

For the Star Wars fan on your Christmas list, here are two sets of Star Wars movies on Blu-ray. AMAZON has the Complete set for $84 and these two volumes for $36 each. Yet BJ’s Warehouse has these Blu-ray sets for $29.99 each. Volume One includes Episodes 1-3, Volume Two includes Episodes 4-6. But this $29.99 price will go up on December 16 so you’re going to have to hustle to get these bargain prices. May the Force be with you!
Author Archives: george
FORGOTTEN BOOKS #198: THE STORIES OF RAY BRADBURY

Ray Bradbury’s best work appeared in the 1950s, but his writing career spans decades. I found The Stories of Ray Bradbury to be the best collection of Bradbury’s work. All the key stories are here. This Everyman’s edition is a delight to hold and peruse. Christopher Buckley provides an informative Introduction on Bradbury’s life and work. This fine book belongs in everyone’s library!
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
The Night
Homecoming
Uncle Einar
The Traveler
The Lake
The Coffin
The Crowd
The Scythe
There Was an Old Woman
There Will Come Soft Rains
Mars Is Heaven
The Silent Towns
The Earth Men
The Off Season
The Million-Year Picnic
The Fox and the Forest
Kaleidoscope
The Rocket Man
Marionettes, Inc.
No Particular Night or Morning
The City
The Fire Balloons
The Last Night of the World
The Veldt
The Long Rain
The Great Fire
The Wilderness
A Sound of Thunder
The Murderer
The April Witch
Invisible Boy
The Golden Kite, the Silver Wind
The Fog Horn
The Big Black and White Game
Embroidery
The Golden Apples of the Sun
Powerhouse
Hail and Farewell
The Great Wide World Over There
The Playground
Skeleton
The Man Upstairs
Touched with Fire
The Emissary
The Jar
The Small Assassin
The Next in Line
Jack-in-the-Box
The Leave-Taking
Exorcism
The Happiness Machine
Calling Mexico
The Wonderful Ice Cream Suit
Dark They Were, and Golden-Eyed
The Strawberry Window
A Scent of Sarsaparilla
The Picasso Summer
The Day It Rained Forever
A Medicine for Melancholy
The Shore at Sunset
Fever Dream
The Town Where No One Got Off
All Summer in a Day
Frost and Fire
The Anthem Sprinters
And So Died Riabouchinska
Boys! Raise Giant Mushrooms in Your Cellar!
The Vacation
The Illustrated Woman
Some Live Like Lazarus
The Best of All Possible Worlds
The One Who Waits
Tyrannosaurus Rex
The Screaming Woman
The Terrible Conflagration up at the Place
Night Call, Collect
The Tombling Day
The Haunting of the New
Tomorrow’s Child
I Sing the Body Electric!
The Women
The Inspiried Chicken Motel
Yes, We’ll Gather at the River
Have I Got a Chocolate Bar for You!
A Story of Love
The Parrot Who Met Papa
The October Game
Punishment Without Crime
A Piece of Wood
The Blue Bottle
Long After Midnight
The Utterly Perfect Murder
The Better Part of Wisdom
Interval in Sunlight
The Black Ferris
Farewell Summer
McGillahee’s Brat
The Aqueduct
Gotcha!
The End of the Beginning
BEAN BY BEAN: A COOKBOOK By Crescent Dragonwagon
As a diabetic, I’m always looking for ways to control my glucose levels. Recent studies have show that eating a cup of beans per day can reduce glucose levels and make control easier. So I tried it myself: for a month I ate a cup of beans per day. One of my favorites was Paisley Farm All Natural Five Bean Salad – 64oz for a pittance at Sam’s Club. Sure enough, my glucose levels fell. But, I felt I needed more variety. I was listing to NPR and Tom Ashbrook’s fine program “On Point” on Thanksgiving and Crescent Dragonwagon was talking about her new bean cookbook. I listened to the interview and immediately got a copy of Bean by Bean. I’m working my way through it. Delicious recipes! You don’t have to be a diabetic to love this food. GRADE: A
BEAN FACTS:
1. Beans are the only cultivated plants that actually enrich, rather than deplete, the soil during the growing process. How is this possible? Legumes have nodules on their roots that add nitrogen to the soil instead of using it up.
