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GHOSTS ABOUND

5/31/2024

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A WRITER'S WIT
​For . . . austere and gracious allegory, as for so much of its mysticism and its chivalry, its ardours and its endurances, the world is in debt to Spain.
Helen Waddell
Author of The Desert Fathers
Born May 31, 1889
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H. Waddell

MY BOOK WORLD

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Fitzgerald, Daniel G. Faded Dreams: More Ghost Towns of Kansas. Lawrence: UP of Kansas, 1994.
 
This book no doubt creates a rich resource for those searching for specific information regarding ghost towns located in one of the 105 Kansas counties. I, myself, found Fitzgerald’s first book (Ghost Towns of Kansas, Volume I) helpful when I became curious about the former town of Runnymede, where, in 1924, my maternal grandfather established a grocery store—only to fail a year later because the automobile allowed people to travel to other towns for their needs. However, by reading about these over one hundred ghost towns, one begins to sense a mosaic of the state’s checkered history, as well. How, for example, some nineteenth-century Kansans were pro-slavery and others were freestaters, in favor of abolition, that people murdered others with regard to the issue. One state historian establishes that from its inception Kansas garnered over 6,000 town “start-ups,” and that if they all had flourished (theoretically) one could not now drive twelve miles in any direction without encountering another town.
 
Of course, reality has turned out being very different. Vast acreages of agricultural land and prairies have swallowed up those former towns—leaving only crumbling foundations or memorial plaques found on what is now private property. Any number of events or trends contributed to the defeat of these ghost towns. Even grand entrepreneurial efforts failed. Important infrastructure (roads, rivers, and railways) did not materialize. Political decisions made in Topeka or county seats (some of those heartily fought over) ruined yet other towns. Catastrophic weather events played a part in some cases. Some towns just lacked proper leadership from the beginning. Thus, Fitzgerald paints a fascinating history of primarily nineteenth-century Kansas (although many towns do not emit their last gasp until the 1930s), in which mostly white people from the east and European locations do battle with indigenous people to usurp or purchase lands that are questionably for sale in the first place. And the author does so without favor to either side. Just the facts. In any event, and regardless of motive, the people portrayed here do represent a certain heroic and pioneer spirit attempting literally to create something out of nothing. The text includes fascinating vintage photos, as well.

Up Next:
TUES: A Writer's Wit | Ruth Westheimer
WEDS: A Writer's Wit | Margaret Drabble
THURS: A Writer's Wit | Pierre Corneille
FRI: My Book World | 
Kara Swisher,  Burn Book: A Tech Love Story

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A WRITER'S WIT: KEN DIXON

5/30/2024

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Darwin is my Jesus Christ.
​Ken Dixon, Visual Artist
​Born May 30, 1943
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K. Dixon
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Order/Disorder: Migration (2005)
Up Next:
FRI: My Book World | Daniel Fitzgerald , Faded Dreams: More Ghost Towns of Kansas

TUES: A Writer's Wit | Ruth Westheimer
WEDS: A Writer's Wit |Margaret Drabble
THURS: A Writer's Wit | Pierre Corneille
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A WRITER'S WIT: JOHN F. KENNEDY

5/29/2024

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When power leads man toward arrogance, poetry reminds him of his limitations. When power narrows the areas of man’s concern, poetry reminds him of the richness and diversity of his existence. When power corrupts, poetry cleanses, for art establishes the basic human truths which must serve as the touchstone of our judgment.
John Fitzgerald Kennedy
Author of Profiles in Courage
Born May 29, 1917
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J. F. Kennedy
Up Next:
THURS: A Writer's Wit | Ken Dixon
FRI: My Book World | Daniel Fitzgerald, ​Faded Dreams: More Ghost Towns of Kansas
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A WRITER'S WIT: MAY SWENSON

5/28/2024

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The best poetry has its roots in the subconscious to a great degree. Youth, naivety, reliance on instinct more than learning and method, a sense of freedom and play, even trust in randomness, is necessary to the making of a poem.
​May Swenson, Poet
Author of A Cage of Spines
Born May 28, 1913
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M. Swenson
Up Next:
WEDS: A Writer's Wit | John F. Kennedy
THURS: A Writer's Wit | Ken Dixon
FRI: My Book World | Daniel Fitzgerald, Faded Dreams: More Ghost Towns of Kansas
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ALWAYS LOOKING

5/24/2024

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A WRITER'S WIT
It is the people who scream the loudest about America and Freedom who seem to be the most intolerant for a differing point of view.
Rosanne Cash,  Singer and Songwriter: "Sea of Heartbreak"
​Born May 24, 1955
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R. Cash

MY BOOK WORLD

Sharot, Tali and Cass R. Sunstein. Look Again: The Power of Noticing What Was Always There. New York: Simon, 2024.

