WEDNESDAY’S SHORT STORIES #21: LITTLE SNOW LANDSCAPE By Robert Walser

Robert Walser’s Little Snow Landscape is a collection of plotless stories–some only a page or two long–which capture Walser’s experience of the world. Walser was a struggling writer for most of his career. In 1933, Walser entered a clinic in Switzerland and stopped writing. He remained there for the rest of his life, dying in 1956 at the age of 78.

My favorite story in Little Snow Landscape is “Three Stories, Told Based on Book Covers.” Walser gazes at books in the window of a bookstore and creates three stories based on the cover artwork of the three books. Very clever, very innovative. If you’re looking for something to read outside of the mainstream, Robert Walser is your guy. GRADE: B

Table of Contents

Translator’s Note ix

To My Home 1

Two Little Fairy Tales 2

Lenz’s Soldiers 4

The Writer (I) 6

Wenzel 10

Farewell 18

Illusion 21

Büchner’s Flight 23

Cinema 25

Birch-Pfeiffer 27

Lenz 29

The Hermitage 34

Dream Vision 36

The Dressmaker 38

The Landscape (I) 40

Walking 42

The Shepherd 44

The Invitation 46

Sunday Morning 48

The Moon 49

Stroll (I) 51

Little Snow Landscape 53

Summer Night 55

Christmas 57

Hölderlin 59

Würzburg 62

The Worker 72

Chamber Piece 77

The Coward 79

The Sausage 81

Lamp, Paper, and Gloves 84

Berta 87

Louise 89

Rain 99

Pencil Note 101

Letter from Biel 103

The First Poem 106

The Comrade 109

The Proletarian 112

The Aviator 115

Munich 117

Jean 119

The Two Writers 121

Mutterseelenallein 122

Don Juan’s Letter 124

Three Stories, Told Based on Book Covers 126

The Beauty and the Faithful One 130

The Angel 131

Children and Small Houses 132

Geneva 134

The Yardstick 137

Four Characters 139

Notebook Extract 141

The Young Servant 144

A Lackey 146

A Sort of Narrative 148

Fairy Tale (II) 151

Book Review 153

Vacation (I) 155

Fragment 157

Walk in the Park 163

Recently I Read … 165

The Four Seasons 167

Stroll (II) 169

The Castle 171

Hats 173

Sunday Outing 175

The Canal 177

Childhood 179

Biographical Note 183

OWN THE ROOM [Disney+]

Own the Room, from Emmy Award-winning directors Cristina Costantini and Darren Foster (Science Fair), centers around the presentations at the annual Global Student Entrepreneur Awards (GSEA). The 2019 completion, held in Macau, shows the pitch sessions for five competitors. Chosen from around the world, the competitors arrive to represent their countries and their entrepreneurial ideas in hopes of winning the $100,000 prize…and maybe change the world.

I was rooting for Daniela Blanco, a Venezuelan émigré who represents the U.S. Daniela is a chemical-engineering student based in New York City who has a process for manufacturing nylon without fossil fuels by using solar energy. Brilliant student Henry Onyango of Kenya is pitching an app called Roometo, a kind of Airbnb for international students. Alondra Toledo of Puerto Rico also has an app, one that allows deaf people to communicate with doctors who don’t know sign language. Another of my favorite contestants is the joyful Santosh Pandey of Nepal whose company, Offering Happiness, caters to the many Nepalese who work abroad and want to send surprise parties—music, confetti, cakes—to loved ones they can’t be with back home…in essence, a cure for loneliness.

