MURDER BY EXPERTS By Anthony Gilbert

“Anthony Gilbert” (aka, Lucy Beatrice Malleson) presents readers with a famous British art collector, Sampson Rubenstein, found murdered in a locked room in his country house. The millionaire was supposed to have taken a young adventuress, Fanny Price, to the train station yet his car is found smashed at the bottom of a cliff.  The police expect to find Rubenstein’s body there as well, but it’s missing. A week or more later Rubenstein is found stabbed to death in the treasure room in his own house.

The mystery is narrated by Simon Curteis, an adventurer who has fallen in love with Fanny Price who has been charged with Rubenstein’s murder. Curtis enlists lawyer Arthur G. Crook to help him find the real murder. Anthony Gilbert delivers a twisty plot and a double surprise ending. If you’re looking for a classic mystery from 1936, Murder By Experts will leave you with your head spinning! GRADE: A

FRIDAY’S FORGOTTEN BOOKS #625: THE BEST FROM FANTASY AND SCIENCE FICTION, FIRST SERIES Edited by Anthony Boucher & J. Francis McComas

Back in September 2018, motivated by James Wallace Harris, I embarked on rereading the 25-volume The Great SF Stories series edited by Isaac Asimov and Martin H. Greenberg (you can check out the beginning post here). My plan was to reread and review a volume each month and I managed to stay on schedule for the next two-and-half years.

Now, I’m back to reread and review the 25-volume The Best From Fantasy and Science Fiction series. I plan to replicate the one-volume review per month model so this project will be completed in 2023.

This first volume is unique for its inclusion of non-SF writers like Daniel Defoe, Charles Dickens, and Oliver LaFarge. The early issues of The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction regularly reprinted “classic” stories by famous authors.

Here are some of my favorite stories from this anthology:

“Elephas Frumenti” and “The Gift of God” are Gavagan’s Bar stories which L. Sprague de Camp and Fletcher Pratt wrote over the years to the delight of readers. If you like tall tales, you’ll enjoy these shaggy dog stories.

“Old Man Henderson” takes place in a future when Venus and Mars have been colonized, and exotic animals have been imported to the Earth from these planets. Henderson is a retired astronaut, the first man to set foot on the moon, but, instead of being a revered hero, everyone in town is sick of hearing his story of the moon landing and he lives alone, avoided by everyone. Kris Neville illustrates the ephemeral aspects of Fame.

“Dress of White Silk” by Richard Matheson shows the nightmare results of a child’s actions. Matheson would return to this theme in some of his later stories.

As you might suspect, several of these stories are dated. But Boucher and McComas provided material to a growing readership in these genres. A good beginning! GRADE: B

TABLE OF CONTENTS:

Introduction by Anthony Boucher & J. Francis McComas — ix

Huge Beast” (1950) by Cleve Cartmill; — 3

“John the Revelator” (1951) by Oliver La Farge;  — 12

“Elephas Frumenti” (1950) by L. Sprague de Camp and Fletcher Pratt; — 27

 “The Gift of God” (1950) by L. Sprague de Camp and Fletcher Pratt; — 33

“The Friendly Demon” (1726) by Daniel Defoe; — 40

“Old Man Henderson” (1951) by Kris Neville; — 45

“The Threepenny-Piece” (1913) by James Stephens;  — 58

“No-Sided Professor” (1947) by Martin Gardner; — 68

“The Listening Child” (1950) by Margaret St. Clair [as by Idris Seabright]; — 82

“Dress of White Silk” (1951) by Richard Matheson; — 94

“The Mathematical Voodoo” (1951) by H. Nearing, Jr.; — 100

“Hub” (1951) by Philip MacDonald; — 120

“Built Up Logically” (1949) by Howard Schoenfeld; — 126

“The Rat That Could Speak” (1860) by Charles Dickens; — 139

“Narapoia” [Dr. Manly J. Departure]” (1948) by Alan Nelson; — 145

“Postpaid to Paradise” (1940) by Robert Arthur; — 153

“In the Days of Our Fathers” (1949) by Winona McClintic; — 170

“Barney” (1951) by Will Stanton; — 178

“The Collector” (1951) by H. F. Heard; ” — 181

“Fearsome Fable” (1951) by Bruce Elliott — 214

FORGOTTEN MUSIC #104: SWEET SOUL MUSIC [3-CD Set]

I grew up listening to Soul Music (mostly in the 1960s) so this 3-CD set provided a lot of memories. But, it also provided a few surprises. I was familiar with James & Bobby Purify’s “I’m Your Puppet” (a Top 10 hit in 1966), but I’d never heard Dionne Warwick’s version before I listened to these CDs. It was very good.

