songS oF innocencE & experiencE
I was dreamin when I wrote this. Forgive me if it goes astray.
Saturday, February 28, 2026
Thursday, February 26, 2026
DDR: How to Kill a Witch: The Patriarchy's Guide to Silencing Women by Zoe Venditozzi & Claire Mitchell
xxi+ 296 = 317 pages
I'm not sure how I encountered this book. Possibly via an ad on Facebook. At any rate, it seemed interesting, the library had a copy, and I put in a request for it. The library's stamped RECEIVED date is January 23, 2026, so I might be the first person to read this copy of this book. For some reason that thought pleases me.
Day 1 (DDRD 3,039) February 26, 2026)
Read to page 73.
"...when the going gets tough in any society, it is the most vulnerable who are accused of causing the damage." (xviii)
Read to page 146 (halfway point).
Read to page 222. So tomorrow will probably do it. Good read!
Read to page
Thursday, February 19, 2026
Isaac Asimov did make me smile hard.
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| https://archive.org/details/moretalesofblack00asim/mode/1up |
I'm reading my second collection of Isaac Asimov's Black Widowers stories (More Tales of the Black Widowers) And enjoying it quite a bit. As a matter of fact, I'm spending a lot more time with it per day than is my wont, and thus am already halfway through the book after just a few days. (Normally it takes me several months to read an Asimov book because I only read a few pages per day. (Sotto voce: in the bathroom.)
The stories delineate the regular dinner meetings of this men's group, which is modeled after a real group Asimov belonged to. At these meetings, a guest is grilled, and some kind of mystery evolves out of the grilling. Invariably, the waiter, Henry, is the one to solve the mystery. It's very formulaic and you would think it would have gotten old after a few stories, but it actually has not and I'm anxious to read more. (There are quite a few more by the way. I'm glad that Internet Archive has them available, since some of the prices for these books are way out of my league.*) In the VIIth story in this volume, entitled "Season's Greetings," A character named Gonzalo suggests that the Black Widowers should put together a book of limericks. He is immediately (and rudely) shot down for the suggestion, and then he surreptitiously begins to write, "There once was a group of dull bastards...."
It didn't make me laugh...few books do...but it did make me smile. Smile hard. I think that's the first time this has happened whilst reading an Asimov book.
So there's that.
*
Monday, February 16, 2026
Leon Russell
Thats why romance is so hard you have ribe open and honest while you lie through your teeth.
Others words to say how ww feel
That's what I wrote last night whilst in the throes of drug-induced delirium. Here's what I remember about it:
I was just about to tumble into sleep when Leon Russell's "A Song For You" began to play. I'd heard the song before, but never really listened to the lyrics. This time, they hit me. Some of the lines reminded me of my friend Pat.
Is what I hope to be
...
There's no one more important to me
Thursday, February 12, 2026
The Book I Just Started Reading Today: Karl Ove Knausgård's Winter
I wasn't all that thrilled with the first book in this series (Autumn), but it was a foregone conclusion that I would read Winter because (1) I bought it from the bargain shelf at Half-Price Books before I'd read Autumn and (2) it has beautiful illustrations. Like this one:






