Sunday, January 31, 2021

January's Book List

As I mentioned in my first blog post for 2021, it's been an annual tradition of mine for ten years, to publish a list of the books I had read the previous year. These lists would be posted onto my sorryalltheclevernamesaretaken blog on January 1st. This year, the list was also posted onto my new blog.

As of this month comes to an end, I'll be adding another dimension. Starting today, I'll be posting, on the last day of the month, a list of the books I've read during the month.

I've written blog posts on a few of these books already this month.

Forever Amber                                           Kathleen Winsor
The Cabin (La barraca)                              Vicente Blasco Ibáñez
The Torrent                                                 Vicente Blasco Ibáñez
The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse      Vicente Blasco Ibáñez
Blood and Sand                                           Vicente Blasco Ibáñez
The Quadroon                                             Mayne Reid
Twilight Sleep                                            Edith Wharton
Caritas in veritate                                       Pope Benedict XVI
The Children                                              Edith Wharton
Glimpses of the Moon                                Edith Wharton

Tuesday, January 26, 2021

Our New Gate


Its been one week since I last posted on the wall we had built around our property in Magatas, Sibulan. The photos today are of the gate that has been installed.

Of course, we're very pleased with the work, although the gate is heavier than we expected. I'm not complaining......I was just surprised. I said I wanted a top quality gate, and that's exactly what we have.

We're to keep the gate closed for the rest of the day. There is some cement that will need to set up.

It's been my practice to divide the photos I've taken, using half on each of my blogs.

Links to both blogs will follow below.

Our New Gate
The New Gate







 

Sunday, January 24, 2021

Squad Urges Biden to Commute Death Row Sentences


 

U.S. Rep. Ayanna Pressley (D-Mass.) and other members of the progressive "Squad" are doubling down on their call for President Biden to end Federal executions and commute the sentences of 49 death-row inmates currently in federal prisons.

This is, of course, a reaction to Trump's revival of federal executions and the 13 executions carried out in the final months of Trump's term as President. I can certainly agree with congresswoman Pressley's desire to stop capital punishment in the United States, but as I pointed out in a blog post written last month, I would feel much better if Pressley's idea of "pro-life" extended to the unborn as well.

I know it is difficult for some to feel merciful toward convicted murderers. Going that step forward isn't always easy. However, I cannot understand how one can feel compassion toward those on death row and still have a callous attitude toward unborn human beings.

In a letter to President Biden, Democrats wrote,


"We believe that rebuilding the dignity of America requires that we recommit ourselves to the tradition of due process, mercy, and judicial clemency when it comes to matters related to the criminal legal system". Yet, there is no "due process, mercy or clemency" for the unborn.

In their letter, Democrats also claimed that President Trump left behind a legacy of "carnage and unrestrained violence" because of the number of executions in the last months of his presidency. True enough, but do they not see the legacy of carnage in the 62 million abortions that have been carried out in the U.S. since the Roe vs Wade decision of 1973?

When Pressley's fellow Democrat, Rep. Cori Bush (D-Mo.) expressed sympathy for the 13 death row inmates executed under Trump (including one self identified white supremacist) Bush's supporters applauded her for having a consistent approach to opposing the death penalty.

I wish her approach to all life was as consistent.

Wednesday, January 20, 2021

The Quadroon, by Mayne Reid

Finishing Forever Amber on the first day of January, I searched my computer files for another book to read.

I had a file containing ebooks that were set aside to be read in 2018, but had somehow not made their way into the queue. Several of these ebooks were translations of the novels of  Vicente Blasco Ibáñez. I transferred a number of the ebooks to my Kindle and began reading The Cabin (La barraca). I went on to read The Torrent (Entre Naranjos), Sangre y arena (Blood and Sand) and reread  Los cuatro jinetes del Apocalipsis (The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse)

In The Torrent , Blasco Ibáñez mentions that the protagonist, Rafael Brull had read the novels of James Fenimore Cooper and Mayne Reid. Not being familiar with Reid, I immediately typed his name into a search engine and came upon a wikipedia page about him.

