Category Archives: Scribbles

Quarter Share (Solar Clipper Trader Tales)

I kept waiting for something to happen in this novel. It never did. It turned out to be a story about institutional food preparation, coffee-making and forming a sales cooperative for flea markets. The hero makes a mean omelet. The crew drilled for emergencies, but never had one. I didn’t need a space battle, but something life-threatening would have at least kept me awake.

The author’s style is conversational, which makes the book very readable. And he does say that his aim was to write of ordinary people making a living—albeit on a space freighter in the black. But come on. One reviewer compared this to “Two Years Before The Mast.” Hardly. These folks not only set their sails with the push of a button, they live a cushy air-conditioned life with no hardship whatsoever. And, alas, no suspense.

PC and the Civil War

What happened in one small, Virginia town when the 1910 Confederate memorial was struck and all-but-destroyed by an out-of-control truck driver: You can imagine the political conflict, I’m sure, when it came to discussing how to rebuild. The truth is that the memorial (and others like it across the South) got erected in the first place by the then-PC-dominating majority. And the twist here is that, so far, slavery and emancipation are not on the agenda for mention.

Kindle rocks

As I wrote in a comment on a publisher’s blog the other day, in response to his contention that traditional publishing will be around for a long time yet, the ebook future may come sooner than expected.

I’ve learned three things from my Kindle: Ebooks are cheaper, there’s no storage problem (my bookshelves already were full) and there’s nothing like browsing, buying and starting to read within minutes, all from the comfort of your easy chair. No driving, no parking, no standing in line to pay.

Kindle is helping some traditionally-published authors see the light as well: “…unlike a lot of other folk, I’m not at all convinced that mortar and brick publishing will never die.  As a matter of fact, I suspect it’s beginning its own elaborate suicide even now….So, if you’re a writer, give Kindle a whirl.  You don’t have any thing to lose…except an agent and a publishing house stealing a big hunk of your profits. Heh.

Great views

360-condos-austin

Definitely the place to live if you can afford it.

360 Condos Austin is one of the more dazzling new condominium high rises in downtown.

Even 9/11 couldn’t stop the American urge to keep building vertically.

Aransas Pass

SaintJoLightLydia Ann Channel lighthouse, also known as the St. Jo Light. Photo by Jim Howard.

First they came for the ISPs, but I wasn’t an ISP…

Be patient, the FCC will get around to bloggers, too. Just a matter of time. Got to watch what you say on these public innertubes, you know. Especially when you have the fascist Democrats in charge of government. They’ll tax and regulate everything they can get their hands on.

UPDATE:  Then there’s the infamous Internet “kill switch” the Democrats like so much. It’s billed as part of “national security,” but it’s also Old Media’s only chance to regain its Democrat-adoring, gate-keeping supremacy over public discourse.

The Time of Eddie Noel

Lexington is another of Faulkner’s “little postage-stamps,” a microcosm of humanity which just happens to be in Mississippi. The time of the title was the mid 1950s when Jim Crow oppressed everyone, putting the trash on top of all, black and white. The blacks suffered the visible injustice, the whites got theirs behind the scenes, until one night, one young black fellow had enough and gunned down six white men, three to death.

How he managed to elude capture and courts (though he suffered incarceration) and Mississippi’s then-traveling electric chair, is a saga worthy of myth.  Oxford, MS corporate lawyer Allie Povall, a Lexington native who was twelve at the time, makes the most of it. Almost too much, with his atmospherics, making the clouds, the rain and wind stand-in for what another age would have expressed as divine judgement. His conclusions about why Eddie Noel not only was not executed for premeditated murder but lived into old age a free man, i.e. that blood will tell and prominent white blood could get even a black man off, isn’t very creditable. But it’s certainly worth considering.