Category Archives: Scribbles

A Love Poem for…Tzipi Livni

From a Syrian admirer, no less. (Don’t miss the audio at the link.) Have to admit, I also think Tzipi is hot. Remind me to do a Rule 5 on her.

So What Are People Saying Over There?

“That’s the question my father often asks me on our way home from the airport in Texas. ‘So what do people think about what’s going on…..about Prime Minister Netanyahu…..about the revolution in Egypt?'”

Humor with bite from Benji Lovitt in Jerusalem.

My friend, Snoopy-the-Goon, for one, says many Israelis have given up on the idea of peace ever happening. Even though his own backyard bomb shelter is full of junk and its door rusted open, the hinges unyielding to WD-40.

Jerusalem’s ramparts

Picture two aging men, both fairly fearful of heights, nervously making their way along the narrow stone ramparts of Jerusalem’s old fortress walls. This picture is of the easy part. It didn’t last.

The inner wall (left) was soon replaced by a short iron railing between us and a 100-foot drop to the streets below. That was when progress got a lot slower and, after beginning at the Jaffa Gate on the west side, we gratefully descended at the Dung Gate on the south. Whose idea was it? Who else? Mine.

Twenty-five errors

That’s how many misspellings, typos and left-out words I found in The Longest Nights: General John D. Imboden & The Confederate Retreat From Gettysburg.

It’s a modest piece of short journalism, obviously written to snag some sales during the Civil War Sesquicentennial. It mainly joins lengthy quotes from Imboden’s post-war magazine articles, and quotes from other participants, presumably from their memoirs and diaries, though the brief bibliography doesn’t identify the sources.

The author, Heather K. Michon, is a freelance writer who says at the end of her 27 KB effort for the Kindle that she “is a writer on a mission to prove that history need not be boring.” The price, like so much indie work these days, is 99 cents.

Still, even history that’s not boring needs editing and proofreading to rise above the stereotype of self-published work. Without them, the reader stumbles along, not so much enlightened about a relatively unexamined and interesting incident of the Civil War as he is annoyed, his disbelief firmly grounded.

Girl with guns: Rule 5

Danica, from the gallery of Oleg Volk.

Global warming

“Never have so few fooled so many for so long, ever.” — Ninad D. Sheth

Via Soylent Green

Ngọc Quyên: Rule 5

 

 

 

A part of Viet Nam I missed, alas.

 

For some closer shots of her face, et al, see here.

 

Via Video4Viet.