Ken, the Soundman



On Sunday of the North Texas Irish ken_soundmanFestival, my friend Mike and his son, Graham, and I sat at the Shamrock Stage and caught a series of acts. One of those acts, the Rogues, we had heard the night before and not been impressed. This morning, however, my good friend Ken took over the sound from the normal sound engineer; it made all the difference. The vocal were more clean, the piping was less muddy and the keyboards came through as expected. He’s a talented bodhrán player, Ken, but I had no reason to suspect that he is also talented on the mixing board.

Well done!

 

~KR

(Written on 20 March 2011)

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Jordan Does Some Light Painting



jordan_light_paints Some time back, as you may recall, Marita Beth, Kara & I did the Adult’s Night Out at the Ft. Worth Museum of Science and History. Marita Beth & I did a light painting that night which currently adorns the desktop of the East Wind Games laptop.

This evening, I caught Jordan swinging his new toys that he had recently purchased and decided to try my hand at capturing the light paintings that Jordan was making. The background isn’t as good as the one Marita Beth & I were in front of, but the image is pretty amusing.

Cheers.

 

~KR

(Written on 20 March 2011)

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Jordan – the Cotton Candy Monster



jordanAt the North Texas Irish Festival, I get to spend time with many, many friends – and sometimes, with their children, too.

This is Jordan, the Cotton Candy munching son of Marcus.

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Blackberry Bangles



When I first looked at this photo in my camera, I thought it was another in my series of food photos: blackberries. It’s not. This is one of my wife’s many beautiful items of jewelry that apparently caught my eye.

bangles ~KR (Written on 20 March 2011)

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Bananas



bannanas

Yes, we have no bananas. Or, so the story goes.

The reality is, there are plenty of bananas to go around.

 

~KR

(Written on 17 March 2011)

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Avalon Revisited



Avalon Revisited

15 March 2011

Avalon Revisited by O.M. Grey is the book I finished last night. It took me under four hours to read it.

That having been said, I guess I even enjoyed it, despite it not being at all what I had in mind when I picked it up. Kyle and I bought this book a couple of weeks ago at the North Texas Irish Festival. It was being sold by a young man in a small, but charming booth. The space was more elaborately decorated than most, catching my eye, of course. There was rich fabric, a tall counter, and an attractive wooden bookcase to one side. The bookshelves were filled with the books he was selling, and this was one of them. Also available was a trilogy that intrigued us, but which our budget that day stopped us from acquiring. The overall theme of the booth was fantasy “steampunk”–complete with an Emergency Vampire Slaying Kit, framed under glass.

We were charmed by the effort that went into the product presentation, and as both Kyle and I have recently been reading other Victorian/steampunk/vampire stories, our interest was piqued enough to make Kyle pull out his wallet.
Although not at all impressed with the book’s cover, I was tickled by the blurb on the back. It told me the main character’s name was a vampire named Arthur, his love interest was a vampire slayer named Avalon, and it was a “sexy, Steampunk romance,” I was in.

What I didn’t realize until I’d read into the book … about five pages … was that “sexy” meant “seriously not for the shy or prudish!” I have certainly read my fair share of smut, but it’s been a while, and I was a tiny bit put off by the use of words like “shaft” and “petals” and descriptions of corset-ripping that culminated in the vampire killing his first victim by page 18. I have been known to brag about not reading “romance” novels … I am amused by them and I have dear friends who can’t get enough of them. But, it’s not my thing.

The book was reading quickly, though, so I stuck with it. And, in true romance fashion, our main character does fall in love by Chapter Three. Thankfully, this changes his outlook on things and in fact he does no more killing of innocent humans until the climax of the story itself, when he does so only to save his true love’s life–and then, they’re not so innocent. The pages in between deal with his various relationships and how he has juggled the life of an English nobleman with the life of a three-hundred year-old vampire. Arthur, the elder son of Henry VIII, by the way—a detail which I especially enjoyed—sees his first love, Katherine (of Aragon) all over again when he sees Avalon, and his heart is captured. Since she’s a sworn vampire slayer, the conflict is obvious.

After admitting I was in fact reading a romance novel, and adjusting to the occasional descriptive sex scenes, my main disappointment was that I felt this could have been any vampire romance … the Steampunk element was very weak. It’s there—the lovers meet on a dirigible airship flight; there are a couple of wrist-worn technological devices and a mirrored locket reported to detect vampires; and there are some descriptions of the Victoran clothing worn, although those lacked the detail I would have expected. But, it seemed like there was much in the way of Steampunk aesthetics that could have been included and wasn’t.