Watching these young people with their bright ideas and enthusiasm, you can’t help but feel hope for the Future. I wanted all these clever contestants to win! If you want to watch an uplifting and exciting group of young people trying their best to succeed, I highly recommend Own the Room! GRADE: A

OUR MALADY: LESSONS IN LIBERTY FROM A HOSPITAL DIARY By Timothy Snyder

“When I was admitted to the emergency room at midnight, I used the world malaise to describe my condition to the doctor. My head ached, my hands and feet tingled, I was coughing, and I could barely move….I had an abscess the size of a baseball in my liver and the infection had spilled into my blood. I did not know this at the time, but I knew something was deeply wrong.” (p. 3)

Timothy Snyder tells the story of how he almost died because of our dysfunctional medical system. Even when Snyder got to the hospital in New Haven, Connecticut he was pretty much ignored for 8 hours! Even when doctors and nurses stepped in to examine him, they were wrong in their diagnosis and their “treatment.” Somehow, the doctors decided Snyder needed TWO spinal taps. They missed the fact that Snyder was suffering from sepsis and was on the edge of death.

Timothy Snyder is a professor at Yale University, but because he arrived at the hospital in New Haven with a Black friend, the medical staff pretty much disregarded them.

If you’re as concerned about the state of our medical system as I am, you’ll find reading Snyder’s brief but powerful book an eye-opener. Snyder’s suggestions for improvement should be debated…and implemented! How’s your health? GRADE: A

TABLE OF CONTENTS:


Prologue: Solitude and Solidarity — 3
Introduction: Our Malady — 13
Lesson 1. Health care is a human right. — 19
Lesson 2. Renewal begins with children. — 61
Lesson 3. The truth will set us free. — 81
Lesson 4. Doctors should be in charge. — 111
Conclusion: Our Recovery — 135
Epilogue: Rage and Empathy. — 143
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS — 147
NOTES — 149

Loch Lomond Scotch Single Malt

My friend Glenn, who I had not seen in almost a year because of the Pandemic, called me up and told me he had a Christmas Present for me. “But Christmas is 10 months away, ” I informed him. “No, this is a present from last Christmas, you know, the one in 2020, ” Glenn explained.

So I drove over to Glenn’s house, put on my mask, and greeted my masked and vaccinated friend who had a long box in his hand. I opened it and there was a bottle of Loch Lomond Scotch Single Malt. In return, I handed Glenn a copy of Hidden Universe Travel Guides: Star Trek: The Klingon Empire. Glenn is a huge Star Trek fan so he was delighted by this gift (Glenn also claims to speak Klingon but I’m skeptical). Christmas in April!

Are you a fan of Scotch? Do you have a favorite drink?

THE DARK ARCHIVE: AN INVISIBLE LIBRARY NOVEL By Genevieve Cogman

The Dark Archive is the seventh book in the Invisible Library series. Genevieve Cogman’s heroine, Librarian Irene Winter, has to juggle mentoring a Fae assistant who wants to be a Librarian, her love-life with Dragon Kai, and the investigations of a vast conspiracy with Vale (a Sherlock Holmes-type character).

The Library that Irene works for is an inter-dimensional agency that tries to keep a Balance between Chaos worlds and Order worlds. At the moment, the Library negotiated truce between the Dragons and the Fae is barely holding. Forces of Darkness are at work to destroy the Peace in bring in a new Order.

Assassination attempts, arsons, kidnappings, and secrets make up the mix of plots in The Dark Archive. If you’re looking for a fun, exciting, and old fashioned High Adventure, the Invisible Library series checks all the boxes. GRADE: B+

The Invisible Library Novels:

FRIDAY’S FORGOTTEN BOOKS #636: THE BEST FROM FANTASY AND SCIENCE FICTION, FOURTH SERIES Edited by Anthony Boucher

The most famous story in The Best From Fantasy and Science Fiction, Fourth Series is Alfred Bester’s classic story of a murderous robot, “Fondly Fahrenheit.” I also liked C. M. Kornbluth’s “I Never Ask No Favors.” Robert Sheckley dabbles in fantasy in “The Accountant” where parents–who want their son to be a wizard–are confronted with the problem that he really wants to be an accountant.