Mayne Reid (April 4, 1818 – October 22, 1883) was born in Ireland, and lived for a time in the U.S., - even fighting in the American-Mexican War (1846–1848).

The wikipedia article goes on the explain that Reid wrote several action filled, adventure novels along the lines of Robert Louis Stevenson. Reid's novels were an inspiration to Teddy Roosevelt, Arthur Conan Doyle, and obviously, Vicente Blasco Ibáñez.

Reading such high praise of Mayne Reid, I knew I'd want to read at least one of his novels. Project Gutenberg has more than 50 of Reid's novels available for download; I did not know where to begin.

The same wikipedia article lists his anti-slavery novel, The Quadroon as one of his best selling. No better place to start, I thought.

Published in 1853, the story takes place in Louisiana. For reasons unclear to me, the protagonist chooses to go under a false name - Edward Rutherford. Coming from Britain, Rutherford is appalled by the brutality and atrocities inherent in slavery. Rutherford falls in love with a slave named Aurore who is described as a "quadroon". In slave societies, a quadroon was a person with one quarter African and three quarters European ancestry. Rutherford wishes to marry Aurore, but cannot because she is a slave and because of  her African ancestry. The two, of course marry in the end, but not in the State of Louisiana.

The novel does contain quite a lot of action and is surprisingly suspenseful at times. I was a little put off by Reid having the need to describe the flora and fauna of Louisiana in such detail. His foreign born, 19th Century readers may have found the descriptions interesting, but this 21st Century reader thought such descriptions slowed the pace.

In the beginning, I found Reid's "negro dialect" for the slaves off-putting as well. However, Reid also gave his uneducated, white, redneck characters a stereotypical drawl, so I was willing to give him a pass.

All in all, although obviously dated, I give The Quadroon a positive rating.

Tuesday, January 19, 2021

Photos for Tuesday


As I wrote yesterday, these will be the final wall construction photos until the new gate is installed.

As there are only six photos remaining, I will post the same photos on both blogs - with links provided down below.

tuesdays-wall-photos
photos-for-tuesday






 

Monday, January 18, 2021

Monday's Wall Photos


As I mentioned earlier, the wall construction on the property in Magatas, Sibulan is pretty much completed. It only lacks smooth "finishing" which will be done at a future date.

There will be a gate, but it is being build off site. When it is finished, photos of the gate will also make the blog.

As before, the photos today will be divided between 2 blogs. Links will be below. Tomorrow should be the final wall photos until we have the gate and smooth finishing.

Wall Photos for Monday
Monday's Wall Photos






 

Sunday, January 17, 2021

Sunday's Photos


As I write this, the construction of the wall going around our property in Magatas, Sibulan is complete (except for "finishing" which will be part of another project).

However, these photos do not show the completed wall. That will be days from now. Even though the wall construction photos have been divided between 2 blogs, I still have several photos to post......I'm not going to post too many at one time.

As has been the case with previous posts on the wall, both posts can be reached via the links below.

sorryalltheclevernamesaretaken.blogspot.com/2021/01/photographs-for-sunday.
robertsimms.blogspot.com/2021/01/sundays-photos






 

Saturday, January 16, 2021

The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse

I had just finished reading Forever Amber by Kathleen Winsor and went looking for another novel to read. Years ago, I had read The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse by Vicente Blasco Ibáñez, and was so impressed, I went back to Project Gutenberg to download more ebooks of Blasco Ibáñez's work. I had put the downloaded mobi files into my computer with the intention of reading them right away. Being a bit of a procrastinator, I neglected the file.

I went back to the neglected file the first week of this year and put Blasco Ibáñez' The Cabin (La barraca) in my Kindle, with a few of his novels going into the queue.

