfather and father. I've had high blood pressure since my early 30s and have been treating it that long. I never could check my blood pressure with a cuff and stethoscope but when my doctor told me about new machines that didn't require a stethoscope, I got one. I used to use it daily. Now I listen to my body all the time and know when I need to check it daily and keep a record for my doctor.
Ah, they just said it....listen to your body and push your doctor to hear what it's saying. If you have a doctor that does not listen to you, FIRE THE DOCTOR! The program is called "Speak up to save lives". That's your job, to speak up.
Did you know that women do not exhibit the symptoms you have so often heard? Check it out! Knowledge can save your life. DO NOT LET ANYONE TELL YOU, YOU ARE TOO YOUNG TO THINK ABOUT IT! My dad's first heart attack was in his early 30s.
Take care of yourself! And share what you learn with your family and friends!
Why do so many books I read get such high ratings?
Easy...I read books I expect to really enjoy! Why else take the time to read (or listen) to them.
But how can you rate a book like say The Kitchen House
as highly as The Secret History of the Pink Carnation
?
Again, easy. They are different genres. Think of it like food....how would you compare a great steak with a great pie? I wouldn't. I would appreciate each in it's own category. Like food, my book appetite varies. Consequently, my expectations start high (5) and if they meet my expectations, that's what they get. Rarely do books go below 'good' which means just that...I enjoyed them for what they are but...
Do you ever give anything less than a 'good' (3) rating?
Unfortunately, yes. It makes me sad when I do. Sometimes even angry. I've wasted time I could have spent with a book I could have really enjoyed! I wonder at my sanity...how could I not have seen before hand this would not meet my escapist need? Why didn't the person that wrote the blurb write the book? What happened to my writer who normally gives me so much pleasure?
One didn't ring, it clunked but I couldn't figure out why. It was after all, 'fiction'. Half way through the book, I read every review I could find; every interview. Everyone else liked it. What was I missing? I read some more. Still not likening it but still wanting to like it. Then I researched the historical foundation. I talked to my 90yo mom about human nature of her youth and what she had learn about what it was like for her parents. Now I knew why the story did ring for me.
FYI, it is permissible to dislike a book. It's also OK to write a negative review. Reviewers should try to explain why it was 'amiss' for them. Authors should not take personal affront as the review just one person's opinion about the book, not about the writer.
I really want to enjoy books I read! I want to share my excitement as I do! When I do get into one that does not come up to my expectations, I will share that with you...hopefully with good reasoning for my opinion and with the knowledge that I may be in the minority. Sometimes broccoli is really good, but some times it just tastes bad!
But how can you rate a book like say The Kitchen House
Again, easy. They are different genres. Think of it like food....how would you compare a great steak with a great pie? I wouldn't. I would appreciate each in it's own category. Like food, my book appetite varies. Consequently, my expectations start high (5) and if they meet my expectations, that's what they get. Rarely do books go below 'good' which means just that...I enjoyed them for what they are but...
Do you ever give anything less than a 'good' (3) rating?
Unfortunately, yes. It makes me sad when I do. Sometimes even angry. I've wasted time I could have spent with a book I could have really enjoyed! I wonder at my sanity...how could I not have seen before hand this would not meet my escapist need? Why didn't the person that wrote the blurb write the book? What happened to my writer who normally gives me so much pleasure?
One didn't ring, it clunked but I couldn't figure out why. It was after all, 'fiction'. Half way through the book, I read every review I could find; every interview. Everyone else liked it. What was I missing? I read some more. Still not likening it but still wanting to like it. Then I researched the historical foundation. I talked to my 90yo mom about human nature of her youth and what she had learn about what it was like for her parents. Now I knew why the story did ring for me.
FYI, it is permissible to dislike a book. It's also OK to write a negative review. Reviewers should try to explain why it was 'amiss' for them. Authors should not take personal affront as the review just one person's opinion about the book, not about the writer.
I really want to enjoy books I read! I want to share my excitement as I do! When I do get into one that does not come up to my expectations, I will share that with you...hopefully with good reasoning for my opinion and with the knowledge that I may be in the minority. Sometimes broccoli is really good, but some times it just tastes bad!
Friday, September 17, 2010
Snapea Crisps
After finishing with the vampires in preparation for my doctor's appointment next week, DH took me to Sprouts (who have opened a store just down the road from us...YEA). I love them as they are so nice to me when it come to helping me pick the best of the best fruit!

While whizzing around the store, I came to am abrupt halt in front of a display of Snapea Chips...original flavor baked made by Calbee Snack Salad. Isn't that a good looking product? And it looks like it should be crunchy. And I was craving a good salad with lots of textures. So I bought a bag. I recommend you break them up when using in a salad.
These are so good! Even without the salad or dip or anything! But I have to warn you...very addictive! I looked them up on the web, you can see all their products here.
No, I am not getting any rewards from Sprouts or Calbee....but I do so like both!

