NEW CPAP


One of my chronic conditions is sleep apnea. I was diagnosed with sleep apnea 17 years ago. That’s when I used my first CPAP (Continuous Positive Air Pressure) device. It was a Healthdyne Tranquility Plus unit (top) that looked like a Macintosh computer and weighed about 20 pounds. Instantly, my life improved: I was less sleepy, my mind was sharper, and Diane didn’t have to endure the cacophony of my snoring each night. Seven years later, I upgraded to a RemStar (left) which was the size of a loaf of bread and weighed about five pounds. And now I have the new, compact ResMed S-9 (right). It’s about the size of a box set of Blu-rays and weighs about two pounds. If I hadn’t used a CPAP all these years, I’d probably be dead now. If you know someone who has a snoring problem, urge them to get it checked out!

WAR HORSE By Michael Morpurgo

War Horse has morphed from a Young Adult novel to a stage play to a Steven Spielberg film nominated for an Oscar for Best Movie. War Horse starts with a young colt bought by a drunken farmer. The farmer’s son, Albert, falls in love with the colt and takes care of it until the farmer sells the horse to the British Calvary when World War I begins. The horse’s experience in battle is grim. Much of the book made it into the play and much of it made it into the movie. But some details were left out and I enjoyed reading the original source material. GRADE: B+

SHERLOCK HOLMES: GAME OF SHADOWS

Bill Crider advised me not to rush out and see Sherlock Holmes: Game of Shadows. I think Bill mentioned something like “it’s good, but not great.” We finally got around to seeing this second Sherlock Holmes starring Robert Downey, Jr. as Holmes and Jude Law as Watson. If you’ve seen the first of Downey’s Sherlock Holmes movies, you have seen the template for this second film: action, humor, fast-paced plotting. Professor Moriarty (Jared Harris) remains Holmes’ arch rival. I enjoyed this film with its tangled plot and entertaining cast. Sherlock Holmes: Game of Shadows isn’t Sherlock Holmes in the traditional sense, but it will serve until the Real Thing shows up. GRADE: B+

MISSION IMPOSSIBLE: GHOST PROTOCOL

I know Cap’n Bob loathes Tom Cruise (AKA The Evil Dwarf), but I found a lot to enjoy in the latest (and best) of the Mission Impossible movies. A cunning terrorist has framed the Impossible Missions force with the bombing of the Kremlin. The U.S. Government has invoked the “Ghost Protocol” where they publicly disavow the MI while covertly encouraging them to find the terrorist before a political disaster occurs. There’s the usual eye-popping stunts and cool gadgetry. Cruise’s team of Jeremy Renner, Paula Patton, and Simon Pegg balance off the screen time. If you’re looking for a stylish action-movie, MISSION IMPOSSIBLE: GHOST PROTOCOL will keep you on the edge of your seat. GRADE: A

FORGOTTEN BOOKS #155: THE MISCELLANEOUS WRITINGS OF CLARK ASHTON SMITH Edited By Scott Connors and Ron Hilger


I subscribed to Night Shade Books’ six volume series of Clark Ashton Smith’s works. Now, the final volume has been published and I’m sad to reach the end. If you haven’t read any of Clark Ashton Smith’s baroque fantasies, you’re really missing out on some fabulous stories. The Miscellaneous Writings of Clark Ashton Smith is an expanded edition of the planned Tales of India and Irony. If you’re a Clark Ashton Smith fan, this is a must-buy.
Table of Contents

Introduction: The Sorcerer Departs by Donald Sidney-Fryer
The Animated Sword
Prince Alcouz and the Magician
The Malay Krise
The Ghost of Mohammed Din
The Mahout
The Raja and the Tiger
Something New
The Flirt
The Perfect Woman
A Platonic Entanglement
The Expert Lover
A Copy of Burns
Checkmate
The Infernal Star
The House of Monoceros
Dawn of Discord
The Dead Will Cuckold You
The Hashish-Eater
Appendices
Story Notes
Bibliography
Errata for The Collected Fantasies of Clark Ashton Smith volumes 1 through 5
“O Amor atque Realitas!” By Donald Sidney-Fryer

LES VIOLONS du ROY with MAURICE STEGNER


Diane and I went to a delightful concert featuring a Quebec-based baroque music group, Les Violons du Roy (“violins of the king”). On this current tour, they’re accompanied by recorder virtuoso, Maurice Stegner. If this crew performs in your neighbor, they’re well worth a listen. Check out the sample below.
CONCERT PROGRAM:
Handel. Concerto grosso in B-flat Major Op. 6 No. 7 (“The Hornpipe”)
Telemann. Suite in A Minor for alto recorder, strings and B. C., TWV 55: a2
Sammartini. Concerto in F Major for soprano recorder and strings
Geminiani. Concerto grosso in D Minor
Geminiani. Concer per flauto No. 10 in F Major

DOWNTON ABBEY, SEASON TWO [Blu-ray]

Dame Maggie Smith, Hugh Bonneville, and Elizabeth McGovern lead a stellar cast in this Second Season of Downton Abbey. Maria Doyle Kennedy, Iain Glen, and Zoe Boyle freshen up this the Second Season of this Emmy Award-winning drama. This 3-disk set includes the Downton Abbey Christmas Special, as well as several bonus features like deleted scenes. The action continues from Season One with England in the middle of World War I. It’s 1916 and the events of the Battle of the Somme up to the end of the war power the plots. If you’re a fan of British drama like Upstairs, Downstairs and Brideshead Revisited, Downton Abbey will entertain and delight you. GRADE: A

ODDS AGAINST TOMORROW

When I reviewed Kiss Me Deadly a couple weeks ago, Todd Mason mentioned Odds Against Tomorrow, a movie I hadn’t seen in three decades. I found a DVD of Odds Against Tomorrow and watched it. I also had a copy of William P. McGivern’s novel that the movie is based on so I read that, too. In the novel version, Earl Slater (a sociopath), Johnny Ingram (a gambler who owes too much money to the loan sharks), and Burke (a former cop) plan a bank job. The structure of the movie and the book differ. In the novel, the bank job takes place about mid-way through the book. In the movie, the bank job happens almost at the end of the movie. The movie’s explosive finish isn’t in the novel. The movie starred Robert Ryan as Earl, Harry Belafonte as Johnny, and Ed Begley as Burke. Director Robert Wise chose to focus on the racial tension between Earl and Johnny. The screenplay by Abraham Polonsky and Nelson Gidding scintillates! GRADE: A-

DEATH OF KINGS By Bernard Cornwell

Death of Kings is the sixth book in Bernard Cornwell’s Saxon series. The series is narrated by Uhtred, the Saxon-born, Viking-raised warrior. Alfred the Great is dying and with him might die the dream of a unified England. It falls to Uhtred, an outsider, to decide whether England survives or falls into chaos. Death of Kings follows the template of the other five books: plenty of political chicanery, double-dealing, and graphic fighting scenes. I’ve enjoyed all the previous novels in this series and I enjoyed Death of Kings as well. GRADE: B+