After reading The Cabin (La barraca) and The Torrent (Entre Naranjos).I went on to reread The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse.

First published in 1916, the story revolves around an Argentinian land-owner (millionaire Julio Madariaga) and his two sons-in-law - one a Frenchman (Marcelo Desnoyers), the other German (Karl Hartrott).

Following the death of Madariaga, the two wealthy families move to Europe -Desnoyers to Paris, Hartrott to Germany.

As the two countries go to war, the two families take sides with their new countries.

Blasco Ibáñez' description of German atrocities committed during World War I was mind opening. I had not realized that the German atrocities in WWI were nearly as bad as those committed in the Second World War. No Holocaust, of course, but still astonishing when compared to previous wars in Europe.

The 1918 English translation by Charlotte Brewster Jordan became the best-selling novel in the U.S in 1919. Publishers Weekly hailed it as "a superbly human story told by a genius", a review with which I heartily agree; it is most definitely one of the greatest novels written in the 20th Century.

The novel can be found in a number of formats at Project Gutenberg.

Saturday's Photos


Another day, another set of photos to post online. These photos are of the construction of a wall going up on our property in Magatas, Sibulan.

I've been limiting the number of photos posted each day for aesthetic reasons......I think the posts look too cumbersome when too many photos are posted at one time. These photos were taken on January 13. As you can see, I'm three days behind on posting photos. As I write this, I still have photos from January 14 and January 15 to put online as well.

As usual, I'm putting different photos on to the two blogs. When published, the links to both blog posts will be found below:

sorryalltheclevernamesaretaken.blogspot.com/2021/01/photos-for-saturday
robertsimms.blogspot.com/2021/01/saturdays-photos.html





 

Friday, January 15, 2021

AOC Slams Biden's Stimulus Plan

Many of my friends on Facebook have stated that, after years of seeing the Left run down Trump without giving him a chance, they were not going to be kind to Joe Biden in any way what-so-ever.

I would usually respond to them by saying I would call out Biden whenever he did something I didn't like, but I would give him credit should he do something I agree with. I'd treat Biden the way they should have treated Donald Trump....and not the way they actually treated him.

On example might be that, because of the Democrat Party's overwhelming support of abortion, I could never vote for a Democrat for any office - local, State or Federal.

 However, it's been reported that Biden calls for more direct cash to Americans in new stimulus package by bumping up the $600 per person by $1400 for a total of $2000. I believe the increase is appropriate - it doesn't buy my vote, by any means, but I think it's the right thing to do.

You would think that with control of the House and Senate, Dems passing the bill would be a done deal. However, it's also being reported that Sandy Ocasio (AKA  AOC) already has a problem with Biden's stimulus plan. She says that "$2,000 means $2,000. $2,000 does not mean $1,400.″

She has a point, but if she wears a fashionable green ball cap, maybe no one will notice it.

Friday's Photographs


With another day, comes more photos of the wall going up around our property.

I'll be posting five photos on this blog this morning, along with five different photos on my other blog.

Once these are up, I'll edit the posts to include links to both. Here's hoping folks find these photos interesting.

robertsimms.blogspot.com/2021/01/fridays-photographs
sorryalltheclevernamesaretaken.blogspot.com/2021/01/photos-for-friday





 

Thursday, January 14, 2021

Thursday's Photos


In keeping with my pattern for the past few days, I'm posting photos of the work being done on a wall going up on our property in Brgy. Magatas. These photos will be divided between my two blogs - sorryalltheclevernamesaretaken and robertsimms.

I've been taking several photos every day - far too many to post onto one blog in one day. Today, I'll be posting a total of 12 photos - six on each of the two blogs. I still have quite a few photos. The work has progressed a bit further that want today's photos suggest.

Links to both blog posts will follow below:

sorryalltheclevernamesaretaken.blogspot.com/2021/01/thursday-photos
robertsimms.blogspot.com/2021/01/thursdays-photos






 

Wednesday, January 13, 2021