2. Cooked beans can be frozen for up to six months. Thaw them overnight in the fridge before reheating.
3. Bean carbohydrates have been proven to drastically improve the stability of blood sugar levels in diabetics. Many adult-onset diabetics have been able to greatly reduce or eliminate their dependence on insulin through diets containing substantial amounts of beans.
4. In ancient Rome, so esteemed were legumes that the four leading families took their names from them: Lentullus (lentil), Piso (pea), Cicero (chickpea), and Fabius (fava).
5. Some ancient cults who believed in reincarnation, most notably the monastic followers of Pythagoras, thought human souls traveled through the stems of bean plants to Hades, where they were then transmogrified for their next lives; it was therefore a sin to eat beans or even walk among bean plants.
6. The mischief-maker behind the bean’s reputation as a musical fruit is a group of complex sugars called oligosaccharides. Oligosaccharides cannot be broken down by our digestive enzymes; instead, our intestinal bacteria ferment them during digestion, causing most of the gas attributable to beans. Luckily, it’s possible to mitigate the gas-making effects of beans through controlling factors such as cooking method and duration, complementary ingredients, and the variety of bean used. (The least “flatulating” legumes are said to be lentils, split peas, adzuki beans, mung beans, and black-eyed peas.)
7. In terms of sheer numbers and staggering diversity, no part of the world comes close to matching the abundance and variety of beans available in America: kidney and black beans, navy and cranberry, lima, white runner, scarlet runner, brown tepary and white tepary, calico, eye-of-the-goat, nightfall, fresh green beans, and more!
ENEMIES OF PERMANENT THINGS: OBSERVATIONS ON ABNORMITY IN LITERATURE & POLITICS By Russell Kirk
Many of you will recognize Russell Kirk as the author of Old House of Fear (1961), The Surly Sullen Bell (1962), A Creature of the Twilight: His Memorials (1966), The Princess of All Lands (1979), Lord of the Hollow Dark (1979), Watchers at the Strait Gate (1984), Off the Sand Road: Ghost Stories, Volume One (2002), What Shadows We Pursue: Ghost Stories, Volume Two (2003) and Ancestral Shadows: An Anthology of Ghostly Tales (2004). But Russell Kirk was also a major figure in the conservative movement. No, this is not a Tea Party nutcase. Kirk believed in the power of ideas. He was an expert on Edmund Burke’s philosophies. I found Enemies of Permanent Things a bit dated (it was published in 1969) but stimulating in its defense of considering the implications of change before we make them. In a section of “Norms of Literature,” Kirk provides a masterful analysis of the work of Ray Bradbury. If you’re interested in ideas, Enemies of Permanent Things will make you think. GRADE: A-
STORAGE WARS: NEW EPISODES
Storage Wars is one of my Guilty Pleasures. I have no idea why I’m so entertained by Dave, Darrell, Brandi & Jerrod, and Barry bidding on other people’s abandoned property. But apparently plenty of other people share the same fascination I have with the drama because Storage Wars is the highest rated program on A&E. Tonight our intrepid entrepreneurs will be bidding on abandoned storage lockers and finding trash and treasure. Check your local listings for the broadcast time in your area.
THIS IS CHRISTMAS by Katherine Jenkins
Several radio stations in our area started playing Christmas music the day after Halloween. That’s too soon for me. I prefer listening to Christmas music after Thanksgiving. Each year, Diane and I buy one or two new Christmas music CDs (we have about 50 in our CD collection). This year, it was Katherine Jenkins’ This is Christmas. I’ve been a fan of Katherine Jenkins for years. She gained a whole new audience with her appearances on Dancing With the Stars. If you’re looking for a delightful Christmas CD, I recommend this one. Take a listen below:
Track List:
1. O Come O Come Emmanuel
2. Ding Dong Merrily On High
3. Away In A Manger
4. In Dulci Jubilo
5. The Christmas Song (Chestnuts Roasting On An Open Fire)
6. Santa Baby
7. The Little Road To Bethlehem
8. Deck The Halls
9. Angels From The Realms Of Glory
10. Sleep Quietly My Jesus
11. I Wish You Christmas
12. Hark The Herald Angels Sing
13. Come What May (with Placido Domingo)
JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS VS. BUFFALO BILLS
This game didn’t sell out–in fact the die-hard fans who attend will be sitting in the rain–so radio coverage will be the order of the day. The Bills haven’t been mathematically eliminated, but their chances of making the Playoffs are very, very slim. Bills fans already talk about the 2013 NFL Draft. Is your favorite NFL team still in contention?
