Author Archives: george

BUFFALO BILLS VS. CHICAGO BEARS (CBS)

All I want for Christmas is for the Buffalo Bills to win in Chicago today despite the single-digit temperatures and chilling winds! The Bills are 8-point favorites, but the weather conditions could be dicey–both in Chicago and Buffalo. After the Bills game, some friends were supposed to come over to celebrate Christmas Eve with us but right now we have a county-wide Travel Ban in effect. Have a hot toddy or hot chocolate to enjoy the countdown to Christmas!

FRIDAY’S FORGOTTEN BOOKS #723: SLAY RIDE By Frank Kane

COVER ARTWORK BY VICTOR KALIN

I couldn’t resist reviewing Frank Kane’s Slay Ride (a far cry from Leroy Anderson’s  “Sleigh Ride”) for an FFB this close to Christmas. Frank Kane wrote a series of private eye novels featuring a tough investigator named Johnny Liddel. I enjoyed Kane’s clever titles for his novels (check them out below).

Slay Ride involves Johnny Liddel in an insurance transaction: trade money for jewels stolen from a client. Of course the hand-off goes wrong and one of Liddel’s colleagues gets killed. Liddel resisted the whole “swap of money for stolen jewels” scheme so this debacle only fires up his motivation to take down the jewel heist ring who shakes-down insurance companies for Big Bucks.

If you’re a fan of the Mike Shayne series, you’ll find Johnny Liddel a similar type of private eye. Do you have a favorite Private Eye? GRADE: B

Frank Kane’s Johnny Liddel Series:

About Face (1947
Green Light for Death (1949
Slay Ride (1950
Bullet Proof (1951
Dead Weight (1951
Bare Trap (1952
The Icepick Artists (1953
Poisons Unknown (1953
Red Hot Ice (1955
A Real Gone Guy (1956
The Living End (1957
Trigger Mortis (1958
Grave Danger (1960
A Short Bier (1960
Time to Prey (1960
Due Or Die (1961
The Mourning After (1961
Stacked Deck (1961
Crime of Their Life (1962
Dead Rite (1962
Hearse Class Male (1963
Johnny Come Lately (1963
Ring-a-ding-ding (1963
Barely Seen (1964
Fatal Undertaking (1964
Final Curtain (1964
The Guilt Edged Frame (1964
Esprit De Corpse (1965
Two To Tangle (1965
Maid In Paris (1966
Margin For Terror (1967
Johnny Liddell’s Morgue (2012
Stairway To Hell (2016
Johnny Liddell Mystery Crime Box Set (2016
Frame (2022

SANTA BABY and CHRISTMAS BALLADS By Dave Koz & Friends

I’ve been a fan of Alicia Keyes for years so buying her new Christmas CD should come as no surprise. Santa Baby is a mix of Christmas standards and some new songs. I heard an interview with Alicia Keyes on National Public Radio (you can listen to it here) and marveled at the discussion about how difficult it is to sing “Ave Maria.” GRADE: A

I also enjoy Dave Koz and his mellow smooth jazz music. If you’re looking for a soothing Christmas CD for those cold winter nights, Christmas Ballads would be the perfect choice! Are you all ready for the Holidays? GRADE: A

TRACK LIST:

No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1.Santa BabyJoan Javits Philip Springer Tony SpringerAlicia Keys3:53
2.Christmas Time Is HereVince Guaraldi Lee MendelsonKeys3:26
3.My Favorite ThingsRichard Rodgers Oscar Hammerstein IITommy Parker Joshua “YNG Josh” Comerly[a]3:54
4.“December Back 2 June”Alicia KeysKeys2:43
5.Please Come Home for ChristmasCharles Brown Gene ReddKeys3:17
6.Happy Xmas (War Is Over)John Lennon Yoko OnoKeys4:05
7.“You Don’t Have to Be Alone”KeysKeys2:19
8.The Christmas Song (Chestnuts Roasting on an Open Fire)Robert Wells Mel TorméKeys2:47
9.“Old Memories on Christmas”Keys Natalie HembyKeys2:59
10.Not Even the KingKeys Emeli SandéKeys3:00
11.Ave MariaFranz Schubert Walter ScottKeys3:46

TRACK LIST:

1. The Christmas Waltz
2. Away In The Manger / Silent Night
3. Happy Xmas (War Is Over) / Imagine (feat. Rebecca Jade)
4. Greensleeves
5. God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen / My Favorite Things
6. Ave Maria
7. It Came Upon A Midnight Clear / Happy Holiday
8. Merry Christmas Darling
9. Petit Papa Noël
10. Wrapped Up In Your Smile 

WEDNESDAY’S SHORT STORIES #104: AMONG STRANGERS By Robert Silverberg

COVER ARTWORK BY DAVID HO

Just in time for that Robert Silverberg fan on your Holiday gift list, Subterranean Press has published a 750-page collection of three novels and a novella.