“What is thrilling on Monday becomes boring by Friday. We habituate, which means that we respond less and less to stimuli that repeat” (2).
 
This statement is the authors’ thesis. What implications does it have? Just about everything. What if you eat your favorite ice cream, rocky road, every day? You eventually become habituated to it; you get tired of it. (Get used to seeing habituate because you’ll see it on nearly every page.) Eroticism can become numbed by repetition. The more sex you have with someone, the less exciting it becomes.
 
The chapter on “variety” is interesting, as well. University professors take sabbaticals every few years, not only to study but to be exposed to a variety of stimuli. They may travel out of town, out of the country. The authors also address the problems of social media, how habituation relates to the topic. They tackle misinformation and the environment. And they address society as a whole: discrimination, tyranny (fascism), and the law. An interesting and timely book.

Up Next:
TUES: A Writer's Wit | May Swenson
WEDS: A Writer's Wit | John F. Kennedy
THURS: A Writer's Wit | Kenneth Dixon
FRI: My Book World | Daniel Fitzgerald, Faded Dreams: More Ghost Towns of Kansas

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A WRITER'S WIT: MARGARET FULLER

5/23/2024

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It should be remarked that, as the principle of liberty is better understood, and more nobly interpreted, a broader protest is made in behalf of women. As men become aware that few have had a fair chance, they are inclined to say that no women have had a fair chance.
​Margaret Fuller
Author of Summer on the Lakes
Born May 23, 1810
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M. Fuller
Up Next:
FRI: My Book World | Sharot and Sunstein, Look Again: The Power of Noticing What Was Always There

TUES: A Writer's Wit | May Swenson
WEDS: A Writer's Wit | John F. Kennedy
THURS: A Writer's Wit | Ken Dixon
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A WRITER'S WIT: SUSAN DODD

5/22/2024

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Luck is largely a matter of paying attention.
​Susan M. Dodd
Author of Old Wives' Tales
Born May 22, 1945
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S. Dodd
Up Next:
THURS: A Writer's Wit | Margaret Fuller
FRI: My Book World | Sharot and Sunstein, Look Again
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A WRITER'S WIT: MIRIAM TOEWS

5/21/2024

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A writer is always, always searching, even against her will, against all her better instincts, for the thread of a story. Everything is fodder. Everything is fuel. You can feel it coming on like the tingling of a sore throat. The brain never stops struggling to reshape every experience and feeling into a coherent narrative.
​Miriam Toews
Author of Women Talking
Born May 21, 1964 
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M. Toews
Up Next:
WEDS: A Writer's Wit | Susan Dodd
THURS: A Writer's Wit | Margaret Fuller
FRI: My Book World | Sharot and Sunstein, Look Again
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SIX NEW YORK STORIES & A HOLLYWOOD NOVELLA

5/17/2024

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A WRITER'S WIT
The only infallible rule we know is, that the man who is always talking about being a gentleman never is one.
Dennis Potter, Screenwriter
Author of Lipstick on Your Collar
​Born May 17, 1935
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D. Potter

MY BOOK WORLD

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Towles, Amor. Table for Two: Fictions. New York: Viking, 2024.

These six lengthy stories and one novella stand as jewels in Towles’s already glittering list of works: A Gentleman in Moscow being my favorite. These works exhibit the same inventiveness and wit. My favorite story, perhaps, is “The Ballad of Timothy Touchett.” Touchett is a young writer who moves to NYC at the turn of this century. He finds work, toiling for a Mr. Pennybrook, a “purveyor of used and rare editions.” Pennybrook is much more, as Touchett soon finds out. Because of Timothy’s ability to mimic handwritings, he is lured into “signing” editions, which Pennybrook then pawns off as the real thing, providing Timothy with what seems like a hefty bonus to a young man attempting to live in the city ($50 per signature). Of course, readers can imagine where this sort of behavior leads, but it’s how they arrive at that point: what Touchett must experience before experiencing his comeuppance. The author’s approach seems a bit Dickensian but also somewhat like metafiction, in which he turns to his readership and reveals perhaps his own points of view.
 
