
TRACK LIST:
TRACK LIST:
Here are three more albums that were mis-shelved and languished for over a decade. The Taylor Swift Holiday Collection (2007) came out before Swift was a superstar. Jo Dee Messina is an underrated Country Western singer. Messina’s A Joyful Noise (2002) is a more traditional Christmas CD with plenty of standard Christmas songs. It’s easy to tell that Messina loves these songs! Willie Nelson’s Pretty Paper came out in 1979. If you like Willie Nelson, you’ll enjoy his enthusiastic renditions of these familiar Christmas songs.
I’m glad I rediscovered these Christmas CDs. Listening to them takes me back across the decades to a kinder, gentler time. Do you have a favorite Christmas song? GRADE: B (for all three)
TRACK LIST:
1 | Last Christmas Written-By – George Michael | 3:29 | |
2 | Christmases When You Were Mine Written-By – Liz Rose, Nathan Chapman, Taylor Swift | 3:10 | |
3 | Santa Baby Written-By – Joan Ellen Javits*, Philip Springer, Tony Springer | 2:41 | |
4 | Silent Night Arranged By – Taylor Swift | 3:31 | |
5 | Christmas Must Be Something More Written-By – Taylor Swift | 3:52 | |
6 | White Christmas Written-By – Irving Berlin | 2:33 |
TRACK LIST:
1 | Winter Wonderland | ||
2 | I’ll Be Home For Christmas | ||
3 | Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow! | ||
4 | The Christmas Song | ||
5 | Silver Bells | ||
6 | Sleigh Ride | ||
7 | Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas | ||
8 | What Child Is This? | ||
9 | O Holy Night | ||
10 | Silent Night | ||
11 | A Joyful Noise | ||
Bonus Track | |||
12 | Keep The Faith |
TRACK LIST:
Pretty Paper | 2:26 | ||
White Christmas | 2:48 | ||
Winter Wonderland | 2:25 | ||
Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer | 2:12 | ||
Jingle Bells | 2:11 | ||
Here Comes Santa Claus | 1:54 | ||
Blue Christmas | 2:38 | ||
Santa Claus Is Coming To Town | 2:14 | ||
Frosty The Snowman | 2:26 | ||
Silent Night, Holy Night | 3:46 | ||
O Little Town Of Bethlehem | 1:31 | ||
Christmas Blues | 3:12 |
I had never heard of Jennifer Rowe (1971-2021) until I read Jon L. Breen’s comment in The Year’s 25 Finest Crime and Mystery Stories: Third Annual Edition (you can read about it here) declaring Rowe’s Death in Store: A Holiday Mystery was the best mystery story collection of 1993. So, of course, I had to track down a copy and read it.
Rowe’s detective, Verity Birdwood, is a quirky solisitor with a knack for solving crimes. In “Forbidden Fruit,” Verity solves a murder while she’s just a child because of her keen eye for detail.
In “Rabbit Killer,” Verity is called on by an old friend to clear her mentally disabled brother who the police suspect as the killer of a neighbor. Verity works her magic and discovers the real murderer.
The title story, “Death in Store,” makes this book “A Holiday Mystery” because a department store Santa gets murdered. Verity Birdwood investigates the stabbing killing with scissors as the murder weapon. Verity’s solution brings some Christmas cheer. If you’re looking for a character with a Miss Marple vibe and an Australian setting, these Verity Birdwood stories deliver. GRADE: B+
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
Forbidden fruit — 3
Rabbit killer — 20
Death warmed up — 59
Flashpoint — 72
Death in ruby — 89
Roses for do-hoppy — 105
Ladies’ day — 123
Death in store — 139
THE VERITY BIRDWOOD MYSTERY SERIES:
I admit I’m a sucker for the Disney+ Star Wars spin-offs even though most of them–except for The Mandalorian–are mediocre. The series starts with an attack on a space freighter by pirates. Then the scene shifts to an urban planet and a kid named Wim (Ravi Cabot-Conyers) who dreams of leaving his placid planet for adventure. And…Wim gets it when he discovers a buried starship. Two girls, Fern (Ryan Kiera Armstrong) who sports a flying jacket and rides a hover-bike and her sidekick KB (Kyriana Kratter), a tech whiz aided by a cool helmet/visor gadget (my favorite character) and Wim’s friend, Neel (Robert Timothy Smith) who looks like a blue elephant, get swept up by the starship and leave the planet…and get lost. Nick Frost extends the list of British actors to be cast in Star Wars as the voice of a snarky droid–SM-33–who has too few comic moments.
Crimson Jack (Jude Law) shows up to get the action started as the kids are desperate to return to their home planet. But, of course, their planet is a “lost” planet that was purposely hidden. I’ve only watched three of the eight episodes–a new episode drops every week–but Star Wars: Skeleton Crew has enough juice to hold my attention. Are you a Star Wars fan? GRADE: INCOMPLETE, but treading towards a B.
