Sunday, October 31, 2021
October 2021 Additions to My Digital Security Blanket
Thursday, October 28, 2021
A Sensitive Remote Weekly Link Round-Up
But what's this about a sensitive remote? Well, I used to have the annoying habit of laying back in the recliner with the TV remote on my stomach or chest then shifting position only to have the remote slide down between the cushions and onto the floor beneath. Poor Denis got the task of digging the thing back out.
Well... the last time this happened, instead of falling to the floor, the remote found a secret hidey hole in the recliner, and Denis couldn't find it even though he literally turned the recliner upside down in his search. However, we knew it was there. How? Because every evening for a week, whenever I'd shift my weight to bring down the footrest, I'd butt-dial the remote. The channel would change, or the closed captioning would turn on, or Netflix would rear its head. *sigh* Then on Laundry Day, I was sitting there folding clean clothes and happened to hear and feel that little devil shift and fall down a couple of inches. I immediately told Denis who crawled underneath and captured the miscreant. No more butt-dialing. Huzzah!
Please tell me I'm not the only one who's butt-dialed her TV remote. Please?
Enjoy the links!
- Another scholarly megaproject from Henry Louis Gates, Jr.
- The perpetual timeliness of Tess of the d'Urbervilles. (The first in the #MeToo movement?)
- The unheralded female scribes who brought medieval manuscripts to life.
- How the TV adaptation of Alex Haley's Roots sparked a cultural awakening.
- Lauded Spanish female crime writer revealed to be three men.
- Translators fight for credit on their own book covers.
- How Jane Austen raised seven Gothic novels from the dead.
- Why mystery fiction is so engaging.
- Dune, fifty years on: how a science fiction novel changed the world.
- The 20-Page Rule: how much time should you give a devastatingly boring book? (Hmm... I've heard of the 50-Page Rule but not the 20-Page.)
- Shells possibly carved by Neanderthals found at Princess Diana's former home.
- The Egyptian egg ovens considered more wondrous than the pyramids.
- An extraordinary 500-year-old shipwreck is rewriting the history of the Age of Discovery.
- A diver discovered a 900-year-old Crusader's sword off the coast of Israel.
- A rich medieval hipster was buried with his fancy beard comb.
- 400 stone-cut chamber tombs, filled with wall paintings and treasure, have been discovered in Turkey.
- A rare 18th-century drawing by Rococo artist Tiepolo has been discovered in an English estate's attic.
- Renaissance-Era Venetian beads that were found in Alaska were there before Columbus discovered America.
- Hungry bears eat 20,000 calories a day. Here's what that looks like in human food.
- Australia begins vaccinating hundreds of koalas against chlamydia in a new trial.
- The return of leatherback turtles to the coast of Queensland, Australia, give hope to this endangered species.
- How one unexpected phone call led to the rescue of the last diving horse in America.
- The mysterious disappearance of Masterpiece the poodle.
- Ten breathtaking images from the 2021 Nature Wildlife photographer of the Year Awards.
- Capitol Police welcomes its newest member: an emotional support dog named Lila.
- A large African cat called a caracal was captured after its escape in a Detroit suburb. (Escaped zebras roaming streets in Maryland. Now caracals in Detroit. What next?)
- Remembering Caroline Todd.
- How Ruth Bader Ginsberg and Gloria Steinem fought for your right to get a beer.
- The trail-blazing, multi-faceted activism of lawyer-turned-priest Pauli Murray.
- Shop Talk: S.A. Cosby is late to this interview and it's because of some dead bodies.
- Andrea Camilleri's final Inspector Montalbano mystery, finished years ago, is published.
- Tony Hillerman and the invention of Jim Chee.
- Michael Van Nostrand, the infamous "Lizard King" of Florida was nabbed in a turtle heist.
- Eleven Indigenous leaders you should know.
- Teeny tiny micro-crochet animals by yarn artist Lucia.
- Three craft artists share how the pandemic has reshaped life and art.
- Giant tarantula pillows.