In the novella, Eve in Hollywood, set in 1938, one Evelyn Ross takes a train to Chicago, but instead of meeting her parents who have driven in from Indiana, she boards one to Los Angeles. Ross is beautiful save for one thing: she bears a long scar across her face, which turns some away. Perhaps because of the scar, she has learned to bear rejection and doesn’t worry about such behavior. She marches to her own drum. Towles has lifted this character from his first novel, a curious idea but one I admire (sometimes writers are just not finished with a character), and takes her on this noir-like voyage of mayhem and murder. Enough said. If you’re a fan at all of Towles’s work, you will enjoy this delightful collection of “Fictions,” as he forms his book’s subtitle.

Up Next:
TUES: A Writer's Wit | Miriam Toews
WEDS: A Writer's Wit | Susan Dodd 
THURS: A Writer's Wit | Margaret Fuller
FRI: My Book World | 
Sharot & Sunstein, ​Look Again

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A WRITER'S WIT: JEAN HANFF KORELITZ

5/16/2024

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Pacing is not the sort of thing you can plan out beforehand, but you're always aware of it as you write, because you need to make constant decisions.
​Jean Hanff Korelitz
Author of The Latecomer
Born May 16, 1961
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J. Hanff Korelitz
Up Next:
FRI: My Book World | Amor Towles, Table for Two: Fictions

TUES: A Writer's Wit | Miriam Toews
WEDS: A Writer's Wit | Susan Dodd
THURS: A Writer's Wit | Margaret Fuller
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A WRITER'S WIT: CLIFTON FADIMAN

5/15/2024

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When you reread a classic you do not see more in the book than you did before; you see more in you than there was before.
Clifton Fadiman
Author of Lifetime Reading Plan
Born May 15, 1904
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C. Fadiman
Up Next:
THURS: A Writer's Wit | Jean Hanff Korelitz
FRI: My Book World | Amor Towles, ​Table for Two: Fictions
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A WRITER'S WIT: SOFIA COPPOLA

5/14/2024

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I had a teacher when I was in college, and he was the first person who liked my photos and said, “The way you look at girls is your own way of seeing.” He was the first person who really gave me the confidence to try something.
​Sofia Coppola, Film Director and Screenwriter
Author of Lost in Translation
Born May 14, 1971
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S. Coppola
Up Next:
WEDS: A Writer's Wit | Clifton Fadiman
THURS: A Writer's Wit | Jean Hanff Korelitz
FRI: My Book World | Amor Towles, ​Table for Two: Fictions
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ANIMAL SECRETS

5/10/2024

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A WRITER'S WIT
A loser doesn’t know what he’ll do if he loses, but talks about what he’ll do if he wins, and a winner doesn't talk about what he’ll do if he wins, but knows what he’ll do if he loses.
Eric Berne
Author of Games People Play
Born May 10, 1910
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E. Berne

MY BOOK WORLD 

Agus, David B. The Book of Animal Secrets: Nature’s Lessons for a Long and Happy Life. New York: Simon, 2023.
        
At first I felt this book to be a bit contrived, but as I got deeper into it, I realized that the author has a seriousness of intent and purpose. From domesticated canines to “wild” animals, he intends for us to see that we have much to learn about living from our animal friends. A few things he hammers home again and again:
1) Companionship can include animals. 2) Like pigeons, pay attention to patterns; don’t take the same route to and from work each day. 3) Keep your cardiovascular system fit. Don’t smoke. Sleep in a flat position. Maintain dental hygiene. 4) Eat a diverse diet, “but stay as close to nature as possible.” Like chimps, learn to take some risks; don’t be afraid of trial-and-error learning. 5) Teamwork, like ants employ, is always a healthy way to live. These are just a few lessons learned from our wild friends.