PAULA POUNDSTONE
Diane is a big fan of NPR’s “Wait, Wait Don’t Tell Me” and one of her favorite panelists is Paula Poundstone. When Diane heard that Paula Poundstone was appearing at her alma mater, Buffalo State College, to perform her stand-up comedy routine, she bought tickets. And, sure enough, Paula was as funny in-person as she is on the radio. Although part of her 2-hour show had some set routines, much of her comedy was generated by interaction with the audience. The set routines included bits about Paula’s three adopted children, Elvis, classic TV shows, and her own obsessive-compulsive tendencies. Paula engaged the audience which resulted in plenty of laughs about the lighting of the Peace Bridge (the main bridge to Canada), manipulative teachers and managers, and hooking up in the Beer Tent at a local festival. If Paula Poundstone shows up in your area, and you want to laugh, I’d recommend you attend her performance.
FORGOTTEN BOOKS #197: KILLING THEM SOFTLY (aka COGAN’S TRADE) By George V. Higgins
George V. Higgins wrote two classic crime novels: The Friends of Eddie Coyle and Cogan’s Trade, now retitled Killing Them Softly to tie-in with the new Brad Pitt movie of the same name. Higgins went on to write many other fine crime novels, but few of them reached the intensity of these two books. Jackie Cogan is an enforcer for organized crime in the Boston area. When a high-stakes card game is knocked-over, Cogan is called in to “fix” the problem. For those of you who haven’t experienced Higgins’ writing style, it’s gritty and hard-boiled. The movie opens today. Check out the trailer below.
FORGOTTEN MUSIC #32: GRRR! GREATEST HITS 1962-2012 By The Rolling Stones
It’s hard to believe The Rolling Stones have been around for 50 years. Harder still to admit I’ve been listening to their music for much of that time. The Stones did their best work between 1962 and 1982. After that, the quality of their work slipped to mediocre levels punctuated with occasion hits (like “Harlem Shuffle” in 1984). The Stones have issued Greatest Hits compilations in the past but this 3-CD remastered set sounds best. Not everything is here (I would have included “The Hand of Fate”) but most of it is. You can hear Keith Richards’ story of how “Street-Fighting Man” was made by clicking here.
Disc: 1
1. Come On
2. Not Fade Away
3. It’s All Over Now
4. Little Red Rooster
5. The Last Time
6. (I Can t Get No) Satisfaction
7. Time Is On My Side
8. Get Off Of My Cloud
9. Heart Of Stone
10. 19th Nervous Breakdown
11. As Tears Go By
12. Paint It, Black
13. Under My Thumb
14. Have You Seen Your Mother, Baby, Standing In The Shadow?
15. Ruby Tuesday
16. Let’s Spend The Night Together
17. We Love You
Disc: 2
1. Jumpin’ Jack Flash
2. Honky Tonk Women
3. Sympathy For The Devil
4. You Can’t Always Get What You Want
5. Gimme Shelter
6. Street Fighting Man
7. Wild Horses
8. She’s A Rainbow
9. Brown Sugar
10. Happy
11. Tumbling Dice
12. Angie
13. Rocks Off
14. Doo Doo Doo Doo Doo (Heartbreaker)
15. It’s Only Rock ‘N’ Roll
16. Fool To Cry
Disc: 3
1. Miss You
2. Respectable
3. Beast Of Burden
4. Emotional Rescue
5. Start Me Up
6. Waiting On A Friend
7. Undercover Of The Night
8. She Was Hot
9. Streets Of Love
10. Harlem Shuffle
11. Mixed Emotions
12. Highwire
13. Love Is Strong
14. Anybody Seen My Baby?
15. Don’t Stop
16. Doom And Gloom
17. One More Shot