TO RUSSIA WITH L.U.S.T. By Rod Gray


With the recent arrest of Maria Butina as a Russian spy, I thought this might be the Right Time to share “Rod Gray” (aka, Gardner F. Fox) and the spicy LADY FROM L.U.S.T. series with you. This risqué series of James Bond spoof spy novels featuring a female agent started off being published by Tower Books (remember them?) and when Tower folded, the series moved to Belmont Books. For more details on the series, you can check out Lynn Monroe’s essay here.

THE LADY FROM L.U.S.T. Series:
First set (1967-1972) 60c, 75c, 95c
1. THE LADY FROM LUST – Tower 43-804, 1967. Rader cover. 60c
2. LAY ME ODDS – Tower 43-860, Rader cover
3. THE 69 PLEASURES – Tower 43-912, Rader cover
4. 5 BEDS TO MECCA – Tower 43-944, Rader cover
5. THE HOT MAHATMA – Tower 44-989, 1968. Rader cover, 75c
6. TO RUSSIA WITH LUST – Tower 44-126, Rader cover
7. KISS MY ASSASSIN – Tower 44-160, Rader cover
8. SOUTH OF THE BORDELLO – Tower 44-171, 1969. Rader cover
9. THE POISONED PUSSY – Tower 45-212, 95c, Rader cover
(Rader leaves Midwood-Tower, 1969)
10. THE BIG SNATCH – Tower 45-276, artist unknown
11. LADY IN HEAT – Tower 45-299, artist unknown
12. LAID IN THE FUTURE – Tower T-095-1, artist unknown.
13. BLOW MY MIND – Tower T-095-3, 1970. Artist unknown.
14. THE COPULATION EXPLOSION –Belmont B95-2008, photo coverr

(1. LUST, BE A LADY TONIGHT – Belmont B95-2020, photo cover. 2nd of THE LADY FROM LUST, with new title and 95c price.
(2. LAY ME ODDS – Belmont B95-2026 – Belmont B95-2026,
2nd printing, photo covers recreates Rader art.
(3. THE 69 PLEASURES – Belmont B95-2043, 2nd printing, photo cover recreates Rader art.
(4. 5 BEDS TO MECCA – Belmont B95-2052, 2nd printing, photo cover recreates Rader art.
15. EASY RIDE – Belmont B95-2076, photo cover
16. THE LADY TAKES IT ALL OFF – Belmont B95-2114, 1971, photo cover
17. TURNED ON TO LUST – Belmont B95-2170, photo cover
18. SKIN GAME DAME – Belmont-Tower BT 50214, 1972, photo cover

Second set, 1973-74, 95c (2nd printings unless noted)
1. LUST, BE A LADY TONIGHT – Belmont Tower BT 50516, 3rd printing of THE LADY FROM LUST, 1973, artist unknown
2. LAY ME ODDS – BT 50542, 3rd pr, artist unknown
3. THE 69 PLEASURES – BT 50559, 3rd pr, artist unknown
4. 5 BEDS TO MECCA – BT 50566, 3rd pr, artist unknown
5. SOUTH OF THE BORDELLO – BT 50582, artist unknown
(This was #8 in the first set. The first 5 books in the second set are not identified by a set number on the cover. Numbering begins with #6)
6. KISS MY ASSASSIN – BT 50594, artist unknown, #7 in the first set
7. SOCK IT TO ME – BT 50604, reprints #9, THE POISONED PUSSY, with new title. Reworks Rader art.
8. THE HOT MAHATMA – BT 50617, #5 in the first set, reworks Rader art.
9. TO RUSSIA WITH LUST – BT 50628, #6 in the first set, reworks Rader art.
10. THE LADY TAKES IT ALL OFF – BT 50636, 1974, #16 in the first set, artist unknown
11. LADY IN HEAT – BT 50649, photo cover
12. BLOW MY MIND – BT 50660, #13 in the first set, photo cover
13. LAID IN THE FUTURE – BT 50667, #12 in the first set, photo
14. THE COPULATION EXPLOSION – BT 50678, new photo cover
15. TURNED ON TO LUST – BT 50692, #17 in the first set, new photo cover
16. THE BIG SNATCH – BT 50710, #10 in the first set, photo cover
17. EASY RIDE – BT 50727, #15 in the first set, new photo cover
18. SKIN GAME DAME – BT 50742, new photo cover.