All in all, Avalon Revisited is a fun enough read, but I can’t say as I’d truly recommend it. I will say, however, that the writing quality was good enough, that I am still interested in reading the trilogy by the same author. I think Ronnie may have purchased those … I may see about borrowing them. I will look forward to hearing Kyle’s report on reading Avalon Revisited. He has much more experience with reading the Steampunk genre, and as such, I would give more weight to his review than to mine.

First sentence: “I was to be the King of England.”

~MB

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My Ten…um…Sixteen…plus…Favourite Movies



My "Go To" DVDs

14 March 2011

A while back, Kyle wrote this and posted it to the PubGuys website:

10 Movies That I’ve Seen More than 10 Times
Everyone has favourite movies. Even if you don’t really like movies all that much, you still have a favourite or two. You probably also have movies that you have seen over and over again whether through choice or happenstance. I’m hoping that your favourite movies are in that list of rewatches, but maybe they’re not. Below are 10 movies that I have seen more than 10 times and an approximate count. I’m not nearly so OCD that I have actually catalogued which movies I have seen multiple times and their counts. It’s also very possible that there are other movies that I have seen more than the 10 listed here. But, these are 10 movies, in no particular order, that I can definitely say without a doubt I have seen more than 10 times.

*****************

And, then, of course he provided his list.  And, a wonderful list it is,too.  With reasons and insight and humorous anecdotes about Kyle.  And, it inspired me.

I was planning to create MY list of favourite movies weeks ago, and life got in the way.  And, I’ve watched a couple of movies half a dozen times more since then!  But the main reason I’m just getting around to it, is that it’s hard to limit the list to only ten.  So, I am cheating a little bit.  Here’s my list:

1.    Excalibur.  This has been my all-time favourite movie since I saw it in the theatre.  Three times.  For me, director John Boorman had taken all the wonderful romanticism of the Arthurian legend and made it real.  It brought to life for me, moreso than any version I’d ever read in print, the iconic characters I’d been in love with for most of my childhood.  Listening to the director’s commentary is a hoot!  And what fantasy geek didn’t memorize the Charm of Making?  “Anal nathrach, orth’ bhais’s bethad, do che’l de’nmha.”

2.    Young Frankenstein.  My favourite Mel Brooks movie ever.  I mean, how many quotable lines can one movie have?  Gene Wilder, Teri Garr, Cloris Leachman, Madeline Kahn and cameo by Gene Hackman—all comedic genius. I’m sure few would argue if I said this perfect spoof on the classic horror film genre is the funniest movie of all time.  “Put. The Candle. Back.”

3.    Airplane.  Most of my friends, at one time or another, have seen me take a random object, usually after someone has asked “what is it?” and place it on my head and then my chest before flapping it through the air while saying, “a hat, a brooch, a pterodactyl?”  I should probably be embarrassed that this movie is on my list … but, I’m not.  I find it to be as perfectly stupid and mindless and campy as it could possibly be.  And, sometimes, that’s just exactly what the doctor ordered.  Its inclusion here is all the more interesting because I don’t actually own a copy!  I’ve seen it so many times because I feel a moral imperative to watch it every time it shows up on the television!

4.    The Princess Bride.  Long on my favourites list, but only just recently can I say I’ve seen it more than ten times.  Five of those times were one day last week!  Sometimes, when I’m working, I can’t really “watch” so much as I “listen” and glance up every now and then.  And, it’s way easier to keep hitting ‘play’ on the remote control, than it is to choose another DVD and switch them.  Another film absolutely famous for its one-liners, its comedic timing, and a phenomenally beautiful score.  And, one of the best romances, ever.  Kyle and I chose a piece of music from this soundtrack for use in our wedding.  I can remember being beside myself with glee when I first learned of the making of this film.  I had, as assigned reading, been introduced to William Goldman’s book in the tenth grade!  If you love the film, you MUST read the book!

