Month: September 2021

TUESDAY (monday?)

School of what?

school
In retrospect, hiding all the microchips in horse dewormer was a stroke of genius.

Back to work everyone!

Yesterday was apparently ‘read-a-book day’.

Today is the birthday, in 1936, of Charles Hardin ‘Buddy’ Holley. He became famous under the name Buddy Holly and was a pioneering figure in 1950s rock and roll.

Posted by Tom in Humor, Music, sixties and seventies

1812 Overture

This is a well-done flash mob presentation from the Plaza del Mercado in Valencia of Tchaikovsky’s 1812 Overture (without the cannon). Enjoy!!

Posted by Tom in classical, Music

Cathedral

Amazon.com: Cathedral: 9781609457235: Hopkins, Ben: Books

I recently finished reading Cathedral by Ben Hopkins. It’s not something I would ordinarily read, but it came highly recommended and I thoroughly enjoyed it. The hardcopy version is some 600 pages and it looks a bit like some saga but the writing is bright and the many interlocking stories are interesting and include some insightful commentary on modern issues.

The book revolves around the building of a cathedral in the mythical town of Hageburg in Alsace. The book is set in the ‘high middle ages’ with the action beginning in the 13th century. The focus is on the mercantile aspects of the town and people and highlights the emergence of the guilds as a counterweight to the hereditary aristocracy.

Hopkins’ father was an economist and there’s no lack of focus on money and how such a giant undertaking as a cathedral might be paid for. Hopkins is also a film maker and has a good eye for scenes with tension and some surprises.

There are plenty of villains in this parade of skirmishes and subterfuges, and few who might pass as heroes. Among the latter are a stonemason who must hide his most intimate feelings, a Jewish entrepreneur with complicated father issues and a nobleman whose designs for the cathedral’s spectacular rose window somehow survive his own lost dreams. And although she’s too conniving to be a conventional heroine, the sharp-tongued peasant girl who grows up to command her own fortune just might turn out to be the winner in Hagenburg’s high-stakes historical lottery.

I enjoyed the book and I recommend it if you have some time on your hands. It’s also a book you can put down and pick up again, so don’t think you have to read the whole thing all at once. Give it a try, though. You might like it.

Posted by Tom in Books, Literature

PETAK

dishes

sky-stabilized time lapse

signs…

Today is the birthday, in 1942, of Al Jardine, one of the co-founders of the Beach Boys. He rarely was the lead vocalist, but he is on this song.

Posted by Tom in Humor, Music, sixties and seventies

QUINTA-FEIRA

Yup…

Today is the birthday, in 1933, of Rick Lewis of The Silhouettes.

Posted by Tom in Humor, Music, sixties and seventies