- Korovai, Ukraine's beautiful wedding bread.
- Anna Chan creates wonderful animal sculptures from shells she finds on the beach.
- How Native artisans in Alaska bring innovation and humor to their craft.
- Eleanor Rigby's grave.
- This new installation pulled 20,000 pounds of plastic from the Great Pacific Garbage Patch.
- The No Scum Allowed Saloon in White Oaks, New Mexico. This round's on me, barkeep.
- Famous writers' houses.
- Demolishing public libraries from the inside: the Niles Public Library is a warning.
- The world's only float-through McDonald's.
- Eleven horror film sets where you can revisit your greatest fears.
- The myriad meanings of the rose.
- Ten Jazz Age mysteries that will make you swing.
- Ten funny mystery movies you can stream tonight.
- Thirteen inventors killed by their own inventions.
- Crime movies so scary they're almost horror.
- The five most realistic P.I.s in fiction.
- Thirty-five classy slang terms for naughty bits from the past 600 years.
- Nineteen inspiring memoirs that will change the way you see the world.
- The twenty-four best science fiction and fantasy books of fall.
Wednesday, October 27, 2021
Bad Little Falls by Paul Doiron
Death of a Dowager by Joanna Campbell Slan
Tuesday, October 26, 2021
November 2021 New Mystery Releases!

Cyd’s only hope for recovering the body and vamoosing back to Brooklyn is to find the killer herself—but she’s thwarted at every turn by Scotland Yard, Shep’s former girlfriends, a sinister mortuary service, an old nemesis, and her taxidermist uncle himself. And when Shep’s apartment is ransacked and a second Ripper expert is found murdered, Cyd knows she’ll have to solve the crimes fast, before someone books her on a one-way trip to the morgue."
Ms. Cole, a librarian and current candidate for town mayor, is shocked when she opens her trunk to discover a murder victim who just so happens to be a guy she dated forty years ago and the founder of the baking empire Nana's Cookies. As the town gossip mill turns, a batch of rumors begins to circulate about Ms. Cole's rebellious youth, which--along with being a murder suspect--threatens to ruin her life and her budding political career. But Ms. Cole is one tough cookie who will not go down without a fight.
Has the campaign for mayor turned deadly? It is up to Lindsey, Sully, and the rest of the crafternoon pals to see how the cookie crumbles and figure out who is trying to frame Ms. Cole for murder and why."
Lydia has eloped with a young actor, Harry Roxby, and following her disinheritance, the couple been living in poverty in London. Harry has become embroiled with a criminal gang and is in terrible danger after allegedly losing something very valuable that he was meant to deliver to their leader. The desperate and heavily pregnant Lydia has a week to return what her husband supposedly stole, or he will be killed. She knows there are few people who she can turn to in this time of need, but the sisters agree to help Lydia, beginning a race against time to save Harry's life.
In doing so, our intrepid sisters come face to face with a terrifying adversary whom even the toughest of the slum-dwellers are afraid of . . . The Red Monarch."
An Irish former bare-knuckles boxer and dockworker from London’s seedy East End, Corravan has good street sense and an inspector’s knack for digging up clues. But he’s confounded when, a week later, a second woman is found dead in a rowboat, and then a third. The dead women seem to have no connection whatsoever. Meanwhile, Mr. Stiles makes an alarming discovery: the shipping magnate’s missing wife, Mrs. Beckford, may not have fled her house because she was insane, as her husband claims, and Mr. Beckford may not be the successful man of business that he appears to be.
Slowly, it becomes clear that the river murders and the case of Mrs. Beckford may be linked through some terrible act of injustice in the past—for which someone has vowed a brutal vengeance. Now, with the newspapers once again trumpeting the Yard’s failures, Corravan must dredge up the truth—before London devolves into a state of panic and before the killer claims another innocent victim."
Ballard quickly concludes that the deadly bullet could not have fallen from the sky and that it is linked to another unsolved murder—a case at one time worked by Detective Harry Bosch. At the same time, Ballard hunts a fiendish pair of serial rapists, the Midnight Men, who have been terrorizing women and leaving no trace.