Up Next:
TUES: A Writer's Wit | Sofia Coppola
WEDS: A Writer's Wit | Clifton Fadiman 
THURS: A Writer's Wit | Jean Hanff Korelitz
FRI: My Book World | Amor Towles, Table for Two
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A WRITER'S WIT: CANDICE BERGEN

5/9/2024

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Though beauty gives you a weird sense of entitlement, it's rather frightening and threatening to have others ascribe such importance to something you know you're just renting for a while. 
Candice Bergen
Author of A Fine Romance
Born May 9, 1946

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C. Bergen
Up Next:
FRI: My Book World | David Agus, The Book of Animal Secrets

TUES: A Writer's Wit | Sofia Coppola
WEDS: A Writer's Wit | Clifton Fadiman
THURS: A Writer's Wit | Jean Hanff Korelitz
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A WRITER'S WIT: PHYLLIS WHEATLEY

5/8/2024

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The world is a severe schoolmaster, for its frowns are less dangerous than its smiles and flatteries, and it is a difficult task to keep in the path of wisdom.
Phillis Wheatley
Author of Being Brought from Africa to America
Born May 8, 1753
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P. Wheatley
Up Next:
THURS: A Writer's Wit | Candice Bergen
FRI: My Book World | David Agus, The Book of Animal Secrets
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A WRITER'S WIT: ANGELA CARTER

5/7/2024

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Reading a book is like re-writing it for yourself. You bring to a novel, anything you read, all your experience of the world. You bring your history and you read it in your own terms.
​Angela Carter
Author of Nights at the Circus
Born May 7, 1940
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A. Carter
Up Next:
WEDS: A Writer's Wit | Phyllis Wheatley
THURS: A Writer's Wit | Candice Bergen
FRI: My Book World | David Agus, The Book of Animal Secrets
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COMING FROM INSIDE THE HOUSE

5/3/2024

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A WRITER'S WIT
One way to get high blood pressure is to go mountain climbing over molehills.
​Earl Wilson
Author of Show Business Laid Bare
Born May 3, 1907
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E. Wilson

MY BOOK WORLD

McQuade, Barbara. Attack from Within: How Disinformation Is Sabotaging America. New York: Seven Stories, 2024.

This book combines both anecdotal and hard evidence to define disinformation (deliberate misrepresentation of facts), provides a number of ways in which authoritarians use disinformation, and finally, gives a number of steps citizens and government can take to reduce the effects of it. If readers have studied the first two ideas, the book may seem like an excellent review. The last part—ways to combat disinformation—are the most informative for me.
 
One way is To Reduce Disinformation from the Supply Side. Germany, for example, REQUIRES “digital platforms to monitor and remove illegal content for face civil penalties” (251). To Regulate Online Publishers Like Other Industries is another. Prohibit Anonymous Users and Bots. Require Disclosure of Funding Sources. Strengthen local journalism by having the government provide partial funding. Local sources are less likely to disinform their friends or in a situation where it comes back on them.

McQuade furnishes numerous other ways in which to combat disinformation, locally, nationally, and on digital platforms. She concedes that these methods will not entirely make disinformation go away, but they could certainly reduce its effects. This read is well worth the time if you’re at all interested in the topic. Any one of us can be duped at any time. Oh, and I really admire McQuade’s prose in print. She, a former copy editor, is meticulous to get the correct subject/verb agreement, in, say, using the word “media.” The media are responsible for content. Too many people in journalism use media as a singular noun. Wrong.

Up Next:
TUES: A Writer's Wit | Angela Carter
WEDS: A Writer's Wit | Phyllis Wheatley
THURS: A Writer's Wit | Candice Bergen
FRI: My Book World | David B. Agus
, The Book of Animal Secrets: Nature’s Lessons for a Long and Happy Life
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A WRITER'S WIT: JOHN GALT

5/2/2024

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In a word, man in London is not quite so good a creature as he is out of it.
​John Galt
Author of Voyages and Travels
Born May 2, 1779
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J. Galt
Up Next:
FRI: My Book World | Barbara McQuade, Attack from Within

TUES: A Writer's Wit | Angela Carter
WEDS: A Writer's Wit | Phyllis Wheatley
THURS: A Writer's Wit | Candice Bergen
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A WRITER'S WIT: BOBBIE ANN MASON

5/1/2024

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I've always found it difficult to start with a definite idea, but if I start with a pond that's being drained because of a diesel fuel leak and a cow named Hortense and some blackbirds flying over and a woman in the distance waving, then I might get somewhere.
Bobbie Ann Mason
Author of Love Life: Stories
Born May 1, 1940
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B. A. Mason
Up Next:
THURS: A Writer's Wit | John Galt
FRI: My Book World | Barbara McQuade, Attack from Within
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    AUTHOR
    Richard Jespers is a writer living in Lubbock, Texas, USA.

    See my profile at Author Central:
    http://amazon.com/author/rjespers


    Richard Jespers's books on Goodreads
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