“In Those Who Watch (1967) three New Mexico humans, an eleven-year-old Hopi boy, a widowed single mother, and a divorced Air Force Colonel, unwittingly become entangled with aliens who have long monitored human civilization. Further complicating affairs, an agent from a rival alien species lands on Earth determined to chase down the three renegade observers.”

The Man in the Maze (1968) is Dick Muller, an engineered telepath, once a hero but now exiled by an ungrateful humanity to the labyrinth on Lemnos. When administrator Boardman tries to enlist Muller once more for a dangerous mission and Muller refuses, the eponymous maze takes on a mental meaning warped enough to rival any physical construct.”

“An overlooked gem, the near-future, post-apocalyptic Tom O’Bedlam (1985)—presented here for the first time in the author’s definitive version—explores the gossamer boundary between rapture and rupture. The denizens of a frayed world begin experiencing collectively shared dreams just as a space probe light years away sends back images eerily similar to their dreamscapes. Is the titular Tom O’Bedlam humanity’s destined prophet to the stars, or a deranged cult leader fated to push a fragile civilization over the brink?”

“The Way to Spook City” (1992), a fabulous novella, takes us through an unforgettable rite of passage, a life-changing voyage into the alien Occupied Zone.  This story will haunt you long after you finish it.

I support small presses like Subterranean and I urge you to do so, too! GRADE: A

LEOPOLDSTADT, A Play by Tom Stoppard

Leopoldstadt is set among the Jewish community of Vienna in the first half of the 20th century and follows the lives of “a prosperous Jewish family who had fled the pogroms in the East”.

According to Tom Stoppard, the play “took a year to write, but the gestation was much longer. Quite a lot of it is personal to me, but I made it about a Viennese family so that it wouldn’t seem to be about me.” All four of Stoppard’s Jewish grandparents died in Nazi concentration camps.

The play begins in 1899 and we hear about the “acceptance” of Jews in Vienna. The large Jewish family seems happy but are unaware of the changes coming. In 1900, beautiful Gretl begins an affair with Fitz (who is anti-Semitic) that leads to dire implications for the family.

The action shifts to 1924 and the post World War I social and political order. Already some of the family members have lost their lives. The optimism the Jewish community shared erodes.

The true horror begins in 1935 as the Nazis burst into the ancestral home and terrorize the now poverty-stricken family. Concentration camps loom.

The play concludes in 1955 with the three remaining survivors of the Holocaust. We saw the family dwindle as Vienna became a toxic place for Jews in the first half of the 20th Century. Both the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times have hailed Leopoldstadt as one of the best plays of the year. I agree. It’s a powerful, cautionary tale. GRADE: A

CYBERINSURANCE POLICY: RETHINKING RISK IN AN AGE OF RANSOMWARE, COMPUTER FRAUD, DATA BREACHES, AND CYBERATTACKS By Josephine Wolff

SPOILER ALERT! “[The cyberinsurance industry has] met this demand at considerable long-term financial risk to themselves since very little is known about how these threats will evolve over time or how courts will interpret the coverage and exclusions in the policies in light of future incidents.” (p. 226). END OF SPOILER ALERT!

Josephine Wolff, Associate Professor of Cybersecurity Policy at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University, presents a history of risk and insurance in Cyberinsurance Policy that helps explain why current cyberinsurance is a dicey proposition. You would think that protecting your computer and cell phone would be like buying insurance for your car or house…but think about the range of online hacking threats and phishing attacks we face today. And, these threats continue to morph like Covid-19 variants to increase the danger.

The flaw in this industry is the inability to accurately assess risk. Until that happens, what cyberinsurance companies are selling is smoke and mirrors. Has your computer, cell phone, or credit card been hacked lately? GRADE: A

TABLE OF CONTENTS:

Series Editor’s Introduction ix

Acknowledgments xiii

1 Introduction: A Market-Driven Approach to Cybersecurity 1

1 History of Cyberinsurance

2 Breach on the Beach: Origins of Cyberinsurance 27

II Cybersecurity Claims Under Non-Cyber Coverage

3 “The Hackers Did This”: Data Breach Lawsuits and Commercial General Liability Insurance 65

4 “The Point of No Return”: Computer Fraud Insurance and Defining Cybercrime 87

5 “Insurrection, Rebellion, Revolution, Riot”: NotPetya, Property Insurance, and War Exclusions 111

III Cyber Coverage and Regulation

6 “The Big Kahuna”: Stand-Alone Cyber Coverage 153

7 “What Is the Point of Collecting Data?”: Global Growth of Cyberinsurance and the Role of Policymakers 181

8 Conclusion: Is Cyber Risk Different? 215

Notes 227

References 249

Index 265