Thursday, July 13, 2023

Interior Design

 


No pictures today

They all fade away

Just me and a keyboard

Trying not to be bored


I have pets in the house

Not one is a mouse

A roach thinks it's cute

But I give it the boot


I am surrounded by books

It gets cozy looks

Right now I'm reading three

Some of them are free!


What? How are they free?

Because I got them from the public LI-BRAR-EEE!

I'm in two book clubs

Occasionally the book flubs


But not the people

They're not sheeple

They're independent and fun

And burn less than the sun


The sun I must avoid

It makes my skin annoyed

On doing more rhymes I must pass

Turns out I'm not Ogden Nash




Wednesday, July 12, 2023

Sporadic Re-Entry: Wednesday Wanderings

 


These are many evenings after Alison and the little dogs go to bed, Cocoa Bear stares at me. She knows if she keeps it up, I might give her snacks.

Ok, there's no maybe to it. I give her snacks. She has her cognitive treats, a joint health treat, and some soft chew dog treats. Look, she's fifteen. I'll feed her whatever she wants.

She had a rough go about a month ago - barely able to walk, very disoriented. But she is much better now with the vet's help and our love and care. Yes, she's old. Yes, she gets confused. Yes, she moves slowly and takes long naps. But she's a good dog, likes to be with me, and eats well.

UPDATE ON BOOK SALES:

I got my check! After OHC's commission, I took home a whopping $39.75! Don't laugh. That's $39.75 more than I made last year!

I need to reorder more copies of my books so I can do it again. If you are interested in my books, please check Amazon. Most are available for no charge if you use Amazon Kindle Unlimited. I know I will never get rich doing it, but it is fun to have readers.

Wish me luck in reorganizing my life to write more.

UPDATE ON BENJAMIN

Benjamin is in the 6th week of his 6-week internship with Warner Robins Air Force base. He has garnered a full-time position after the internship is over. He'll have to transition from dorm housing to an apartment by July 28th. We helped him look some last weekend, but he still needs to secure a place. Sometimes, as parents of a young adult, you have to learn to step back and let them find their own way. It ain't easy.

UPDATE ON THE LIBRARY

Alison and I have grown to love our local libraries very much! We participate in two book clubs, the Mystery Book Club and the True Crime Book Club. It's a great joy to be discussing books with fellow readers. And we often go off-topic! Some people read the hard copy, some use e-readers, some use audio, some watch a related program, and some just bluff. It's all good!

Alison goes up to a knitting/crochet group once a week. I read children's stories at the Pierce County Library. I love reading aloud to people, especially children.  I do female-voiced characters sometimes. I guess I can get away with it because I'm not in drag. Drag StoryTime may not be my thang as a performer, but believe me, I got no problem with it.

Another new great thing about the Library is that they have added access to the Kanopy streaming service. I'll post a blog soon about how absolutely awesome that is!

UPDATE ON GRACE EPISCOPAL

We have a priest in charge now, contracted for the next seven months (or six - I'm not sure). He is Father Donald Holland, who is a friend and a Waycross resident.

My favorite thing to do in church is read the Lector's reading and/or Prayers of the People. Reading aloud - it's what I enjoy most.

My desire to be involved with the church ebbs and flows. Right now, I am more at an ebb. I have less enthusiasm about it right now. Maybe soon, the feeling will come back.

UPDATE ON THE TRUMPOCALYPSE

One of the things that I've learned in the True Crime Book Club is how long even the most obvious killers take to come to trial. The most recent we read took six years for an arrest and another three years to go to trial.

What does that mean? My hope is that Trump would have completed trials and verdicts before the Presidential Campaign got into swing.  

Those hopes are dashed. It has been so slow to get indictments, and then you find out it will be months or even years before the trial, even under the best circumstances. Right now, all we're seeing is why wealth and privilege rule all in our society. Trump's major tactic is to obfuscate, lie, draw attention to others, and most of all - delay, delay, delay! And his plan is working.

If only conservatives would turn on him instead of trying to shuffle the last deck chairs on the Titanic.

But I've hoped for that for almost eight years now. I guess it's not gonna happen. I guess they'll just turn a federal (or state) prison into a White House.

Wanderingly Yours,

T. M. Strait






Friday, June 30, 2023

Return to Book Signing


 After at least two years, I finally returned to a book signing at Author's 
Night at the Okefenokee Heritage Center on June 22nd, 2023.

I meant to have a picture, but I couldn't find one, at least one that included me.  

It was fairly successful.  I sold a couple of History of the Traps, and I sold out of Crowley Stories - not as dramatic as it sounds, as I only had 3 or 4 to begin with.

I hope to get out there again soon, but I'll have to get more copies of my books.

And I have to write more.


Thursday, June 29, 2023

Silent Sunday Nights


 I love Silent Sunday Nights on TCM (Turner Classic Movies)!