5.  Dangerous Beauty and Shakespeare in Love.   Okay, here we go with the cheating.  This is my favourite Renaissance duo of films; both historical romances; both set in the time period I know and love the most.  Dangerous Beauty is a fabulous film version of the story told in the autobiography of Veronica Franco, a sixteenth century Venetian courtesan and poet.  The chemistry between actors Catherine McCormack and Rufus Sewell is a beautiful thing to watch. The cinematography is lovely, the soundtrack divine.  And, from this film comes my favourite movie quote, ever.  Shakespeare in Love is the brilliantly woven tale of William Shakespeare, playwright and poet, and a woman he may have loved.  The most artful part of this film is the way the screenplay (another brilliant work by Tom Stoppard) weaves together and twists into one, the story of Shakespeare and Viola’s love, and the parallel story of Romeo and Juliet’s love—the play he’s currently writing and producing.  Magical for those who know Shakespeare’s works, and beautiful romance even for those who do not  Both of these films have wonderful soundtracks, scripts, actors, settings, costumes.   And, really, I’ve decided after dozens of viewings, that they tell the same story.  Courtesan/Playwright.  Venice/London.  She falls in love with a man above her station that she can’t have/He falls in love with a woman above his station that he can’t have.   That man is forced to marry someone he doesn’t love/That woman is forced to marry someone she doesn’t love.  They have each other anyway, though they know it cannot be.  Courtesan faces death, imprisonment/Playwright is believed to be dead.  Happy reunion occurs, only to have circumstances come between them once again.  Courtesan faces the Inquisition and her lover and the people come to her rescue.  The film ends with them together, but still separated by marriage vows.  Playwright faces potential failure of a play and theatre closing and his lover and ultimately, the Queen comes to his rescue.  The film ends with them together in the pages of his next play, but separated by marriage vows … and an ocean.

5-1/2.  Moll Flanders.  Another in my collection of historical romance type flicks.  I love this version of Daniel Defoe’s story, although it bears little resemblance, really, to the original.  A fact for which I, at least, am thankful.  If the book from which it is drawn scares you away from the film like it originally did me, Robin Wright Penn, Morgan Freeman and Stockard Channing are three wonderful reasons to give it a go.  I love the love stories within it, I love the narrative style, and I love the twist at the end.

6.   The Incredibles and Cars.   Both of these phenomenal works are by Disney/Pixar and both deserve to be in any collection of great films.  I have chosen to list these two movies together because I watch them for the same reason:  I want a fun, exciting, light-hearted film that will guarantee I get to both laugh and cry.  Cars is a totally brilliant example of the successful anthropomorphizing of  inanimate objects—motor vehicles, enhanced by the top-notch voice acting of many well-known and beloved actors.  It also has the charming aspect of being a retrospective of a younger, happier America.  An America before interstate highways and six-lane bypasses.  Travel was still about the journey, rather than the destination and Route 66 was the place to get your kicks.  I can remember that when we first heard about the film, we were underwhelmed … I mean, how can you get emotionally involved with a car?  Watch it and see!    The Incredibles is a rare and beautiful thing in that it is a fresh, original story about superheroes!  It contains some of the best one-liners ever, some great life lessons and like another groundbreaking Disney favourite of mine, Who Framed Roger Rabbit?, it spawned some super fun animated shorts.  It also introduces one of my favourite supporting characters of all time:  Edna!  I am working on memorizing her lines!

7.    An Ideal Husband.  My favourite November movie.  We girls of the Ostentation have long had a bit of a tradition in that we absolutely must watch An Ideal Husband to properly get in the mood for our annual holiday weekend at Dickens on the Strand in Galveston.  Perhaps, some would argue, that we ought instead, to be watching some film version of  a Dickens classic, the obvious choice being A Christmas Carol.  And, truth be told, I do plenty of that, as well.  But, it is this wonderful film version of the  Oscar Wilde classic that best captures the pomp and circumstance of our Galveston weekend each year.  We are inspired by the clothing, the dialect, the language—but mostly the humour.  Rupert Everett, Cate Blanchett and Minnie Driver more than adequately put us in the par-TI-cularly correct frame of mind for our festivities.  And, this is another DVD that once in the player, almost never gets “watched” only once.

8.   Chicago and Phantom of the Opera and Moulin Rouge.  These are my sing-along movies! Chicago has a fabulously memorable soundtrack that is so much fun to sing along with.  And the two co-stars, Rene Zellweger and Catherine Zeta-Jones, as well as Richard Gere, do an awesome job of bringing their roles to life—including doing their own singing and dancing. And the book and choreography are Bob Fosse at his best.  Phantom of the Opera I include in my list because although not a huge Andrew Lloyd Weber fan, I do adore this version of the show.  I have seen it on stage and not been impressed.  We own the soundtrack from the London cast, and do not choose to listen to it often.  But, the film version is exquisite.  The cinematography is outstanding, the casting is far better than in either London or New York, and the costuming is second to none.  Except maybe  Moulin Rouge.  Easily one of the most innovative films of all time, I love everything about this movie.  From the stellar performances by Nicole Kidman and Ewan McGregor to the brilliant costume and set design of Catherine Martin to the artful re-writing and inclusion of modern music, writer/director Baz Luhrmann has gifted us with a lush, unique film experience that simply cannot be fully appreciated in just one viewing.  In fact, I recently had a day when I watched this movie four times!   So, if you somehow missed this one, move it to the top of your queue.  And if you’ve seen it before … see it again.  I promise you’ll see something new!  Now, “everybody can-can!”