THE NEW LADY FROM LUST, 1975, $1.25, photo covers
1. GO FOR BROKE – BT 50777
2. HAVE A SNORT! – BT 50794
3. TARGET FOR TONIGHT – BT 50805
4. THE MARACAIBO AFFAIR – BT 50814
5. VOODOO KILL – BT 50829
6. THE LADY KILLER – BT 50838
7. KILL HER WITH LOVE – BT 50858

1. THE LADY FROM LUST – BT 51102, no date. 4th printing restores original title with new cover painting by unknown artist.

ONE, TWO, THREE


One, Two, Three (1961) stars Jimmy Cagney and Arlene Francis in a movie directed by Billy Wilder. Cagney plays the head of Coca Cola in West Berlin. He dreams of being promoted to the Coke Head of Europe. Cagney’s boss sends his wild, 17-year-old daughter, Scarlett Hazeltine, to West Berlin to get her away from her boyfriends in Atlanta. Cagney thinks he has things under control, but discovers Scarlett has been secretly slipping out at night and visiting East Berlin. And, of course, Scarlett now has a new love interest: Otto the Communist.

Some of the jokes and plot in One, Two, Three reflect the Cold War. The Russians and East Germans are caricatures. Cagney rockets around his office trying to juggle all the various elements of his schemes while Arlene Francis tries to hold his family together. One, Two, Three was Jimmy Cagney’s last movie until his cameo 20 years later in Ragtime. Are you a fan of Cagney and Arlene Francis? GRADE: B-

LIFE AFTER GOOGLE By George Gilder


George Gilder writes, “All wealth is the product of knowledge.” (p. 13) Gilder believes that GOOGLE will suffer the fate of most businesses as new knowledge emerges despite GOOGLE’s hiring of PhD.s and really, really smart people. Life After GOOGLE: The Fall of Big Data and the Rise of the Blockchain Economy provides both a cogent analysis of GOOGLE today and a fair guess about GOOGLE’s future.

In contrast to Gilder’s arguments, Andy Kessler writes “Can Bitcoin Save Us From GOOGLE” (you can find Kessler’s article here). Kessler points out the weaknesses of APPLE, AMAZON, FACEBOOK, and GOOGLE. APPLE lives in fear that one of the other low-cost smart phone producers will eat into its market share. AMAZON dominates retail, but will its forays into selling food (WHOLE FOODS) and drugs drag down profits. FACEBOOK struggles with privacy issues and subversion. Kessler says of these tech giants only GOOGLE dominates its space and has the resources to defend it. What do you think of GOOGLE? GRADE: A
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
Prologue: Back to the Future–The Ride xi
Chapter 1: Don’t Steal This Book 1
Chapter 2: Google’s System of the World 11
Chapter 3: Google’s Roots and Religions 25
Chapter 4: End of the Free World 37
Chapter 5: Ten Laws of the Cryptocosm 45
Chapter 6: Google’s Datacenter Coup 51
Chapter 7: Dally’s Parallel Paradigm 63
Chapter 8: Markov and Midas 75
Chapter 9: Life 3.0 93
Chapter 10: 1517 109
Chapter 11: The Heist 119
Chapter 12: Finding Satoshi 129
Chapter 13: Battle of the Blockchains 143
Chapter 14: Blockstack 159
Chapter 15: Taking Back the Net 171
Chapter 16: Brave Return of Brendan Eich 179
Chapter 17: Yuanfen 189
Chapter 18: The Rise of Sky Computing 199
Chapter 19: A Global Insurrection 213
Chapter 20: Neutering the Network 227
Chapter 21: The Empire Strikes Back 241
Chapter 22: The Bitcoin Flaw 247
Chapter 23: The Great Unbundling 257
Epilogue: The New System of the World 269
SOME TERMS OF ART AND INFORMATION FOR LIFE AFTER GOOGLE 277
BIBLIOGRAPHY 285
NOTES 293
INDEX 313

KEURIG K-10 PLUS MINI COFFEE MAKER


Diane’s sister just spent a week with us. Carol drinks decaf coffee in the mornings brewed in a MR. COFFEE unit while I drink regular Starbucks Blonde coffee from my Cuisinart coffee maker (review here). Carol uses a Keurig coffee maker in her home and Diane decided we should replace the old MR. COFFEE unit with something Carol would be familiar with. We went to KOHL’S and checked out their Keurig coffee makers.

