Saturday, December 31, 2016

Notes on Crazy for the Storm by Norman Ollestad (2009

I got the idea for this one from NPR's story program, Snap Judgment.  The author basically did the book in 15 minutes.

It's a true story, written well, about an 11 year old kid and his dad in a plane crash around Big Bear.  The kid survives, and dad and dad's girlfriend don't.

The kid grows up at Topanga Beach in the late 1970's and it feels like the 70's with puka shells and big collars.  Dad teaches the kid to surf, ski and play hockey, which the kid later understands to be training for surviving the ordeal of the crash.

Read this one.

Friday, December 23, 2016

Note on The First Christmas, by Marcus Borg and John Dominic Crossan (2007)

This is a great historical look at the Christmas narratives in Matthew and Luke.  It treats those as parable. It was not intended to be factual. Those stories contrast a baby king in a manger born of the dirt poor to those who rule their world and ours-- Herod, Augustus etc.-- and that contrast is the point of Christmas and the gospels generally.

It rings true and was an inspiring read. My favorite bible historians knock another one of the park.   James, read this one and any others these authors write.

Sunday, December 11, 2016

Notes on We Are As Gods, by Kate Daloz (2016)

This a well written book by the daughter of a 1970's "back to the lander."  Her parents, along with many other middle class educated anglos, purchased land in Vermont and built a house and had a farm.  This book tells their stories and places them in a wider context.

One can interpret this back to the land movement as having failed.  Most of the communes died out.  Looked at another way, this movement has simply changed form and continues to this day.  Organic food and solar panels trace their roots to this period.


The book is insightful, well written and interesting and a great read.

James' birthday at USS Midway Museum

I don't know how it happened.  My wife and I are liberal.  We got a conservative son.  He likes money, he like weapons, and he likes soldiers.

We looked for some military museum for his birthday and settled upon the USS Midway Museum. It's a decommissioned aircraft carrier that was converted to a museum in about 2004.


We stopped along the way in Riverside for citrus.  We got 25 lbs of navel oranges, 15 lbs of sweet tangerines (about 10 of which for neighbors) and peanut candies.

The Museum did not disappoint. We had very nice retired vets at the Museum to show us around and answer questions. You can disagree with the politicians (which I do), but there's no questioning the sincerity of those who serve.

You can tell he liked it because he spent just a minimum amount of time in teh gift shop. he usually gets stuck in there.  And when it was time to go, he complained.



museum in the background.



cockpit of a fighter jet?





 brig







on the deck.  it's corny, but he loved it.