Determined to solve both cases, Ballard feels like she is constantly running uphill in a police department indelibly changed by the pandemic and recent social unrest. It is a department so hampered tia and low morale that Ballard must go outside to the one detective she can count on: Harry Bosch. But as the two inexorable detectives work together to find out where old and new cases intersect, they must constantly look over their shoulders. The brutal predators they are tracking are ready to kill to keep their secrets hidden."
But as her study progresses, and she gathers data on the health of individual bears, things start to go awry. Her helicopter pilot quits unexpectedly, equipment goes missing, and a late-night intruder breaks into her lab and steals the samples she’s collected. She realizes that someone doesn’t want her to complete her study, but Alex is not easily deterred.
Convinced the death was not an accident, Flora persuades attractive local crime writer Jack Carrington to help her find out what really happened to poor Polly Dakers, a popular young woman with a complicated love life, who’d been at the heart of village life in Abbeymead.
Jack is reluctant to get involved in another murder case at first but even he can’t deny that Polly’s fall seems fishy. An argument at a party, a missed hairdresser’s appointment and a red woollen bobble found on the wooden boards where Polly last stood provide a trail of clues…
As they grow closer to solving the puzzling mystery, the unlikely pair stumble upon several surprising secrets about those closest to Polly. A number of potential suspects begin to emerge. But who really disliked Polly enough to kill her? Was it Raymond, her jilted first love? Harry, her latest beau? Or Evelyn, Harry’s jealous estranged wife?
As the investigation brings them closer to the truth, Flora is intent on unmasking the killer – but will her stealthy sleuthing lead her down a dangerous path?"
When a Hindu theologian is found murdered in his home, the city is on the brink of all-out religious war. Can the officers of the Imperial Police Force—Captain Sam Wyndham and Sergeant “Surrender-Not” Banerjee—track down those responsible in time to stop a bloodbath?
Set at a time of heightened political tension, beginning in atmospheric Calcutta and taking the detectives all the way to bustling Bombay, the latest instalment in this remarkable series presents Wyndham and Banerjee with an unprecedented challenge. Will this be the case that finally drives them apart?"
With titles like 'The Chocolate War'; 'The Birthday Lunch'; 'Oystercatcher'; 'A Market Tale' and 'Fifty Million Bubbles', you may be sure that champagne and gastronomy will feature as well as cosy crime in 'Dangerous Vacation'. Bruno strides through these tales, staying calm. settling local disputes and keeping safe his beloved town of St Denis.
Only on one occasion does he panic: in 'Bruno's Challenge', his friend Ivan, proprietor and chef of the town's popular eatery, suddenly collapses on the eve of a large anniversary dinner, and he asks Bruno to take over the restaurant. After a few protests followed by some deep breaths, the inimitable Bruno meets his challenge and saves the day."
Sean Reynolds is obsessive about rewilding his Auchinglass estate and there are rumours that he has taken illicit steps to hurry that on, much to the anger of local farmers. There are other tensions too. An elderly lady died some months before, officially in a tragic stumble off a cliff path, but she was burdened with many secrets and her closest friend believes it was murder.
When horror strikes in Inverbeg, Strang fears further retribution is at work and as he gets closer to uncovering the ugly truth, he finds himself in more danger than ever before."
But Roslazny doesn't stay sleepy for long. Poison-pen letters, a small-town crime wave, and persistent rumours of a Baba Yaga - a murderous witch hiding in the frozen depths of the Russian taiga - combine to disturb the icy silence. And one day Olga arrives at her hut only to be knocked unconscious by a man falling from the Trans-Siberian, an American tourist with his throat cut from ear to ear and his mouth stuffed with 10-ruble coins. Another death soon follows, and Sergeant Vassily Marushkin, the brooding, enigmatic policeman who takes on the case, finds himself falsely imprisoned by his Machiavellian superior, Chief-Inspector Babikov.