For irony, there’s Ike and Tina Turner’s “It’s Gonna Work Out Fine” (it didn’t for them). And, for a classic One Hit Wonder, there’s Fontella Bass’s “Rescue Me.” The only head-scratcher is “Leader of the Pack” by The Shangri-Las which I don’t consider a Soul song.

James Brown, Aretha Franklin, Sam & Dave, Dionne Warwick, Wilson Pickett, The Shirelles, Otis Redding, Martha Reeves, and many others from that 1960s era provide some sweet soul music on this 3-CD set. Are any of your favorites here? GRADE: B+

TRACK LIST:

1Percy SledgeWhen A Man Loves A Woman2:53
2Aretha FranklinI Say A Little Prayer3:30
3Martha Reeves & The VandellasDancing In The Street2:36
4Jackie WilsonReet Petite2:43
5Sam CookeOnly Sixteen1:54
6Billy StewartSummertime2:41
7Ben E King*Spanish Harlem2:56
8Otis ReddingSatisfaction2:42
9Wilson PickettIf You Need Me2:31
10Big Dee Irwin + Little EvaSwinging On A Star2:23
11Harold Melvin & The Blue Notes*If You Don’t Know Me By Now3:30
12Ike & Tina TurnerSomebody Somewhere Needs You2:33
13Dionne WarwickI’m Your Puppet2:59
14The Staple SingersLet’s Do It Again3:28

TRACK LIST:

1Ben E. KingStand By Me
2Aretha FranklinYou Make Me Feel (Like A Natural Woman)
3Lee DorseyHoly Cow
4Sam & DaveSoul Man
5Jackie WilsonHigher & Higher
6Percy SledgeMy Special Prayer
7Martha ReevesHeatwave
8The TamsHey Girl Don’t Bother Me
9Soul SurvivorsExpressway To Your Heart
10Sam CookeYou Send Me
11Ike & Tina TurnerIt’s Gonna Work Out Fine
12Dionne WarwickWho Gets The Guy
13Wilson PickettDown To My Last Heartbreak
14Otis ReddingI’ve Been Loving You Too Long (To Stop Now)

TRACK LIST:

1Fontella BassRescue Me
2Aretha FranklinChain Of Fools
3The Shangri-LasLeader Of The Pack
4Otis ReddingShake
5Jackie WilsonDoggin’ Around
6Sam CookeEverybody Likes To Cha Cha Cha
7Percy SledgeTake Time To Know Her
8Harold Melvin And The Blue NotesWake Up Everybody
9James BrownYou Can’t Keep A Good Man Down
10Sam & DaveSweet Soul Music
11Ramsey LewisThe “In” Crowd
12Archie Bell & The DrellsTighten Up
13The ShirellesFoolish Little Girl
14Dionne WarwickOnly Love Can Break A Heart

WEDNESDAY’S SHORT STORIES #13: WIZARDS Edited by Jack Dann & Gardner Dozois

I’m a fan of wizards from Merlin to Harry Dresden to some of the magical folks in this anthology. “The Witch’s Headstone” by Neil Gaiman is my favorite story in Wizards. A young boy who doesn’t realize the powers he possesses attempts to help the ghost of a witch…with startling results. Neil Gaiman is a master of this type of story.

I also liked Patricia A. McKillip’s “Naming Day” where a young girl, on the cusp of her magic education, encounters some weird difficulties. Very clever!

“Stonefather” is part of Orson Scott Card’s Mithermages series where a young boy discovers his true nature. I’ve read a lot of Card’s work, but not the Mithermages series so now I’ll have track down those books.

