Category Archives: Entertainment

My Favorite Things: Mystery Novels

While I read a lot of history and biographies, as well as literary fiction, most of my reading is mystery novels.

I don’t apologize for this…They are a great escape.

But you have to be careful.  I detest some of the plot driven mystery novels that turn out to be Best Sellers.  I usually have those figured out in about 10 minutes and don’t really care about the characters.  I quit reading most of them years ago.

I need a good plot, but it’s also important to me that the books be character driven-and that the characters be well defined individuals.

Over the past year or so, I’ve discovered three authors I particularly enjoy.

If there is a mystery fan on your Christmas list, or if you just like to read mysteries yourself, I would strongly recommend these three:

  1. Louise Penny– She is my favorite.  My only issue is that she doesn’t write fast enough!  I have to wait a year for each new book.  She is a Canadian writer and her books are mainly set in a little town called “Three Pines” outside of Montreal.  Three Pines is kind of an artist colony populated with fascinating characters who recur throughout her books.  Inspector Gamache is the police inspector on each case and his interactions with the residents of Three Pines is the though line in these books.  The characters are well defined and the books are wonderfully plotted.  I recommend reading them in order starting with “Still Life.”
  2. G M Malliet- Start with “Death of a Cozy Writer”.  Her three books are all set in England or Scotland and I greatly enjoyed them all.
  3. Julia Spencer-Fleming– I’m currently flying through her series of novels set in upstate New York.  Her books also really should be read in order, starting with “In the Bleak Midwinter”.  There is an interesting relationship between the married chief of police in the small town of Millers Kill and the new Episcopal Minister and military vet Clare Ferguson.  I would probably best describe it as kind of a modern Spencer Tracy-Katharine Hepburn type of thing.  Frankly, some of her books are stronger than others, but I wouldn’t miss any of them.  Again, well defined characters and strong plot lines.

I would also recommend Rita Mae Brown’s Sister Jane/Foxhunting series set in Virginia.  It’s probably because I’m from Virginia and know the area where these are set very well and recognize the character types, but these are a real guilty pleasure.

I also read a fair amount of gay mysteries-when I can find a good one.  This is a very dangerous area as there is a lot of really bad writing in this genre.  However, there are four writers who consistently deliver well written books I really enjoy.  They are Josh Lanyon, Anthony Bidulka, Greg Herren and Dorien Grey.  I would also recommend these guys to people-gay or straight- who enjoy a good mystery.  In this genre, I also enjoy Charlie Cochrane’s series about a couple of Gay college professors in England prior to World War 1.  These are not as strong as the others, but I’m a sucker for English mysteries-Gay or Straight- set in this era.

Just some ideas.

Happy Reading!

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Remembering Blake Edwards’s Last Bow

Nice article  by Walter Mirisch on Blake Edwards from “Vanity Fair”:

On the evening of September 30, 2010, I participated in a program at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences called “An Evening with Blake Edwards.” Blake and I were seated side by side on the stage of the Samuel Goldwyn Theater before an enthusiastic audience of approximately 1,000, to discuss his life and career.

Our relationship had started a long time before that night. In 1960, Blake was one of the earliest targets of the newly formed Mirisch Company’s campaign to add the services of the industry’s most talented directors to our roster of Billy Wilder, John Sturges, William Wyler, and Robert Wise. I had met Blake in 1948, when we were both beginning our careers at the little Monogram Studios, but our careers—his as a writer-director, mine as a producer—had gone in different directions by the time we reconnected and made a four-picture writing, producing, and directing deal. He had already directed Operation Petticoat (1959) with Cary Grant, Breakfast at Tiffany’s (1961) with Audrey Hepburn, Experiment in Terror (1962) with Glenn Ford, and Days of Wine and Roses (1962) with Jack Lemmon, among others.

His place in the pantheon of such great writer-producer-directors as Preston Sturges and Billy Wilder was already assured. However, he ascended to the level of the immortals with the first film we worked on together, The Pink Panther. His collaboration with the actor Peter Sellers, which began on this film, would produce some of the most uproarious minutes ever captured on film. This movie and its successor, A Shot In The Dark, and the ensuing long list of Inspector Clouseau’s continuing adventures have entertained audiences for nearly half a century, and there is no reason to believe that succeeding generations of film audiences will not continue to roar with laughter at the combined comedic genius of Blake Edwards and Peter Sellers. Blake and I later collaborated on What Did You Do In The War, Daddy? and The Party, again with Peter Sellers.