As part of my fun with being retired, I'm watching the earliest movies I can find on TCM and gradually working my way up in time.

Generally speaking, the oldest movie each week is featured on Silent Saturday Nights.

So far, to date, I have seen 48 silent films at a pace of about one per week. The earliest I have seen is from 1906 -


The Birth, The Life and the Death of Christ. 
It had set scenes that were more like tableaus - the camera is fixed, and the scene changes in front of it.

I have seen several from 1929, the most recent being The Big Diamond Robbery starring the early Western superstar Tom Mix.


He was film's first King of the Cowboys. He made almost 300 films, of which only about 10% still survive. Many of them were lost in the 1937 Fox vault fire. Like many films of another era, it has questionable racial attitudes, portraying Chinese workers in a very stereotypical manner.

I usually watch in segments, anywhere from 10 to 30 minutes daily.

Currently, I am watching Don Juan (1926) featuring John Barrymore, one of the longest-running theatre families in the United States (presently represented by Drew Barrymore).


It was known for its first use of Vitaphone for the film's musical score but not for dialogue. Vitaphone was used a year later for the first "talkie" - The Jazz Singer starring Al Jolson. Don Juan is also known for holding a kissing record, with almost 200 kisses in the film.

I especially like comedies featuring talents like Buster Keaton, Charlie Chaplin, and Harold Lloyd.

But that's the good news.

The bad news is that TCM is in trouble. The evil (sorry, it's the way I feel) people that bought Warner Brothers/HBO/CNN/DC) people are proceeding to dismantle TCM, firing many of their top executives, and some hosts may be next.

I'll save my dire disgust for the Discovery people for another post.

If you, like me, are concerned about saving this valuable Americana, please use the hashtag #SaveTCM on your social media posts.

Thanks for hearing me out.

I mean, for silently reading.





Wednesday, June 28, 2023

Table of the Banned

 


A brief cruise around my house revealed a table full of books I own that have been banned or could be banned. Some have been banned in school libraries, some in public libraries, and some would be subject to CRT restrictions (basically, that you could no longer teach the truth in history class).

King James Bible - banned in elementary and middle schools in Utah. It has passages that are intensely violent and others that are sexually explicit. Utah changed its laws so if even one parent objected to a book, it could be pulled from library shelves. In protest of that idiotic rule, one parent decided to ask for a ban of the King James Bible. And, taken out of context, as other objected to books are, he's absolutely right. Once you start down the road to madness, anything can happen.

Maus - this PULITZER prize-winning graphic compelling tells the story of the Holocaust using anthropomorphic characters. It raises the ire of holocaust deniers and has the audacity to display naked mice heading for the gas chambers. I've read hundreds of graphic novels. Maus is among the very best.

A Young People's History of the United States - I got this for Benjamin to get a richer view of history than he was at school (where Nixon was one of the best Presidents ever, and the teacher stated that being gay was a sin). It tells history from the point of view of the average person rather than the elites. I don't know if this book is specifically banned. I also don't think you can find it in libraries.

An Inconvenient Truth -  Is it banned? I'm not sure. But I doubt if you can find it in most school libraries. It teaches the truth about climate change, something the political and Christian right don't want young children exposed to.

Waking Up White - a white woman wakes up to the systematic racism she is surrounded by. So, what do you think? You think a book that screams "woke" would survive DeSantis-level scrutiny?

It Can't Happen Here -  a 1930s book by Sinclair Lewis, imagining the US where fascism creeps in and takes over. It can't happen here? I would argue that Florida is finding out that it surely can happen here.

The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn - the book's banning has been chiefly perpetrated by leftists, objecting to the use of the n word. Yes, I am a leftist/progressive, but one smart enough to understand the importance of context and what Mark Twain was trying to communicate.

To Kill A Mockingbird - yep. Some places have banned this book, one of the greatest literary works of the 20th century. Don't want white people to feel bad, I guess.

Red, White & Royal Blue - has the unabashed audacity to feature gay characters. 

Jesus and the Disinherited - not banned per see, but probably not very wanted in political and Christain right circles, as it connects the light and love of Jesus to those who are disadvantaged and discriminated against and promotes social justice. Many, many churches in the area I live in are much more interested in the prosperity gospel, condemning reproductive rights and marginalizing and demonizing LGBTQ+ people than they are in social justice and inclusion.

The Jungle - this intense book and expose of the meatpacking industry led to reforms that helped protect workers and consumers, including leading to the FDA and the 1906 Pure Food and Drugs Act. Why was it objected to? Why, it's SOCIALISM.

The World According to Garp and A Prayer for Owen Meany -  two books by John Irving that have been subject to bans. The World According to Garp presents feminist concerns and a sympathetic transgender character.

 Good as Gold - I actually picked the wrong Joseph Heller book. It should be Catch-22 which I also have. Explicit scenes and defiance of bureaucracy.