9.    My Fellow Americans.  This is one of those films that I find many have missed.  It stars Jack Lemmon, James Garner and Dan Ackroyd as U.S. presidents—past, past, and present.  Much of the film is simply Lemmon and Garner, political enemies thrust together in their quest to clear their names and solve a series of conspiracy-related crimes.  From their competition over the big chair to their march in the gay pride parade, it is two great actor/comedians playing perfectly off each other.  The film gives a poignant look at the back-stabbing, cut-throat world of  the denizens of Washington D.C.  At times it evokes great American pride … at other times disgust.  But, at all times, it is wonderfully funny. Someday, I should watch it with an ear for how many insulting names the two ex-presidents come up with for each other!

10. All That Jazz and Groundhog Day.  I know—this is an odd pair.  I’ve grouped them together because they share the same message—We only get one chance, really, to live life to its fullest!  All That Jazz is the autobiographical, comedic tragedy of Bob Fosse—one of Broadway’s best and brightest.  Brilliantly acted by Roy Schieder, it’s the story of a man who rarely made “the right” choices, but who lived big.  In fact, he lives so big that the little things that are really the big things fall to the side.  He ultimately dies with regrets about the priorities he chose.  It has long been a favourite of mine both for its message and for the world-class writing, choreography and direction of Bob Fosse, himself.  I laugh, I cry, I dance.  Groundhog Day is Bill Murray’s best work, in my opinion.  Trapped in a loop, Murray’s character is forced by means unknown, to repeat the same day—February 2—over and over and over again, presumably until he gets it right.  I find this movie to be just as funny every time I watch it, and just as life-affirming.  I love its message—to me it says each day is precious; each moment worth making the right choices.  Tomorrow may never come—all we have is today.  And, again, I get to both laugh and cry!  It’s all good.

11.  I know … this is a list of my ten favourite movies, and it’s already at sixteen … but, it didn’t seem right  for me to leave off my list, these three “collections,” if you will, of genre films that I adore and have watched more times than I can even count.

The first is quite literally anything from Walt Disney Studios.  I had amassed a nearly complete collection of their animated films before DVDs became the thing to collect.  And, now, I have a bookshelf devoted to a VHS collection I don’t even still have the equipment to view!  But, view them I did!  The timeless classics like Snow White, Cinderella, Sleeping Beauty, Bambi, Dumbo, The Fox and the Hound, 101 Dalmatians, and the newer The Lion King, Beauty and the Beast and The Little Mermaid— even The Black Cauldron—entertainment at its best.  They now taunt me from their large, padded boxes on the shelf.  I miss those old friends and hope someday again, to own copies I can watch.

The second genre for my list is Christmas movies.  I am a self-proclaimed sap when it comes to movies about the human condition and the inspirational messages in Christmas movies.  My all-time favourite: Scrooge.  This is a 1971 musical version of Dickens’ classic A Christmas Carol (one of my favourite-ever books).  I actually have quite the thing for film versions of this story, having seen dozens of them and owning at least seven different tellings, and yet, still, this one is my favourite.  It captures so much of what I believe was Dickens’ original spirit. Another favourite is the much more recent Scrooged, starring Bill Murray.   Other favourite Christmas movies I’ve seen more than ten times would include both the old and new versions of A Miracle on 34th StreetIt’s a Wonderful Life (it doesn’t get better than that!), White Christmas, How the Grinch Stole Christmas (the original animated Boris Karloff version, of course … I prefer to try to forget about the Jim Carrey version) and the old Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer and A Charlie Brown Christmas.  I’ve seen most of those old animated Christmas shows from the sixties, more than ten times (by the time I was a teenager, even), but the rest of them are less than favourites.  New favourites whose times watched haven’t reached the number ten, yet, but are notable, nonetheless include The Polar Express.