While whizzing around the store, I came to am abrupt halt in front of a display of Snapea Chips...original flavor baked made by Calbee Snack Salad. Isn't that a good looking product? And it looks like it should be crunchy. And I was craving a good salad with lots of textures. So I bought a bag. I recommend you break them up when using in a salad.
These are so good! Even without the salad or dip or anything! But I have to warn you...very addictive! I looked them up on the web, you can see all their products here.
No, I am not getting any rewards from Sprouts or Calbee....but I do so like both!
The Postcard Killers

The story is about a very attractive couple who attract other couples only to gruesomely kill them. One victimized couple consisted of the only daughter of a New York cop. He will travel Europe to find the killers. Along the way he is joined by a Swedish reporter.
I know that doesn't sound very exciting, but trust me, if it can draw me in and keep me interested more in the story than my pain filled body, it is a hell of a story! The murders are horrific but you mostly know that from the reactions of the finders which keeps the goriness to a minimum.
I also liked listening to this book because I did not have to struggle with foreign words and names and accents as the 3 narrators did such a great job!
O, I did check, The Postcard Killers is available at Audible.com as well as Amazon.com
in Kindle format as well as wherever you get your paper copies.
O, I did check, The Postcard Killers is available at Audible.com as well as Amazon.com
I must thank Hachette Book Group for sending me this book for review! Especially as they know it will have no bearing on my review.
Tuesday, September 14, 2010
I got Postcard Killers in the mail!
From Karen Ukraine at Hachette Book Group! O, yes, James Patterson and Lias Marklund's The Postcard Killer, read by Katherine Kellgren, Eric Singer and Reg Rogers. (Audible, unabridged, 6 discs) I wonder if DH can get this onto the Kindle so we could listen to it on our way to and from and while waiting for the vampires? (Blood must be sucked a week before the doctor sees me.) I think I will go ahead and load the disks onto my computer (just incase).
What? O, sorry. Picture:

Cool cover! This is a quote from the book site:
What? O, sorry. Picture:

Cool cover! This is a quote from the book site:
PARIS IS STUNNING IN THE SUMMER
THE KILLING IS SIMPLY MARVELOUS
WISH YOU WERE HERE
Now see why I wanted it? Don't worry, you'll get my thoughts when I finish!Thank you NewspaperARCHIVE.com!
Why? For the following!

