fauxklore (
fauxklore) wrote2025-07-15 09:47 pm
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2nd Quarter 2025 Update - Books, Movies, Goals
I’ll get back to the catch-up soon, but quarterly posts should be more timely, so here goes one.
Books:
Only 7 books this quarter, alas.
Movies:
I saw two movies in theatres and 3 on airplanes this quarter.
Goals:
My plans for a westward circumnavigation are progressing, but I haven’t booked anything yet.
I have tickets for 2 minor league baseball games.
I am about 2/3 of the way along on one crafts project.
I’ve read 18 books, so I am behind on my attempt to get to 80.
I still need to find the box with my parents’ slides.
I did find the last version of my life list so I should be able to update it soon.
My efforts to learn to read Hangul are progressing very slowly.
I’ve not really made any progress on organizing my genealogy files. Nor have I really done anything about going to any national parks. I had good intentions regarding cassette tapes but didn’t get further than taking out two to listen to before deciding on their fate.
In short, I’m behind, but, hey, I’ve been busy.
Books:
Only 7 books this quarter, alas.
- Agatha Christie, The Man in the Brown Suit. I’d read this long ago but reread it for my travel book club. The plot involves a young woman who sets out to solve a mystery that starts in London and takes her to Southern Africa. It’s as much a romance as a mystery and does have a bit more “had I but known …” than I’d prefer, but it was still entertaining. It’s also the first appearance of one of Christie’s lesser known recurring characters, Colonel Race.
- Jasper Fforde, Early Riser. Set in a future where people hibernate through the winter (so, sort of like my condo), a young man is recruited to be a Winter Consul, watching over the sleepers. He is specifically charged with investigating an outbreak of viral dreams involving a blue Buick, but there are other nefarious goings on. I wanted to like this book but it didn’t quite work for me. I think the problem was that there were a lot of cultural references, mostly to Welsh things, that I missed. I did, however, really like some of the folklore Fforde created for this. For example, there’s a creature called the Gronk who likes to fold clothes and listen to Rodgers and Hammerstein songs.
- Talia Carner, The Third Daughter. I read this for my long-running book club. The story involves a teenage girl who is trafficked to Buenos Aires under the guise of marrying a wealthy Jewish man. Instead, she spends five years in a brothel, where she learns about Tzvi Migdal, the pimps’ union, and gets involved in Baron de Hirsh’s organization which is trying to bring them down. It’s clear that Carner did a lot of research and the result is a satisfying (but disturbing) story.
- Marcia Cohen Ferris, Matzoh Ball Gumbo. This book covers the history of Jewish life in Charleston / Savannah, New Orleans, Atlanta, the Mississippi Delta, and Memphis, with an emphasis on food. That includes a lot of non-kosher food, though there are discussions of kosher shops and delis and caterers. There’s also a lot of interesting material about the relationships between African-American cooks and the Jewish families they worked for. I had no desire to make any of the recipes included, but the book was worth a read, particularly for people who (like me) have a lot of Southern Jews in their family trees.
- Giles Milton, Nathaniel’s Nutmeg. This is an interesting account of the economic battle between the Dutch East India Company and the Brtish crown over the island of Run. Nathaniel Courthope played only a minor role in this, but I guess alliteration helps marketability. The end result of the spice wars was Holland getting Run, essentially leading to controlling the Spice Islands, and the British getting an insignificant island named Manhattan in exchange. I thought this was a really interesting book and I think the members of my travel book club enjoyed discussing it.
- Bill Bryson, The Road to Little Dribbling. Written in 2015, Bryson set out to revisit some places he had written about in Notes from a Small Island, as well as explore other parts of Great Britain. It’s very funny much of the time and often enlightening as Bryson records trivia about the some of the places he visits. Thoroughly delightful.
- Sam Haines, 100 Curses on Trump and Musk. Sam Haines is a pseudonym used by Martin Berman-Gorvine for his humorous writing. This is a collection of Jewish curses (all in English, with many translated into Yiddish.) Many of them are just adaptations of familiar curses, e.g. “He should turn into a chandelier, to hang all day and burn all night.” My favorite was “May he turn into a centipede with ingrown toenails.” Mildly humorous, but overall this should have been much funnier.
Movies:
I saw two movies in theatres and 3 on airplanes this quarter.
- The Penguin Lessons: This movie is based on Tom Michell’s member about his experiences teaching in Argentina during the 1976 coup. He rescued a penguin from an oil slick in Uruguay and brought it back to the school, where it helped Michell overcome his disillusionment with the school. There’s also the political situation in Argentina at the time to deal with. While it was advertised as a comedy, it won’t feel like one to anyone who knows anything about the history of Argentina. I recommend it, but bring plenty of tissues.
- Eephus: I admit to being shallow. I went to see this movie entirely because of my boundless love for Bill “Spaceman” Lee, whose participation in it was heavily advertised. The expectations that were raised were, alas, unmet. In short, they gave the Spaceman pretty much nothing to do. He shows up mysteriously, pitches one inning, and disappears just as mysteriously. The movie is really about the friendships between men as seen in a final game before a ballpark in a small New England town is going to be demolished to make room for a new school. If you go in with that in mind, the movie isn’t terrible. But I was there for the Spaceman and I wanted more than 3 minutes of him.
- A Complete Unknown: I had intended to see this in a movie theatre but never got around to it. So it was a natural choice to watch on my flight to Athens in June. It was reasonably interesting, but, sheesh, I didn’t realize Bob Dylan was such an asshole.
- Conclave: I watched this on my flight back from Greece and found it very interesting. It was, of course, timely given the recent papal conclave. I found the political aspects very interesting. I also thought it was particularly well acted, which is hardly surprising with Ralph Fiennes in one of the starring roles. I did, however, find one aspect of the ending pretty unconvincing.
- The Persian Version: I had some more time on my flight back from Greece and was getting a bit tired of reading. I’m not entirely sure why I chose to watch this semi-autobiographical film by Maryam Keshavaraz. It’s pretty weird. The main character, Leila, is a lesbian who ended up getting pregnant from a one night stand with her gay male friend. This leads her to try to reconcile with her mother and along the way she learns her mother’s story. There’s a lot going on and it’s sometimes hard to follow, but it does have funny moments and I liked the music, which includes a Persian version of “Girls Just Want to Have Fun.”
Goals:
My plans for a westward circumnavigation are progressing, but I haven’t booked anything yet.
I have tickets for 2 minor league baseball games.
I am about 2/3 of the way along on one crafts project.
I’ve read 18 books, so I am behind on my attempt to get to 80.
I still need to find the box with my parents’ slides.
I did find the last version of my life list so I should be able to update it soon.
My efforts to learn to read Hangul are progressing very slowly.
I’ve not really made any progress on organizing my genealogy files. Nor have I really done anything about going to any national parks. I had good intentions regarding cassette tapes but didn’t get further than taking out two to listen to before deciding on their fate.
In short, I’m behind, but, hey, I’ve been busy.