On that evening at the Academy only seven short weeks ago, Blake and I talked for nearly two hours. He was obviously failing and physically straining, but he made an extraordinary effort to reveal as much of himself as he could to his hugely appreciative audience. When our conversation concluded, the entire assemblage of the theater rose to give a standing ovation to Blake. He was sitting in a wheel chair, and I watched him make a herculean effort to rise and acknowledge the applause of his audience one last time. He said to me quietly, “I must stand up for them.” Holding my arm for support, he waved his other arm in a fond farewell.

via Remembering Blake Edwards’s Last Bow | Little Gold Men | Vanity Fair.

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Blake Edwards Obituary

Blake Edwards, the director of many fine films including on of my favorites, “Breakfast at Tiffany’s” died today.  He was also Julie Andrews’ husband of 42 years and directed her in several films…

More:

LOS ANGELES (AP) – Blake Edwards, the director and writer known for clever dialogue, poignance and occasional belly-laugh sight gags in “Breakfast at Tiffany’s,” “10” and the “Pink Panther” farces, is dead at age 88.

Edwards died from complications of pneumonia late Wednesday at St. John’s Health Center in Santa Monica, said publicist Gene Schwam. Blake’s wife, Julie Andrews, and other family members were at his side. He had been hospitalized for about two weeks.

“He was the most unique man I have ever known-and he was my mate,” Andrews said in a statement Thursday. “He will be missed beyond words, and will forever be in my heart.”

Edwards had knee problems, had undergone unsuccessful procedures and was “pretty much confined to a wheelchair for the last year-and-a-half or two,” Schwam said. That may have contributed to his condition, he added.

At the time of his death, Edwards was working on two Broadway musicals, one based on the “Pink Panther” movies. The other, “Big Rosemary,” was to be an original comedy set during Prohibition, Schwam said.

“His heart was as big as his talent. He was an Academy Award winner in all respects,” said Schwam, who knew him for 40 years.

A third-generation filmmaker, Edwards was praised for evoking classic performances from Jack Lemmon, Audrey Hepburn, Peter Sellers, Dudley Moore, Lee Remick and Andrews, his wife of 42 years.

Actor Robert Wagner credits Edwards with giving him some of the greatest opportunities of his career.

“There won’t be anybody passing by like him again. He was a genius,” Wagner said Thursday. “Personally, we were so very close friends and he was so kind to me throughout my entire life.”

via Blake Edwards Obituary: View Blake Edwards’s Obituary by Danville and Rockingham County.

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Winona Ryder On Mel Gibson, In GQ: ‘He’s Anti-Semitic And He’s Homophobic’ (PHOTOS)

From Huffingtonpost.com

This guy has some serious issues…

Winona Ryder, featured in the latest issue of GQ, talks about her long past in Hollywood — and her horrifying run-in with Mel Gibson. She claims that she knew of the star’s alleged intolerance far before anyone else.

“I remember, like, fifteen years ago, I was at one of those big Hollywood parties. And he was really drunk,” she recalls to the magazine. I was with my friend, who’s gay. He made a really horrible gay joke. And somehow it came up that I was Jewish. He said something about ‘oven dodgers,’ but I didn’t get it.

“I’d never heard that before,” Ryder continues. It was just this weird, weird moment. I was like, ‘He’s anti-Semitic and he’s homophobic.’ No one believed me!”

Since, Gibson has been derided for multiple racist diatribes, and is now suffering a very public anger meltdown.

via Winona Ryder On Mel Gibson, In GQ: ‘He’s Anti-Semitic And He’s Homophobic’ (PHOTOS).

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Murder, They Wrote: The Year In Mysteries : NPR

I love to read mysteries and here are some recommendations from NPR.

However, they left out three of my favorites-more on them later…

If you click the link, you can see the other books the NPR writer recommends.

Okay, let’s acknowledge the big pink elephant (or giant red Swedish fish?) in the living room, and then we can get on with this salute to some of the other best mysteries and suspense novels of 2010. Stieg Larsson. It would be preposterous to offer a round-up of the year-in-crime-fiction without paying homage to The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest and the international phenomenon of Larsson’s entire Millennium Series. (My local independent bookstore is doing a brisk business selling black rubber bracelets imprinted with the question: “What Would Lisbeth Do?”)  Maybe 2011 will bring us Lisbeth Salander fans some version of that rumored fourth installment floating around on Larsson’s companion’s computer. If not, it’s still been a thrill to witness the launch of one of the mystery and suspense canon’s groundbreaking series.

via Murder, They Wrote: The Year In Mysteries : NPR.

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Boston Santa Speedo Run

Now I finally know why my Father told me there was no way he was letting me go to College in Boston when I wanted to apply to Boston U all those years ago….