America's First Saint
"Pope Paul VI sat on his red throne as gusts of autumn wind blew across St. Peter's Square, flapping clerical capes in the crowd of more than 100,000 persons," reported the Wellsville Daily Reporter on September 15, 1975. "In a colorful ceremony against the imposing, domed backdrop of St. Peter's Basilica, the Pope declared Elizabeth Ann Bayley Seton the first American-born, Roman Catholic saint. 'Rejoice, we say to the great nation of the United States of America,' he declared. 'Rejoice for your glorious daughter. Be proud of her. And know how to preserve her fruitful heritage.' About 16,000 Americans led the crowd's applause Sunday as the Pope canonized Mother Seton, culminating a 100-year-old campaign by U.S. Catholics for her sainthood."
"The 77-year-old Pope speeded up the canonization process to name Mother Seton a saint during the church's 1975 holy year. He waived clerical proofs for the last of four miracles required for sainthood. Pope Paul gave communion to the surviving beneficiaries of two of the reputed miracles -- Swedish-born American Carl Kalin, 73, and Mrs. Ann O'Neill Hooe, 28, of Severn, Md. Kalin recovered from fulminating meningo-enephalitis in 1963 after prayers to Mother Seton. Mrs. Hooe recovered from leukemia in 1952. The third, a Sister of Charity nun, recovered from cancer of the pancreas in 1933."
Not a Catholic myself, I was curious about this woman so went searching electronically. There are lots of citations. Her birth in 1774 "was just before the fight for our Nation's birth. Catholicism was not the religion of the time as evidence of this event (found in Wikipedia):
"Four years later, in 1791, the First Amendment to the American Constitution was ratified. This amendment included the wording, "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof..." This amendment officially granted freedom of religion to all American citizens, and began the eventual repeal of all anti-Catholic laws from the statute books of all of the new American states."
"Some anti-Catholic political movements like the Know Nothings, and organizations like the Orange Institution, American Protective Association, and the Ku Klux Klan, were active in the United States. Indeed, for most of the history of the United States, Catholics have been victims of discrimination and persecution. It was not until the time of the Presidency of John F. Kennedy in the following century that Catholics lived in the US largely free of suspicion. The Philadelphia Nativist Riot, Bloody Monday, the Orange Riots in New York City in 1871 and 1872,[54] and The Ku Klux Klan-ridden South discriminated against Catholics (as they did the Jews and African Americans) for their commonly Irish, Italian, Polish, German, or Spanish ethnicity.[55] Many Protestants in the Midwest and the North labeled Catholics as "anti-American Papists", "incapable of free thought without the approval of the Pope." During the Mexican-American War, Mexicans were portrayed as "backward" because of their "Papist superstition". In reaction to this attitude, some hundred American Catholics, mostly of Irish origin, fought on the Mexican side in the Saint Patrick's Battalion.[56]"
"In 1850, Franklin Pierce, as the US Attorney for the District of New Hampshire, presented resolutions for the removal of restrictions on Catholics from holding office in that state, as well as the removal of property qualifications for voting; however, these pro-Catholic measures were submitted to the electorate and were unsurprisingly defeated.[57] As the 19th century progressed, animosity between Protestants and Catholics waned. Many Protestant Americans came to understand that, despite anti-Catholic rhetoric, Catholics were not trying to seize control of the government. Another reason was that many Irish-Catholic immigrants fought alongside their Protestant compatriots in the American Civil War on both sides. Nonetheless, concerns continued into the 20th century that there was too much "Catholic influence" on the government.[citation needed]Some anti-Catholic political movements like the Know Nothings, and organizations like the Orange Institution, American Protective Association, and the Ku Klux Klan, were active in the United States. Indeed, for most of the history of the United States, Catholics have been victims of discrimination and persecution. It was not until the time of the Presidency of John F. Kennedy in the following century that Catholics lived in the US largely free of suspicion. The Philadelphia Nativist Riot, Bloody Monday, the Orange Riots in New York City in 1871 and 1872,[54] and The Ku Klux Klan-ridden South discriminated against Catholics (as they did the Jews and African Americans) for their commonly Irish, Italian, Polish, German, or Spanish ethnicity.[55] Many Protestants in the Midwest and the North labeled Catholics as "anti-American Papists", "incapable of free thought without the approval of the Pope." During the Mexican-American War, Mexicans were portrayed as "backward" because of their "Papist superstition". In reaction to this attitude, some hundred American Catholics, mostly of Irish origin, fought on the Mexican side in the Saint Patrick's Battalion.[56]"
"In 1850, Franklin Pierce, as the US Attorney for the District of [57] As the 19th century progressed, animosity between Protestants and Catholics waned. Many Protestant Americans came to understand that, despite anti-Catholic rhetoric, Catholics were not trying to seize control of the government. Another reason was that many Irish-Catholic immigrants fought alongside their Protestant compatriots in the American Civil War on both sides. Nonetheless, concerns continued into the 20th century that there was too much "Catholic influence" on the government.[citation needed]" "
So how did I go from the first American saint to talking about American Catholic history...well, it seemed to just flow in my mind to today's news that there was a mosque and a Muslim pray area in the Twin Towers; bet there was a chapel or two for Christians (maybe) and a synagogue too.
So it is important to note that the terrorists did not care who was in those buildings! They didn't care that a mosque or a chapel was there...they just wanted to kill and terrorize our country. So they killed Muslims! Christians! Jews! and countless people of other faiths, even people without faith! They killed ...as many people as they could....that's what they did. They wanted to do...kill as of many people in those buildings as possible. I don't think they cared a whit about what the political, nationalities or religious persuasions of any of their victims...inside or outside! They created live Americans victims...a country of victims....made some of them forget that we love our country and that people founded our country on freedom of religion even when it difference from mine or yours.
Don't let those awful men push our country back to intolerance! We, the people, are better than that!
Sunday, September 12, 2010
Medieval helpdesk in English
Ok, this is for those who don't like to read their movies! I love my friends that share their sillies with me!
You just gotta smile!
I received this in an email and...

Always try to help a friend in need | |
Believe in yourself | |
Study hard | |
Give lots of kisses | |
Laugh often | |
Don't be overly concerned with your weight, it's just a number | |
Always try to see the glass half full | |
Meet new people, even if they look different to you | |
Remain calm, even when it seems hopeless | |
Take lots of naps.. | |
Be weird whenever you have the chance | |
Love your friends, no matter who they are | |
Don't waste food | |
RELAX | |
Take an occasional risk | |
Try to have a little fun each day. ...it's important | |
Share a joke with friends | |
Fall in love with someone.. | |
...and say 'I love you' often | |
Express yourself creatively | |
Be conscious of your appearance | |
Always be up for surprises | |
Love someone with all of your he art | |
Share with friends | |
Watch your step | |
It will get better | |
There is always someone who loves you more than you know | |
Exercise to keep fit | |
Live up to your name | |
Seize the Moment | |
Hold on to good friends; they are few and far between | |
Indulge in the things you truly love | |
Cherish every Sunday | |
At the end of the day... PRAY | |
......... And close your eyes | |
And smile at least once a day! |
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