Alex Edmans, a Professor of Finance at London Business School, takes a deep dive into the manipulation of data and information so common in so much of our communications and “news.” The key element Edmans focuses on is our tendency to believe “facts” and “stories” that support our biases. If we’re pro-women running corporations, we’re much more willing to believe “studies” that show women CEOs out-perform male CEOs (according to Edmans, the jury is still out on this issue).
The other major culprit in skewing information is data mining. Data mining is a technique to search data for “facts” that support whatever you’re trying to prove. There may be a 1000 studies on whether breast-feeding increases a baby’s IQ, but data mining will find the studies that support your belief that infant formula works just was well. Whether it does or not, is another question.
With all the “research” being done, Edmans warns that anyone with a computer can find “evidence” to support just about any position–whether it’s true or false. That’s how conspiracy theories grow and thrive on junk science.
Deliberate confusion is the norm today. So many random facts are thrown about in the game of bewildering and baffling us. Is red meat bad or good? Should we drink a shot of vinegar (or extra virgin olive oil) each day to improve our heath? Are electric cars really better than gas powered cars?
I came away after reading May Contain Lies with a renewed skepticism and wariness about current “research” and social trends. I’m more liable to look at multiple sets of facts about an issue now and not just reject “evidence” that conflicts with my biases. Like Joni Mitchell suggests, I need to consider Both Sides Now. You might want to think about that, too. GRADE: A
Introduction — 1
PART I: THE BIASES
1. Confirmation Bias — 15
2. Black- and- White Thinking — 17
PART II: THE PROBLEMS
3. A Statement is Not Fact — 57
4. A Fact is Not Data — 59
5. Data is Not Evidence: Data Mining — 89
6. Data is Not Evidence: Causation — 115
7. When Data is Evidence — 168
8. Evidence is Not Proof — 192
PART III: THE SOLUTION
9. Thinking Smarter as Individuals — 211
10. Creating Organizations that Think Smarter — 235
11. Creating Societies that Think Smarter — 259
Appendix: A Checklist for Smarter Thinking — 283
Acknowledgements — 293
Notes — 295
Index — 313
The 10-3 Buffalo Bills travel to Patti Abbott Country to take on the 12-1 Detroit Lions. Some sports “experts” are hyping this game as a Super Bowl Preview. I don’t know about that. Both teams have plenty of injuries so we’ll see who shows up to play this game. The mighty Lions are 2½ point favorites. I’m not optimistic that the Bills can win this game.
How will your favorite NFL team perform today?
Anthony Chase, our local theater critic, praised Charo who he has seen in concert several times, and urged the listeners of his radio segment to buy tickets to see Charo when she was scheduled to appear in Western New York. For those of you who many be unfamiliar with Charo, she is a Spanish-born actress, singer, comedian, and flamenco guitarist who rose to international prominence in the 1960s on American television, as well as starring in several films. Charo began playing classical (Spanish-style) guitar at the age of nine, training under the famed guitarist Andrés Segovia. When she arrived in the United States, she became a popular guest on The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson and was known as the “cuchi-cuchi” girl.
Since Charo was appearing at the Rivera Theater–five minutes from our house–Diane had me buy two tickets on Thanksgiving Eve to witness this event. Charo performed a high energy show singing some ABBA songs, playing her classical guitar–of course she played “Bolero”!–and plunged into the enthusiastic audience who took dozens of selfies with the famous Charo. All in all, an excellent concert by an 80-ish woman who doesn’t look or act her age! Do you remember Charo? GRADE: B+
For part of the 1960s, Gordon R. Dickson was my Favorite Science Fiction writer. That role changed frequently from Asimov to Heinlein to Simak to Laumer…you get the idea. But for a few months, I was a Dickson guy. I read everything by Dickson I could get my hands on.
Some writers are born storytellers and Gordon R. Dickson falls into that category. Back in the late 1980s, BAEN Books published two fat collections of Dickson’s short stories: Beginnings (1988) and Ends (1988) which pretty much sum up his writing career.
These two collections provide examples of Dickson’s best work and his various interests, especially in War. Gordon R. Dickson is best known for his Childe Cycle:
If you have an interest in one of the key SF writers of the 1960s and 1970s, Beginnings and Ends encapsulate Gordon R. Dickson in two great collections. Are you a fan of Gordon R. Dickson? GRADE: A (for both)
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
I was busy organizing my music CDs last week when I found a handful of Christmas albums that had been misshelved (my bad!) and essentially “lost” for over a decade! Diane has over 100 Christmas CDs and they’re shelved separately but somehow these Christmas CDs ended up in the Smooth Jazz section!