Wizards offers a variety of stories for just about every reader interest. GRADE: B+

TABLE OF CONTENTS:

PREFACE by Jack Dana and Gardner Dozois — ix

MA RAINEY’S BLACK BOTTOM By August Wilson [Netflix]

Diane and I saw the play version of August Wilson’s Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom in 1995 at the Studio Arena Theater in Buffalo, NY. This more recent movie version on Netflix features Viola Davis as the Diva of the Blues, Ma Rainey. Davis plays Ma Rainey as capricious and moody as a legendary blues singer could be. Chadwick Boseman delivers an Oscar-worthy performance as troubled trumpeter, Levee Green, a member of Ma Rainey’s band, The Seasoned Georgia Jazz Band.

Most of the action centers around a recording session in Chicago at the Paramount recording studio in the 1920s. The white men who run the company try to cater to Ma Rainey’s whims because they know her records will earn them a lot of money.

As in many of August Wilson’s plays, there’s an undercurrent of violence in the action as race, art, religion, and the historic exploitation of black recording artists by white producers trouble the characters.

Have you seen Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom? GRADE: A

THE WEIRDest PEOPLE IN THE WORLD: HOW THE WEST BECAME PSYCHOLOGICALLY PECULIAR AND PARTICULARLY PROSPEROUS By Joseph Henrich

Joseph Henrich, a professor at Harvard, maintains that we have become wealthy and successful because we’re Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, and Democratic (WEIRD). Taking a historical approach, Henrich provides the formula for societies to out-perform other societies (and either defeat them or absorb them).

This 680-page book examines the ways countries can invest in their people to produce economies that generate wealth and power. Henrich shows how people who are highly individualistic, self-obsessed, control-oriented, nonconformist, analytical, and trusting of strangers tend to succeed. Some societies require strict adherence to social norms and values. But time and time again, Henrich shows that people who focus on themselves–their special attributes, accomplishments, and aspirations–tend to be confident, progressive, and astute.

Henrich explores the differences in family structures, marriage, and religion that produce such different results. And, of course, the impact of markets on the economies of countries result in the wealth–or poverty–of nations.

If you’re the mood for a comprehensive Deep Dive into why the West dominates the world (although China is creeping up), give The WEIRDest People in the World a try. GRADE: A

Table of Contents:

Preface xi

Prelude: Your Brain Has Been Modified 3

What God Wants 7

The Histories of Religions, Biologies, and Psychologies 16

Part I The Evolution of Societies and Psychologies

1 WEIRD Psychology 21

Really, Who Are You? 24

Marshmallows Come to Those Who Wait 38

UN Diplomats Get Parking Tickets 41

Obsessed with Intentions 49

Missing the Forest 52

The Rest of the Iceberg 55

2 Making a Cultural Species 59

Evolved to Learn 61

Evolving Societies 68

Avenues into Your Mind 82

3 Clans, States, and Why You Can’t Get Here from There 87

How Ilahita Got Big 88

When, How, and Why Did Societies Scale Up? 103

Getting to Premodern States 112

Going End Around 121

4 The Gods Are Watching. Behave! 123

Moralizing Gods and Contingent Afterlives 128

The Evolution of Gods and Rituals 139

Hell, Free Will, and Moral Universalism 146

Persuasive Martyrs and Boring Rituals 148

The Launchpad 151

Part II The Origins of WEIRD People

5 WEIRD Families 155

Dissolving the Traditional Family 159

The Carolingians, Manoriaiism, and the European Marriage Pattern 186

Downstream Transformations 191

6 Psychological Differences, Families, and the Church 193

Kinship Intensity and Psychology 194

The Church Altered Kinship and Changed Psychology 224

Opening the Floodgates 230

7 Europe and Asia 233

The Church’s Footprints 234

Psychological Differences Within China and India 244

Fertile Ground 252

8 WEIRD Monogamy 255

A “Peculiar” institution 258

Polygyny’s Math Problem 263

A Testosterone Suppression System 268

Trust, Teamwork, and Crime 274

Putting the Pieces Together 281

Part III New Institutions, New Psychologies

9 Of Commerce and Cooperation 287

Market Integration and Impersonal Prosociality 290

“No Hui, No Market Towns” 301

The Commercial and Urban Revolutions 307

Round Up 320

10 Domesticating the Competition 322

War, Religion, and Psychology 322

Europeans Made War, and War Made Them WEIRDer 332

Taming Intergroup Conflict 340

When and Why? 350

Harnessing the Power of Competition 357

11 Market Mentalities 360

How Work Became Virtuous 367

Be Yourself: The Origins of WEIRD Personalities 379

It’s Big, but How Big? 390

Part IV Birthing the Modern World

12 Law, Science, and Religion 395

Universal Laws, Conflicting Principles, and Individual Rights 398

Representative Governments and Democracy 407

The WEIRDest Religion 415

Dark Matter or Enlightenment? 427

13 Escape Velocity 430

Wiring Up the Collective Brain 442

More Inventive? 460

Psychology and Innovation in the Modern World 465

Escaping the Trap 466

14 The Dark Matter of History 469

Guns, Germs, and Other Factors 474

Globalization and Its Discontents 484

Appendix A Milestones in the Marriage and Family Program 491

Appendix B Additional Plots 499

Appendix C The Psychological Impacts of Relational and Residential Mobility 501

Notes 507

Bibliography 585

Index 657

AFC CHAMPIONSHIP GAME: BUFFALO BILLS VS. KANSAS CITY CHIEFS

Kansas City QB Patrick Mahomes dominated the sports news this week. Would Mahomes recover from his concussion sustained in last week’s game against the Cleveland Browns? Well, yes.

The AFC Championship game features the two youngest quarterbacks to face each other in the key game: Mahomes is 25 and Bills QB Josh Allen is 24. The Bills are four point underdogs.

Over in the NFC Championship game between the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and the Green Bay Packers, we have some of the oldest QBs in the NFL: Tom Brady is 43, Aaron Rodgers is 37. The Packers are favored by 3 1/2 points. I’ll go with the team that plays its home games on the frozen tundra of Lambeau Field. Who will you be rooting for today?

SURFACE TO AIR By Gerard de Villiers

Surface to Air is Malko Linge novel by the prolific Gérard de Villiers. It concerns a carpet merchant from New York City whose family in the Pakistan has been killed by a U.S. drone strike. The carpet merchant wants revenge so he contacts jihadists. Then he shares his plan with the jihadists: he wants to shoot down Air Force One with President Obama in it. But, in order to pull off this scheme of revenge, the carpet merchant needs an Igla-S–a sophisticated Russian surface-to-air missile. Since many Russian weapons find their way onto the Black Market, the jihadists agree to acquire one.

Complications occur as the FBI decides to aid the carpet merchant’s mission in order to lure the jihadists into a trap. But, much of the mission will take place in Russia where the FBI is supposed to defer to the CIA. Bureaucratic infighting ensues. The CIA brings in their favorite contract agent, Malko Linge, who nearly dies as he’s ambushed by Russian elements. If you’re a fan of spy novels with action, you’ll find a lot to like with Surface to Air. For my reviews of other Malko novels, check out Checkpoint Charlie here, Chaos in Kabul here, Madmen of Benghazi here, and Revenge of the Kremlin here. GRADE: B

FORGOTTEN BOOKS #625: STIFF NEWS By Catherine Aird



I’ve always enjoyed Catherine Aird’s snarky mysteries. Stiff News (1998) is the 17th book in Aird’s Sloan and Crosby series, but you don’t have to have any previous knowledge of the books in this series to enjoy this clever mystery.

A letter received by an old woman’s son shortly after her death alerts Detective Inspector C. D. Sloan that another woman’s death by “natural causes” may actually be a murder. Sloan and Crosby begin an investigation of the odd events in a local nursing home catering to former members of a WWII regiment. Aird’s great strength as a mystery writer is her clever and witty characterizations.

You’ll wince at Aird’s uncompromising view of elderly residents of nursing homes. If you’re in the mood for mystery whose tentacles extend into the Past, Stiff News will amuse and entertain you. GRADE: A-