 

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“The Eight Reindeer Monologues”

If you are looking for some great, irreverent Holiday fun, I strongly suggest “The Eight Reindeer Monologues”, a play by Jeff Goode, at The Broach Theatre here in Greensboro, NC.

I don’t want to give away too much information, but let’s just say Santa may be guilty of sex crimes, Mrs Claus has a bit of a drinking problem and the reindeer have much more distinctive personalities than you may have suspected.

Excellent performances from all four actors-Jordan Hayes, Camilla Millican and especially stellar work from Lee Strickland and Tal Fish.

Go see it…It runs through December 18th.  More information at www.broachtheatre.org.

You’ll never think of Santa and Rudolph the same way again..

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How ballet changed the world | Need to Know

There’s a new biography out of Diaghilev that I’m dying to read.  This makes me even more anxious to get to it….

From NPR…

“The night in May, 1909, when Diaghilev, the impresario, brought his troupe of musicians, dancers, designers, and choreographers to Paris and opened in a theater was the turning point for all the arts. Those brilliant colors and bold rhythms put an end to the paleness and primness of the early part of the century. Nothing has ever been the same since.”

That is Diana Vreeland, fashion designer and style icon, describing the way Ballets Russes took Paris by storm in the early years of the 20th century. When Sergei Diaghilev, a penniless Russian aristocrat, realized he would never be a great artist himself, he decided to become a patron, a collaborator, a catalyst. And through his passion and hard work, he attracted talent like Coco Chanel, Igor Stravinsky, Pablo Picasso, Leon Bakst, Vaslav Nijinsky, to name just a few. Together they created ballets and operas that changed every facet of the art world, from music and dance to fashion and design.

via How ballet changed the world | Need to Know.

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War On Christmas Spreads To Lincoln Tunnel : NPR

Interesting article from NPR….

This “War on Christmas” crap normally just makes me tired.

I’m of the “live and let live and go to whoever’s party is best today” school of thinking…Just stay in the moment, enjoy the season and don’t think about any of it too much..

And people really should know by now, it’s a waste of time and energy to argue about religion…

Holidays are time for traditions, and one of the biggest American traditions this time of year is arguing about religion.

Some years, a community is torn over a manger on the lawn in front of city hall or a missing menorah.

This year, the season’s biggest religious controversy is in an unlikely place: the Lincoln Tunnel connecting New Jersey and New York.

For the last three weeks, New Jersey commuters entering the tunnel have had to sit in traffic and contemplate the sight of a billboard with a picture of a nativity scene, a star and three wise men. Its message: “You know it’s a myth,” courtesy of a group called American Atheists.

Drivers can mull over this challenge for the few minutes of purgatory it takes to cross under the Hudson River. Once they make it through the tunnel into New York, however, they’ll encounter another billboard, this one from the Catholic League.

It’s the same nativity scene, but this time with a retort: “You know it’s real.”

More:   War On Christmas Spreads To Lincoln Tunnel : NPR.

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Morrison pardon doesn’t change The Doors’ history | Raw Story

I’ve always been fascinated by Jim Morrison and the Doors.  Love their music…Stopped by his grave in Paris…

But, still, can’t politicians find better ways to use their time????

Pardon of Jim Morrison can’t change The Doors’ history or answer a slew of ‘What ifs?’

A hot, frenzied night in Miami changed life for Jim Morrison and The Doors. That’s something the late singer’s pardon on indecent exposure and profanity charges can’t correct.

“It made him realize he was no longer in the graces of the gods, that things could go wrong,” said Ray Manzarek, the band’s keyboard player. “Jim had a great line — in that year we had a great visitation of energy. We had the mandate of heaven. And I think at that moment, he lost the mandate of heaven.”

An arrest warrant was issued for Morrison four days after a March 1, 1969, concert at the Dinner Key Auditorium. He turned himself in, was tried the next year and convicted on two charges. Gov. Charlie Crist and Florida’s Cabinet members pardoned Morrison of those convictions Thursday.

But forgiveness can’t change history. Morrison, worried about prison time, was distracted. Other cities, worried about The Doors, canceled concerts. Morrison ended up dead in a Paris bathtub in 1971 while appealing the convictions. Would he have died if the Miami incident never happened?

 

“It was one of the many things that contributed to his death. I don’t give it any more credence than any of 10 other things,” guitarist Robby Krieger said. “If it had never happened, would he never have died at that time? Maybe not. It didn’t help.”

 

More:   Morrison pardon doesn’t change The Doors’ history | Raw Story.

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