Come Rejoice! from 1994 is a conventional Christmas album with plenty of familiar songs. The only unusual song is “Song for Sarajevo” which highlights the conflict that was occurring at that time. Judy Collins’ clear and bright voice delivers plenty of delight with this mix of Christmas songs. GRADE: B+
Renee Fleming’s Christmas in New York is more unconventional with a mix of songs, some familiar, some not. I love Fleming’s version of “Who Knows Where the Time Goes,” not a traditional Christmas song. “Central Park Serenade” is fun as is “The Man With the Bag.”
Traditionalists will love “Winter Wonderland,” “Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas,” and “Silver Bells.” GRADE: B+
If you want to get into the Christmas Spirit, Judy Collins and Renee Fleming will take you there with these wonderful albums! Are you listening to Christmas music?
TRACK LIST:
1 | I’ll Be Home For Christmas | 1:06 | |
2 | Away In A Manger | 4:21 | |
3 | Joy To The World | 2:32 | |
4 | Song For Sarajevo | 4:44 | |
5 | Cherry Tree Carol | 4:28 | |
6 | Good King Wenceslas | 3:18 | |
7 | All On A Wintry Night | 3:28 | |
8 | Come Rejoice | 3:32 | |
9 | Little Road To Bethlehem | 2:35 | |
10 | Silent Night | 4:05 | |
11 | A Christmas Carol | 1:31 | |
12 | Charlie & The Bells Medley: White Christmas / Happy New Year | 3:40 | |
13 | Let It Snow | 3:09 | |
14 | Amazing Grace | 3:48 |
TRACK LIST:
Winter Wonderland | 3:50 | ||
Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas | 3:35 | ||
Silver Bells | 3:07 | ||
Merry Christmas, Darling | 5:36 | ||
The Christmas Waltz | 3:19 | ||
Who Knows Where The Time Goes | 4:26 | ||
Sleigh Ride | 5:17 | ||
Snowbound | 6:28 | ||
In The Bleak Midwinter | 3:46 | ||
Central Park Serenade | 4:12 | ||
The Man With The Bag | 2:40 | ||
Love And Hard Times | 4:46 | ||
Still, Still, Still | 5:16 |
It’s sad that Mystery Scene magazine, founded in 1985 by Ed Gorman, just ended its run in October 2024 with issue #174. But when The Year’s 25 Finest Crime and Mystery Stories: Third Annual Edition was published in 1994, the magazine world was a very different place.
Jon L. Breen’s “The Mystery in 1993” presents an optimistic picture of the market for mystery novels and short stories. Breen cites publishing statistics and pronounces the field “still healthy.” (p. 9). Breen goes on to list his 15 favorite mystery novels of 1993. In his assessment of the short stories of 1993, Breen singles out Jennifer Bowe’s Death in Store as the best short story collect he read that year (I’m tracking it down!). In the Reference Books category, Breen loved Burl Barer’s “fascinating and thorough account of Simon Templar and his creator Leslie Charteris , The Saint: A Complete History (McFarland). I’m tracking that down, too.
Breen also praised Marc Lachman’s A Reader’s Guide to the American Novel of Detection and Gary Warren Niebuhr’s A Reader’s Guide to the Private Eye Novel–two books I do own.
The Year’s 25 Finest Crime and Mystery Stories: Third Annual Edition presents a wide variety of stories, something for every reader’s taste. I really liked Lawrence Block’s “Keller’s Therapy” and Doug Allen’s “The Ghost Show.” If you’re looking for a short story collection that captures the mystery short story essence of 1993, this is the book for you. GRADE: B+
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
Introduction: The Mystery in 1993 by Jon L. Green –9
Slasher / F. Paul Wilson — 23
Keller’s therapy / Lawrence Block — 37
The mouse in the corner / Ruth Rendell — 59
That bells may ring and whistles safely blow / Margaret Maron — 80
That damn cat / Barb Collins — 89
Parris Green / Carole Nelson Douglas — 103
The man in the red flannel suit / Jan Grape — 127
Checkout / Susan Dunlap — 141
Goodbye, Sue Ellen / Gillian Roberts — 149
The ghost show / Doug Allyn — 162
McIntyre’s Donald / Joseph Hansen — 183
Some sunny day / Julian Rathbone — 203
The wall / Marcia Muller — 231
History repeats itself, and it doesn’t even say pardon / Mat Coward — 276
Strays / Kristine Kathryn Rusch — 283
The lesson / Billie Sue Mosiman — 301
Spin-a-rama / Jeremiah Healy — 308
The mood cuckoo / Jonathan Gash — 322
The ugly earthling murder case / George Alec Effinger — 336
Sweetheart of the rodeo / Mark Timlin — 352
A vacance en campagne / Tim Heald — 376
It takes one to know one / Robert Bloch — 391
Shade work / Bill Pronzini — 412
First lead gasser / Tony Hillerman — 418
Enduring as dust / Bruce Holland Rogers — 427