Month: September 2024

Catch up on Books!

I haven’t posted recently about the books I’ve been reading but I’m going to catch up, starting now!

I don’t usually read mysteries, but I like Lawrence Osborne. His novels tend to be leisurely, slow-burn mysteries that could be mistaken for impeccably observed travel memoirs, except for the fact that usually there’s a dead body that needs hiding, finding or explaining. He reminds me a bit of Graham Greene; his stories are set in exotic locales all across the globe – Bangkok, Morocco, Mexico, Cambodia and this one which takes place in Hong Kong at an indeterminate time, but probably a few years ago.

To set the scene, students, among others, are protesting, and the pro-democracy demonstrations are being quashed with escalating violence by Chinese authorities and pro-Beijing street gangs. Everyone is on edge: “There was a rippling electricity in the air waves; the herd spooked by the approach of wolves who have not yet been seen but whose tremendous and alien scent is on the wind.” Osborne colorfully evokes the lure of the foreign and sets the scene for his narrator, Adrian Gyle, an expatriate reporter who has been eking out a lazy living in Hong Kong for decades, a down-at-the-heels character who would fit right into a Graham Greene novel.

He’s been in Hong Kong since just after the 1997 handover, and now his best days and best work are behind him. He spends his time dawdling with Jimmy Tang, his close friend from his years at Cambridge, and Jimmy’s wife, Melissa — and then, critically, with the man’s much younger mistress, the 23-year-old Rebecca To. Opposites in temperament and circumstances, Adrian and Jimmy have maintained a close friendship since a shared enthusiasm for Chinese poetry brought them together as undergraduates.

Jimmy has two yachts with crews, and cars with drivers at the ready, and his wardrobe and liquor cabinet are awash in brand names that the superrich take for granted. Occasionally, Adrian will betray his resentment toward Jimmy with a revealing aside about how shallow his friend really is: “When talking about Maoism, for example, he would just grimace and say, ‘Yes, yes, I understand, but the clothes, comrade, the clothes.’”

Adrian is impressed with Rebecca, a woman who, like Jimmy, comes from money. She’s smart, resourceful and part of the student rebellion, occasionally even smelling like tear gas — which complicates her affair with Jimmy because the Tang family has standing with the Communist Party. “We can’t have Jimmy going all pro-democracy on us,” Jimmy’s wife says when she is probing Adrian about Jimmy’s latest dalliance.

When Jimmy and Rebecca are spotted by a tabloid photographer, their affair becomes public and endangers Jimmy’s marriage and reputation. But Rebecca’s fate seems to be far worse; soon after, she vanishes and the body of a woman whose name is not released is brought to the morgue. The deeper Adrian digs, the more he suspects his college chum. At one point, he talks to Rebecca’s father, who has known the Tang family for decades and recalls that Jimmy “was always careless with others.”

What if your oldest friend might be a killer, but you can’t prove it? What if he isn’t a killer, but simply uses his connections and clout to make a problem like a young lover go away? Or what if Jimmy isn’t involved at all, but Adrian has simply grown tired of the unequal nature of their friendship and sees a chance to use his own power as a journalist (albeit one whose career is teetering toward irrelevance) to bring his pal down a peg?

But On Java Road most excels as superbly atmospheric reportage of a place and time. Hong Kong, within its “amphitheater of subtropical hills”, is captured with confident sweep and in vivid detail: the goldfish market with its walls of glimmering fish in plastic bags of water, the black bunting fluttering outside the funeral parlors of Java Road, the ferries crisscrossing the harbor, whose waters at night reflect the neon light show blazoned from its waterfront towers. Diversity shimmers — and simmers. From the balconies of mansions ensconced in jungle vegetation on its Mid-Levels, shipping billionaires and other oligarchs expediently kowtowing to Beijing look down, drink in hand, at the chaotic avenues below where black-clad students in scuba masks use woks to smother tear gas canisters hurled by police squads.

It’s a wonderful book, maybe more about the human condition and the nature of friendships than about the murder of a young woman, but you can have both and immerse yourself in the marvels of Hong Kong.

Set mostly in Liberia and the United States from 1975 through 1991, The Darling, from acclaimed author Russell Banks, is the story of Hannah Musgrave, a political radical and member of the Weather Underground.