Olga resolves to help Vassily by proving his innocence. But with no leads to follow and time running out, has Olga bitten off more than she can chew?"
Monday, October 25, 2021
Murder at Mallowan Hall by Colleen Cambridge
Sunday, October 24, 2021
Late September in the Desert Botanical Garden
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The first thing we saw were blooms on the barrel cacti. The ones that have already flowered look like little pineapples, don't they? |
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Due to the monsoon rains, I also saw bumper crops of prickly pear fruits. |
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Barrel cactus blossoms |
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This fishhook barrel cactus was getting ready to flower, too. |
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This curve-billed thrasher was busy eating berries. |
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A Queen butterfly on lantana. |
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A ground squirrel eating cholla fruit. |
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Blanket flowers |
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Sunflowers |
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Desert Roses |
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At the Patio Cafe. Have you ever seen striped tree trunks? |
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Now you have! |
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A ground squirrel posing for me at the Patio Cafe. |
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Possibly the prettiest cactus flower of them all that day. |
I hope you enjoyed your visit!
Thursday, October 21, 2021
A Demolition Derby of a Weekly Link Round-Up
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Before |
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A little demo, anyone? |
- A handwritten early manuscript of The Grapes of Wrath is being published for the first time.
- This landmark rare book collection focuses on climate change.
- Good news ahead? A patient's depression was immediately "switched off" using an experimental new brain implant.
- From The Guardian: All women know they are prey-- and that no one with any authority seems to care.
- Val McDermid in The Guardian: "Genre readers have less empathy? I'm not feeling that."
- One more from The Guardian, and then I promise to move on: Animals have dwindled in novels since 1835. Is fiction undergoing its own extinction event?
- Hello (bonjour) from your friendly TV translator.
- Frankenstein sets a world auction record for a printed work by a woman.
- Why use a dictionary in the age of internet research?
- How historians of modern tattooing explore a long-hidden past.
- This relief of a saint's dog shines gold after hundreds of years of pets for the "good boy."
- A rare 16th-century Italian plate sells for over £1 million at auction.
- An underwater museum allows divers to explore shipwrecks from the Battle of Gallipoli.
- Researchers are unraveling the mystery of the Greek tomb of "Nestor's Cup."
- The untold story of van Gogh's once-maligned masterpiece, The Potato Eaters.
- Mexico's ancient inhabitants moved land and bent rivers to build Teotihuacán.
- An ornate medieval shield looted by the Nazis will be returned to the Czech Republic.
- This annual starling murmuration is so dense it's called "the black sun." (I saw my first one of these on the east coast of Scotland on my way to Edinburgh.)
- With a nearly foot-long proboscis, this new moth species holds the record for longest insect tongue. Which reminds me of the times I've been touched by butterfly tongues...
- Modern crocodiles are evolving at a rapid rate.
- Watch a compilation of the ambassador animals of the Oregon Zoo happily eating pumpkins.
- Owney, the post office pooch who traveled around the world and earned medals wherever he went.
- Rattlesnake rattles use auditory illusion to trick human brains.
- Golden fur in dogs evolved two million years ago, long before domestication.
- Venomous sea snakes that charge divers may just be looking for love.
- As Miss Navajo Nation, Shaandiin Parrish helped her community through the pandemic.
- The secret codes of Lady Wroth, the first female English novelist.
- Groundbreaking archaeologist Ann Axtell Morris finally gets the full cinematic treatment.
- The books, tragedies, and unsolved mysteries that inspired a new novel connecting Italy and New York.
- Nine theater mysteries that bring the drama.
- Seven everyday American food additives that are banned in other countries.
- Nine cozy reads with bookish characters.
- Six novels in which romance blooms in the stacks.
- Thirty-one horror films about writing, reading, and the book business.
- From pen stroke to key stroke: on slander in suspense.
- Stephen King's top books, according to Stephen King.
- The fabulous (and sometimes strange) female hairstyles of the past two hundred years.
- Thirteen books to read if you loved The Great Gatsby.
- The twenty-five best movie trailers of all time.