Category Archives: Library

Alamo Chapel

alamo_chapel_interior

For those who have never been there, or have been but have forgotten what it looks like inside. No Texas blog can have too many pictures of the Alamo. Although I believe this was taken before the souvenir-trinket cases at the far end behind the camera were removed to a separate building elsewhere on the grounds. Then, the flags of all the states and countries the defenders came from were scrunched into a tiny room to the left of the entrance. They now line the walls here in the outer room. More such pictures, inside and out, old and new, some you’ve probably never seen, are available here.

Stupid legislative tricks

From the, "If it ain’t broke, government will fix it until it is" department:

Congress has banned "distributing children’s books printed before 1985."

Why? Because the ink might contain lead. Are our pols brilliant? They probably only watch TV anyhow.

Via Instapundit.

Where are the space aliens?

One of the favorite games of Mr. Boy’s cub scout den, especially in the woods on camping trips, is to each get a stick and go hunt for aliens. Not the illegal sort, but the outer-space variety.

Most of it, of course, is spurred by Star Wars and similar epics. But it’s not as if scientists haven’t given it some thought. In fact, a lot of thought. For instance, the SETI program.

Three good essays on the subject are here, here, and here. I think they’re out there but, like most of the humans and the aliens in Poul Anderson’s Starfarers, they may well have long since turned inward in favor of exploring themselves.

Via Instapundit.

Jay Janner’s photos

Jay, a staff photographer for the daily, has plenty of good ones on his blog. I’d post one but he’d probably ask me to take it down. Since he’s put them on the Web himself, it’s not necessary. Go see for yourself. Good stuff. No fakery.

Also Ralph Barrera. (I think I’ve spelled his name correctly, this time. Little inside joke. Very little.) And Brian Diggs and Kelly West. I didn’t realize so many had their own sites. Jay’s led me to them. Good for them.

Ringworld

ringworld.jpg

Still a favorite, the Ringworld series, which I think of now and again. So when I saw this wonderful book cover repro from Ringworld’s Children, I had to post it. I’m surprised the three four-book series isn’t packaged to sell as one. Maybe rare reader Veeshir, who also enjoyed the series, has some thoughts on that.

The Disagreement

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The beginnings of Winder Hospital, which became one of Richmond’s largest in the Civil War, where my great grandfather, a private in Barksdale’s Mississippi Brigade, spent several months in 1862.

The post title, however, is that of this historical novel I recently finished about the training and coming-of-age of a young Virginia doctor during the war. Not at Winder, but at Charlottesville General Hospital on the UVA campus. A good story worth your time only if you are captivated by the period. The hero’s stuffed-shirt personality and the author’s extensive use of the vernacular can be annoying. The hero’s clinical detachment serves him well as a doctor but can make him a tiresome human being. Such jarring notes as his disinterest in religion are more modern than nineteenth century.

Now and then I felt trapped in some period memoir, becoming confused by the use of passive voice and multiple parentheticals. One detail, a slouch cap, was silly. A slouch was a hat, not a cap. Nevertheless, I found it hard to put down for long. I did miss the bleeding and cupping, two common treatments of the time to relieve fevers which were later discarded as doing only harm. I suppose the hero would have looked pretty stupid using either one and so they were left out.

The author obviously put a great deal of work into the tale (recounted in the back pages aknowledging his grants) and so I felt a little guilty at being able to acquire it almost new for one penny plus four dollars shipping. He can thank Amazon for that. One does wonder how the classical writers ever did it, without masters degrees in fine arts, writing workshops and multiple grants.

“The cover is a very pretty shade of red”

Amazon reviewer’s "positive" note after savaging The Rule of Four, a supposed bestseller which, at Amazon at least, drew three hundred ninety-eight one stars versus one hundred fifty five stars.

I haven’t read the book and certainly don’t plan to now. Since Amazon supposedly is in the business of selling books it seems to have created a monster with this review system. But it’s hard not to take more than twice as many bad reviews as good ones to heart and avoid the item in question.