“The Darling” begins on Hannah’s farm in the Adirondacks; she has decided to return, after a decade’s absence, to Liberia. We learn that her husband is dead and her children are missing; we are promised that the details will come later. Hannah loops back to her past, her years as a fugitive Weatherman, her family history. Her parents raised her to believe that her principles are of weight in the world; even when she doesn’t communicate with them directly for years, they stand by her. Tired of living underground, she forges a passport and accompanies a fellow fugitive to Africa, settling in Liberia and working in a lab that has chimpanzees.

She marries Woodrow Sundiata, a minister in the corrupt government of William Tolbert, bears him three children and inhabits a bubble of privilege as the white wife of a high government official, with servants and enough leisure to devote to animal rescue. Then, during a brutal revolution, Woodrow is “chopped down and killed” in front of his wife and children, who vanish to become crazed killers called “Worse Than Death,”+ “Fly” and “Demonology.” Her return completed, she leaves Monrovia on 9/11, and goes to an America as unrecognizably transformed as her sons.

In America Hannah decides to visit her parents for the first time in 15 years. After surprising her mother she learns that her father suffered a cerebral hemorrhage a few weeks before her return. Though her mother is optimistic about his recovery Hannah quickly realizes that he is completely brain-dead. She is able to visit her father once in the hospital before he dies. Shaken by the death of her father, Hannah steals her mothers car and visits Charles Taylor whom she helps escape from American jail and return to Liberia where he leads a revolution and eventually comes to power.

Hannah spends the rest of her time in Liberia fruitlessly searching for her sons despite the urging of Sam Clement, the American ambassador, to leave for America. He at last provides a video tape showing that her children are now child soldiers working for Prince Johnson who have murdered Samuel Doe. He also reveals that the Americans were behind Charles Taylor’s escape from prison and rise to power and that they have known Hannah’s true identity and movements for decades. Hannah, dispirited that all along she was working on behalf of the interests of the CIA finally leaves Liberia.

I spent some time in Liberia and Banks’ writing is evocative of the sights and sounds of the country. The book will give you a good sense of the country and its violent past.

“Everyone knows that this is a dangerous business, but between you and me, being a woman is a dangerous business, and don’t let anyone tell you otherwise…”

A Dangerous Business is an entertaining, light murder mystery set in Monterey, California, in 1851 during the Gold Rush. Inspired by Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Murders in the Rue Morgue,” Eliza and Jean — one a young widow relieved to be rid of her abusive older husband, the other an adventurous, shape-shifting cross-dresser with a dark secret in her past — are determined to deploy logic and observation to figure out who killed their missing colleagues.

Ever since her husband was killed in a bar fight, Eliza Ripple has been working in a brothel. It seems like a better life, at least at first. The madam, Mrs. Parks, is kind, the men are (relatively) well behaved, and Eliza has attained what few women have: financial security. But when the dead bodies of young women start appearing outside of town, a darkness descends that she can’t resist confronting. Side by side with her friend Jean, and inspired by her reading, especially by Edgar Allan Poe’s detective Dupin, Eliza pieces together an array of clues to try to catch the killer, all the while juggling clients who begin to seem more and more suspicious.

As the bodies and clues pile up, Eliza becomes suspicious of all of her clients — the drunks, the lonely lechers, the sex-starved sailors, the talkative lawyer with a dagger in his jacket pocket, “the evangelical who wept and puked and passed out.” She even starts to doubt the friendly young rancher who likes to take her out for breakfast, as if they were “a respectable couple.”

Eliza, initially ignorant of so much, is uneducated but by no means stupid. She picks up knowledge everywhere: from her clients fresh off ships from around the world, from books they give her, like David Copperfield and A Scarlet Letter, and from overheard conversations about America’s divide over slavery and the growing probability of civil war.

Eliza’s determination to see the larger picture opens up the world to her. She is a young woman trying to define herself in a young country doing the same. Smiley wryly notes that her character comes to realize that “life had turned out to be more complex than even she, in her business, had expected.”

Posted by Tom in Books, Literature

Happy FRIDAY!!