The Public Burning - stunningly raw alternate history and satire of the Nixon Era. This book was banned by government libraries when it first came out. It is rare and difficult to find this book. I'm amazed I have a copy, but I am a big Robert Coover fan.

The Grapes of Wrath - again, history of the average working man going through a historical crisis. Why? Once again, socialism is the scapegoat. This is not the only John Steinbeck book that receives bannings - also Of Mice and Men, for similar reasons. 

Caste -  this is one of many books by black authors, both fiction and non-fiction, that is being "cast" out of some libraries. This is non-fiction, compellingly explaining the similarities between India's caste system and what blacks and other persons of color are subject to in the US. Again, DeSantis doesn't want true history taught. He wants to return to the Lost Cause Myth perpetrated originally by the United Daughters of the Confederacy at the turn of the 20th century.

The Handmaid's Tale and Oryx & Crake - two brilliant dystopian novels written by Margaret Atwood. They're fiction, but each day their themes - a regime of Christian fascists controlling women and the other showing the results of continued climate change and environmental destruction.

These are just some I could find in a couple hours of searching. There are others I have (or had), including the two dystopian novels that impacted me as a teenager - 1984 by George Orwell and Brave New World by Aldous Huxley. My 9th-grade English teacher let me read 1984 as a special assignment, and I started a novel as an extension and sequel. Can you imagine that happening in today's schools?

In summary, if you object to a book, don't read it. If you personally don't want your child to read it, you can stop them from getting the book at the library.  

What you can't do is tell me what I can read and what my children and grandchildren can read.

Censor yourself and your family all you want. You're doing a disservice to yourself and your family, but you have the right to do that.

But stop telling other people what they can or cannot read.





Wednesday, June 21, 2023

T. M. Strait! Local Author Emerges From His Hidey Hole!

 T. M. Strait

Local Author


                                       
$3.99 ebook                            $3.99 ebook                                                            $1.99 ebook
$15 paperback                        $20 paperback                                                        $10 paperback


$1.99 ebook
$7 paperback

prices may vary


History of the Trap:  YA science fiction/fantasy in the vein of Harry Potter. The Hunger Games 
                                     and Stranger Things.

Crowley Stories: Swamp's Edge - slice of life stories spinning around characters in a small                                                                   Southeastern Georgia town bordering on the Okefenokee                                                                 Swamp.

Here Comes Tommy:  funny, sentimental, and nostalgic autobiographical stories about                                                       growing up.

Adventures in Time and Space:  compilation of exciting short stories, perfect for late elementary and middle school readers!

Others as ebooks only, including Eric Reid & the Time Team, and Through the Closet and Into the Woods.

Coming Soon:  The Extra Credit Club, and Vol. 2 of History of the Trap!

Check out The Strait Line (http://thestraitline-tmstrait.blogspot.com) for new blog entries every week!


Books available from the author, at the Okefenokee Heritage Center, or online from Amazon and other online vendors.


Thursday, June 15, 2023

How Does My Garden Grow?

How does my garden grow?

Not at all. Nothing I planted came up.  

Except one frond emerged that indicated the potential of a carrot. One solitary carrot. When I pulled it up, it was black and sludgy. And it smelled like a backwoods outhouse.

I'm not a scientist, but I had read enough to know something had gone terribly wrong. Something in the atmosphere was making it difficult to grow crops. And it wasn't just here. It was all over the world.

Much of the world's foods had to be grown in hot houses, green environments where the air and temperature could be controlled. Only purified water was used.

Could the world's needs be met by greenhouse environments alone? No, but everyone was struggling to open as many facilities as possible.

Some of my friends insisted it was just a temporary problem, caused mainly by incompetent growers and using the wrong mix of fertilizers and chemicals. But they weren't having any more luck than I was.

Ender Fenton, down the street, had put up a fancy greenhouse. His success was mixed. The right balance was hard to get. He had to filtrate the water and air, which was hard for one untrained individual to do. Nevertheless, he showed enough promise that others were jealous of his achievement. Jealous enough that last night, some neighbors tried to raid his greenhouse and did devastating damage to it in the process.

No, I was not one of the neighbors. Yes, my family was becoming desperate, but I still had too much civility and pride. I don't mean to sound too noble. I may yet hit a breaking point.

We were in for a tough haul. Not all of us will make it through it.

It's not entirely hopeless. Amateur and small gardens and farms may be becoming a thing of the past, but governments and large industrial agriculture had the potential to thrive.  

Of course, scientists could figure out how to rebalance the atmosphere so that it was not so poisonous. Media stressed how hard the scientists worked on it, but genuine breakthroughs and progress remained theoretical.

I came inside from my failed gardening. Little Sarah was coughing, her eyes watering, her nose running. Seasonal allergies, or something more?

Maybe it wasn't just the plants that were being affected.