Richard Matheson’s “The Test” can be found in a number of anthologies. Lord Dunsany’s “Misadventure” is one of his Jorken club tales with a chilling conclusion that predicts the dangers of Artificial Intelligence. “The Little Black Train” is one of Manly Wade Wellman’s best Silver John stories. This one concerns a curse on woman with a dark past. This volume features plenty of top-notch stories! GRADE: A-

Contents 

WOMEN ROCK! GIRLS & GUITARS

Women Rock! Girls & Guitars (2000) is one of those custom music CDs that various companies would indulge in a couple decades ago. This one happened to be available “Exclusively at Sears” (Starbucks used to do these types of CDs, too). Whoever assembled these songs loved Heart: there’s “Barracuda” and “Crazy on You” as well as a live version of “Maybe I’m Amazed” with Cyndi Lauper. This CD has a lot of Heart!

Of course there are dozens of other women in Rock whose songs could have been chosen, but this is the line-up that the suits at Sears seemed to prefer. My favorite songs on this CD are Wynonna’s “Only Love” and Cyndi Lauper’s classic “Girls Just Want to Have Fun.” What do you think? GRADE: B-

TRACK LIST:

1HeartBarracuda4:25
2Sheryl CrowIf It Makes You Happy5:27
3WynonnaOnly Love3:35
4Amy GrantTakes A Little Time4:35
5HeartCrazy On You4:55
6Melissa EtheridgeI’m The Only One4:57
7Cyndi LauperGirls Just Want To Have Fun3:58
8Destiny’s ChildAmazing Grace2:43
Bonus Track
9Cyndi Lauper / HeartMaybe I’m Amazed (Live)3:45

WEDNESDAY’S SHORT STORIES #20: HOUSTON, HOUSTON DO YOU READ? By James Tiptree, Jr.

“Houston, Houston Do You Read?” was published as by “Raccoona Sheldon” (another of Alice B. Sheldon’s pseudonyms) in a paperback original SF anthology, Aurora: Beyond Equality edited by Vonda N. McIntyre and Susan J. Anderson. This was 1976 and feminism in Science Fiction was on the rise. “Houston, Houston Do You Read?” went on to win a Nebula Award in 1976 and a Hugo Award in 1977.

A spacecraft with a three man crew on a mission to study the Sun, returns to Earth…but Earth isn’t where it’s supposed to be. The men get radio messages from Luna Central warning that their course is wrong. The men first think this is a joke. Then they realize if their course is wrong, they could run out of fuel, food, and water. The men consider the possibility they’re being contacted by aliens. But, the truth is much stranger than that.

I was a huge “James Tiptree, Jr.” fan. I found those stories artful and original. Later, James Triptree, Jr. was revealed to be a woman and that generated shock waves throughout the SF field. I bought and read everything Alice B. Sheldon published until her tragic death in 1987. “Houston, Houston Do you Read?” is one of her masterpieces. GRADE: A

YOURS UNFAITHFULLY By Miles Malleson

Miles Malleson had roles in Hitchcock’s Stage Fright and Anthony Asquith’s The Importance of Being Earnest, but he was also a playwright. The Mint Theater specializes in obscure but excellent plays. It put on a production of Yours Unfaithfully on in 2016 and videotaped it in high definition. Now, you can view it for FREE (like I did) at minttheater.org until May 16, 2021.

Yours Unfaithfully (1933) tells the story of an open marriage, one in which Anne (Elisabeth Gray) encourages Stephen (Max von Essen), her unhappy husband, to have an affair with the exceedingly attractive widow, Diana ( Mikaela Izquierdo). As you might suspect, the theory of a three-way relationship rubs up against the practicalities…and costs.

I thought Elisabeth Gray as the wife performed superbly (and I’m not just saying that because she is a redhead). The entire cast is solid and the direction of Jonathan Bank, the company’s producing artistic director, is smooth and sophisticated. Miles Malleson had two open marriages so all of the action on the stage projects credibility. If you’re looking for a serious comedy, Yours Unfaithfully will make you langh…and think. GRADE: A