Somhlolo Day is a public holiday in eSwatini (Swaziland) observed on September 6th. If Somhlolo Day falls on a Saturday or Sunday, then the following Monday becomes a holiday. Also known as Independence Day or Sobhuza Day, this is the National Day of eSwatini and commemorates the day that Swaziland gained independence from Britain in 1968.

eSwatini is the smallest landlocked country in the Southern Hemisphere and the second smallest country in continental Africa. In the middle of the nineteenth century under the leadership of King Sobhuza I (Ngwane IV), Swaziland was twice the size it is today.

Caught between the British and the Boers, the Pretoria Convention of 1881 guaranteed Swaziland’s ‘independence’ but this freedom came at a price as the convention also defined its borders, with Swaziland losing large parts of its territory. After the Boer administration collapsed at the end of the Anglo-Boer War in 1903, the British took control of Swaziland as a protectorate.

On September 6th 1968, Swaziland was granted formal independence within the Commonwealth. This national holiday is named after King Sobhuza I (Ngwane IV), who was king between 1805 and 1839, and who was nicknamed ‘Somhlolo’ (The Wonder) and is considered the founder of Swaziland.



Today is the birthday, in 1948, of Claydes Smith, Kool & The Gang, who had the 1981 US No.1 & UK No.7 single ‘Celebration’, 1984 UK No.2 single ‘Joanna’, plus over 15 other Top 40 hits. He died in Maplewood, New Jersey, on June 20, 2006, aged 57. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3GwjfUFyY6M

Posted by Tom

Yes, it’s THURSDAY

Today is Jeûne genevois, a public holiday in the canton of Geneva, Switzerland. Meaning Genevan Fast, it is observed on the Thursday after the first Sunday of September. This holiday is related to the Federal Fast, a Swiss government-arranged multi-denominational holiday celebrated by all Christian Churches and the Jewish community.

In 1831, the Federal Fast was fixed in all cantons in Switzerland on 8 September, before moving to the third Sunday in September. Geneva has instead kept to its own date.

Fasting days had been a tradition in Switzerland since the late medieval period. Despite not being seen as part of the reformed Protestant faith, they continued to be observed in parts of Switzerland.

In October 1567, there was a Geneva-wide fast to show support to the Protestants who were being persecuted in Lyon, France. This fast is recognised as the first Jeûne genevois.

In 1869 as a result of the Federal Fast across Switzerland, Jeûne genevois was no longer an official holiday, though it continued to be observed by many Genevans. In 1966, it was reinstated as a holiday. While the religious fasting element is no longer widely observed, banks, most businesses and shops will be closed on Jeûne genevois.

In the sixteenth century, the only food that was allowed to be eaten on Jeûne genevois was plum pie. It remains a treat to be enjoyed on this holiday to this day.


I want to lose weight but I don’t want to get caught up in one of those “eat right and exercise” scams.

Walmart is opening dental offices in some of its stores. They will have an express lane for people with 10 teeth or less.

Woke up this morning and found out that someone had put vegetables in the beer crisper.

You’d be amazed how often I’m wrong when people ask me, “Guess what?”

Accidentally went shopping on an empty stomach and am now the proud owner of aisle 5.

Old age is when it takes longer to get over a good time than to have it.

I joined a dating site for people my age. It’s called Carbon Dating.

Another site I found is called Shingles Only.

When I go for walks I worry about tripping and falling, so I wear a helmet. But I also worry about looking ridiculous, so I carry a skateboard.

It’s tough getting older. I went into an antique store and they wouldn’t let me leave.

I went to the doctor because I thought I had arthritis. I don’t, I have early onset rigor mortis.

Yesterday the guy that was supposed to fix my doorbell didn’t show up. Or did he…

A Missionary group visited a Cannibal Tribe in New Guinea. It was their first taste of Religion.

If it’s so great outside, why do bugs try to get in my house?

If I could only use one word to describe myself, it would probably be: “not good at following directions”.

A man going on a honeymoon cruise stopped to buy seasick pills and condoms. The druggist said, “If it makes you sick, why do you do it?”

If you suck at playing the trumpet that’s probably why.

Five out of six scientists have proven that Russian roulette is harmless.

The best part of Kamala’s tax on wealth is if you don’t have $100 million, it won’t affect you. (If you are reading this, that includes you and everyone you’ve ever known)


“I was hoping to find a driverless taxi.” “Would you feel better if I told you I didn’t have a drivers license?