The Keurig K-10 Mini Coffee Maker looked ideal. It was priced at $119, but was on sale for $69. Diane had a 30% off coupon and a KOHL’S Birthday Rewards coupon and a coupon for $10 off $50 in the Home Department which brought the price down to just $39! And, after we bought the Keurig K-10 Mini, the KOHL’S cashier gave Diane $10 of KOHL’S cash–go figure! I tested the Keurig K-10 Mini out with some STARBUCKS Veranda K-cups. Delicious! I have some TIM HORTON’S DECAF K-cups for Carol when she visits in August. We can also use the Keurig when a guest shows up and only wants one cup of coffee or tea. Do you like Keurig coffee makers? GRADE: A (so far)

MAMMA MIA! HERE WE GO AGAIN


Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again is both a sequel and prequel to Mamma Mia! (2008). Part of this movie tells the story of how free-sprit Donna Sheridan (played marvelously by Lily James) both found her way to the idyllic island of Kalokairi in the Aegean Sean and got pregnant with her daughter, Sophie. The sequel part features a grown up Sophie (played by Amanda Segfried) who has restored the hotel Donna built as a tribute to her mother. Of course, there are problems. Sophie’s lover, Sky (Dominic Cooper), considers a job offer in New York City which would separate him from Sophie. Young Donna chases her destiny. Sophie’s “fathers” (Pierce Brosnan, Colin Firth, and Stellan Skaragard) each face “issues” in their lives.

No matter, the energy powering these Mamma Mia! movies is the ABBA music. Christine Baranski steals every scene she’s in. Andy Garcia provides some impressive gravitas. Cher dominates the last 20 minutes of the film. If you’re in the mood for a musical confection, give Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again a try. GRADE: B

FRIDAY’S FORGOTTEN BOOKS #486: YOU’LL GET YOURS By William Ard


Private eye Barney Glines is hired by press agent Archie St. George to pay a ransom for the stolen jewels of his beautiful star, Kyle Shannon. But Barney Glines finds more than a simple exchange of money for the jewels. He finds a dead body and the cops think Barney Glines is the killer. Glines tries to solve the puzzle of who framed him and at the same time get out of jail. You’ll Get Yours mixes drugs, blackmail, and violence into a murderous cocktail.

You’ll Get Yours was first published in 1952 in Lion Books under William Ard’s pseudonym “Thomas Wills.” This wonderful new STARK HOUSE edition includes a bibliography of William Ard’s work. William Ard died in 1960 from cancer. Ard was 37. GRADE: B+

THE DEATH OF MRS. WESTAWAY By Ruth Ware


Best known for The Woman in Cabin 10, Ruth Ware writes a chilling story of secrets and identity in The Death of Mrs. Westaway. Harriet Westaway is a poor, struggling young woman who reads tarot cards. She borrowed money from a loan shark so now she’s being threatened because she can’t make the payments. Harriet receives a formal letter from a lawyer stating she’s a beneficiary in her grandmother’s will. Harriet’s grandmother died years ago, so she thinks the lawyer has her confused with the real Harriet Westaway. But, Harriet needs the money so she goes to find out what’s in the will. Then the murders start.

Ruth Ware is not Agatha Christie. I figured out what was going on fairly early in this book. I’m guessing most of you would identify the murderer. GRADE: C

THE KISS QUOTIENT By Helen Hoang


Helen Hoang, author of The Kiss Quotient (2018), writes, “As I pursued and eventually attained a diagnosis [of Asperger’s Syndrome] (at the age of thirty-four), Stella, my autistic heroine, was born on the page. It has never been so easy for me to write a character. I knew her intimately. She came from my heart. I didn’t have to filter my thoughts to make her socially acceptable, something I’d been unconsciously doing for ages.” (p. 317)

Helen started reading romance novels when she was eight years old. She found them calming and relaxing. Years later, Helen wondered why none of the women in the romance novels she read were autistic. So, she wrote The Kiss Quotient where her heroine, Stella Lane, a brilliant econometrician who analyzes huge data sets decides to explore love. Stella struggles with social interactions and prefers just to concentrate on her work. But, Stella’s mother pressures her to start dating, an activity Stella dreads. Stella is convinced her problems with men center around her belief that she’s bad at sex. So Stella decides to hire a guy from an escort service to “teach” her how to be good at sex. I especially enjoyed Stellas “Lesson Plan” for her sex session.

Yes, there are some reverse Pretty Woman plot twists in The Kiss Quotient. I don’t usually read romance novels, but the premises of this one are creative and novel with the genre constraints. I found The Kiss Quotient to be a fun read. GRADE: B+

LEAVE NO TRACE (Based on MY ABANDONMENT By Peter Rock)



It’s 1999 and a father and his teenage daughter live off the grid in the Forest Park, a beautiful nature reserve near Portland, Oregon. Why are they living in such a primitive fashion? Like Captain Fantastic (2016) where a father raises his children away from civilization, My Abandonment (2009)–the book Leave No Trace is based on–critiques American society by contrasting the stripped-down Life this father and young daughter live while surrounded by a materialistic society.

Director Debra Granik made the surprising Winter’s Bone eight years ago which was based on Daniel Woodrell’s 2006 novel of the same name. Winter’s Bone launched the career of Jennifer Lawrence and Leave No Trace will supercharge the careers of Ben Foster and Thomasin Harcourt McKenzie.

Ben Foster plays his role of Will, a veteran with “problems,” in a quiet, understated fashion with intensity. Thomasin Harcourt McKenzie, the New Zealand phenom who plays Tom, adores her father and wants to protect him. Debra Granik and her co-screenwriter Anne Rosellini follow the plotline of My Abandonment for about two-thirds of the movie. Then, they make a strategic decision to change the ending. The novel’s ending is darker while the movie’s ending is more hopeful. Both work. Michael McDonough’s cinematography is stunning. GRADE: A-

BAD BLOOD: Secrets and Lies in a Silicon Valley Startup By John Carreyrou



Elizabeth Holmes, a 19-year-old Stanford University drop-out, formed a Silicon Valley company called Theranos. Elizabeth Holmes sold investors on the idea that she and her company could produce devices that with a few drops of blood could run hundreds of tests on that blood. Essentially, it would put traditional blood testing companies like Quest Diagnostics out of business. Millions of dollars rolled in. Holmes was able to attract investors like Rupert Murdock, Bob Kraft (owner of the New England Patriots), Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim, John Elkann (Fiat Chrysler Automobiles), and Cox Enterprises. Even more impressive was the star power of the Board of Directors Holmes was able to recruit: Henry Kissinger, George Shultz, Sam Nunn, and Trump Secretary of Defense “Mad Dog” Mattis. How Holmes mesmerized these high-powered people into supporting her dream is a mystery. For years, the Theranos devices failed. Turnover within the firm increased. Holmes would fire anyone who doubted her vision. She fired staff that raised questions about the technology she claimed worked just fine.

John Carreyrou of the Wall Street Journal started to investigate Theranos. Holmes refused to be interviewed by him. Carreyrou was followed. Theranos’s legal team threatened to sue the Wall Street Journal and Carryrou if they published articles critical of Elizabeth Holmes and Theranos. Despite all the intimidation, the truth finally came out. Theranos was a billion dollar scam. Elizabeth Holmes is under indictment. Her devices were bogus. Bad Blood reads like a thriller. Suspense and breath-taking events show up on practically every page. How could so many smart people get fooled? Why did this scheme succeed so long? Bad Blood points the way to some answers to these questions. This is the best non-fiction book I’ve read in 2018 so far! Highly recommended! GRADE: A

I want to send out a Special Thanks to my son, Patrick, who not only recommended Bad Blood but also provided me with a copy to read!
Table of Contents
Author’s Note ix
Prologue 3
1 A Purposeful Life 9
2 The Gluebot 18
3 Apple Envy 30
4 Goodbye East Paly 41
5 The Childhood Neighbor 54
6 Sunny 67
7 Dr. J 81
8 The miniLab 95
9 The Wellness Play 109
10 “Who Is LTC Shoemaker?” 120
11 Lighting a Fuisz 132
12 Ian Gibbons 141
13 Chiat\Day 150
14 Going Live 161
15 Unicorn 174
16 The Grandson 184
17 Fame 201
18 The Hippocratic Oath 213
19 The Tip 223
20 The Ambush 240
21 Trade Secrets 250
22 La Mattanza 259
23 Damage Control 268
24 The Empress Has No Clothes 281
Epilogue 294
Acknowledgments 301
Notes 305
Index 325