Today is the birthday, in 1946, of Freddie Mercury (Farrokh Bulsara) British singer, songwriter, record producer with Queen. Regarded as one of the greatest singers in the history of rock music, he was known for his flamboyant stage persona and four-octave vocal range. Born in Zanzibar to Parsi-Indian parents, Mercury attended English boarding schools in India from the age of eight and returned to Zanzibar after secondary school. In 1964, his family fled the Zanzibar Revolution, moving to Middlesex, England. Having previously studied and written music, he formed Queen in 1970 with guitarist Brian May and drummer Roger Taylor. Queen had had the 1975 UK No.1 single ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’, plus over 40 other UK Top 40 singles. And the 1980 US No.1 single ‘Crazy Little Thing Called Love’. As a solo artist he scored the 1987 UK No. 4 single ‘The Great Pretender’. Mercury died of bronchio-pneumonia on November 24th 1991 aged 45, just one day after he publicly announced he was HIV positive. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zO6D_BAuYCI

Posted by Tom in eighties music, Humor, Music

It’s WEDNESDAY (not Friday)

Today is Qaumee Dhuvas (meaning ‘National Day’ in Dhivehi, the local language) in the Maldives, a public holiday and the National Day of the Maldives. This day celebrates the victory of Muhammad Thakurufaanu Al Auzam over the Portuguese occupation in 1573.

In 1558, the Portuguese established a garrison which they administered from Goa. They killed the Sultan Ali VI of the Maldives and effectively instigated colonial rule. In 1573, Muhammad Thakurufaanu Al Auzam along with his two brothers and companions led a local revolt when the Portuguese attempted to impose Christianity on the Muslim population. The attacks drove the Portuguese out of Maldives and ended fifteen years of colonial rule.

Muhammad Thakurufaanu ruled as Sultan until his death from natural causes on 26 August 1585. He is revered as the national hero of the Maldives and 1st of Rabee ul Awwal each Islamic year is marked as the National Day of the Maldives.

The Maldives is the smallest country in Asia. Including the sea, the territory spans roughly 90,000 square kilometres (35,000 sq mi), with a land area of 298 square kilometres (115 sq mi). The Maldives is also the lowest country in the world, More than 80 per cent of the country’s land is composed of coral islands which rise less than one meter above sea level.


Good advice…



Today is the birthday, in 1981, of Beyoncé, American singer, songwriter, dancer and actress. With Destiny’s Child she had the 2000 US No.1 single with ‘Say My Name’ and the 2001 US & UK No.1 single and album ‘Survivor’. Beyonce scored the 2003 US & UK No.1 single ‘Crazy In Love’ from the world-wide No.1 album Dangerously In Love. Throughout her career, she has sold an estimated 100 million records as a solo artist and a further 60 million records with the group Destiny’s Child. She has won 22 Grammy Awards and is the most nominated woman in the award’s history. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sQgd6MccwZc

Posted by Tom

TUESDAY – back to work

Today is Foundation Day in San Marino. It commemorates the foundation of San Marino on this day in 301 AD by Saint Marinus.

During the reign of Emperor Diocletian (284 – 306 AD), the imperial view of Christianity became less benign and Christians were increasingly being persecuted and killed for their faith.

In this atmosphere, Marinus, a stonemason, fled from Dalmatia (in modern-day Croatia) to escape from religious persecution for his Christian beliefs. He arrived at Monte Titano, where he founded and built a chapel and a monastery. 

Over the years, the monastery and the area around it grew until a sizable population had been established, safe high in the mountains from the persecution of Diocletian. When the mountain people were discovered, the landowner Felicissima bequeathed it to the community in perpetuity.

The first mention of a church named after Saint Marinus dates to the year 530. Today the old church has been replaced on the site by the Basilica of San Marino, which was built in the 19th century.


I hope you celebrated Labor Day!


Today is the birthday, in 1945, of George Biondo, from Steppenwolf who had the 1969 US No.2 hit single ‘Born To Be Wild’. Steppenwolf sold over 25 million records worldwide, released eight gold albums and scored 12 Billboard Hot 100 singles. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=egMWlD3fLJ8

Posted by Tom in Humor, Music, sixties and seventies