The third categorical entry would have to be musicals.  I didn’t include any classic musicals in my 1-10 list, because there are so many!  I was raised on musical theatre, and as such, these were my favourite movies as a child.  Back in the days before DVDs and even before VHS, you didn’t “own” your own movies.  You watched what came on TV or you went to the theatre.  And before cable and before the Disney Channel and HBO and video on demand, you didn’t have that many choices.  Disney movies were hotly guarded by the studio; the animated classics were re-released every seven years on the big screen and the family gathered ’round the TV on Sunday nights to watch things like Pollyanna or That Darn Cat.  The other movie studios’ products came to television seasonally.  The Wizard of Oz—every Thanksgiving.  Ben Hur and Easter Parade—every Easter.  White Christmas—every Christmas Eve.  And, between the big holidays was all the other stuff; a lot of it classical musical theatre on film. Rodgers and Hammerstein’s Oklahoma, South PacificThe King and I and of course, The Sound of Music.  Lerner and Loewe’s Brigadoon (where I first fell in love with the kilt and the Scots dialect), My Fair Lady, Camelot, and Gigi.  And of course, every Danny Kaye, Donald O’Connor, Fred Astaire, or Gene Kelley movie ever made, with Singing in the Rain at the top of the list!  I adore them all, and am in the process of building my collection of DVDs so I can watch them for the seventy-eleventh times!

As I look back at my list, there are certainly themes … romance, history, song and dance, life and death, laughter and tears.  There are obvious repetitions of a few favorite names.  And of my sixteen in my primary list, ten of them are set in a time period prior to the twentieth century. And even though I allowed my list to swell beyond ten titles,  I’ve probably left something important out.  But as it seems right now, these are my “go to” movies.  The ones I reach for time and time again.

I really have no idea how Kyle got his list whittled down to only ten!

~MB

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His and Hers Phones



Pair of Phones

13 March 2011

Yesterday, as we stopped for gas on the way home from the faire site, I glanced over at the center console of my truck and noticed the almost mirror images of our phones as they lay there, reflecting the 7-Eleven building in their dark screens.

It’s not an awesome photo, it just seemed like a fun capture. And, now, I am taking advantage of having a spare photo, and using it to be able to say I’m completely current with my KRuMB posts, again!

So there, March snowball! Take that! ;-)

~MB

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Barrels of Fun



Barrels

12 March 2011

We spent the day at the Scarborough Renaissance Festival site, cleaning, maintenancing and readying our booths for the upcoming faire season. Remember that March snowball rolling downhill? If we don’t do this now, it’ll be April before we know it, and faire is upon us. So, off to faire we went this morning, only to drag our butts home ten hours later—dirty, sore, and exhausted.

We owe a huge debt of gratitude to those who came out and helped us today—friends and chosen family—generous, talented, wonderful people who helped us clean and move furniture and a million other things. Curtis and daughter Rebecca, and later the rest of the family as well! Whatever would we do without them?  Kat and Jeff, who worked hard for me on the Pendragon Costumes side of the lane.   Marcus, our manager, and Jordan, his son—an awesome father and son team.   Mike and Frank who not only cleaned and schlepped and hauled, but who replaced my broken back door. Rod, whom I adore and I think would do just about anything we asked. Steve, who did such a beautiful job on the garden-building! (We sent him and Curtis to Home Depot and they procured everything we needed to have a successful work day. And with my birthday Home Depot money I got “rocks” and they look awesome! LOL) Dwayne, whose decorating touch makes the East Wind Games booth a real thing of beauty. And, Laura, who was perfect in her efforts to make our living space habitable after ten months of un-use.

The end result of the day, is two clean booths, ready for product set-up, a new door, a new garden, a new floor plan at East Wind Games, a bunch of sore muscles and two much-emptier beer coolers! ;-)   Okay, not all fun, perhaps, but satisfying.

As we drove off site, this collection of trash cans awaiting the day the site crew will deliver them to their work zones, caught my eye. I kind of like the repetitious patterns and shapes.

28 Days ’til opening!

~MB

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Mr. Timothy



Mr. Timothy

11 March 2011

Mr. Timothy
is the book I finished most recently.  Bought for me by my husband, as a gift, its subject matter and plot are not really within my usual realms of interest.  It’s really quite the thriller—a murder mystery, edge of your seat sort of story.  I rarely choose to read (or watch movies, for that matter) about violence that occurs in a fictional setting.  Some fantasies, like JRR Tolkein’s works are notable exceptions, but for the most part, if it’s not history … stories that are factual, not fictional … I don’t want the violence in my life.  I prefer to read about people, places, things and ideas, that I can learn from in some way.  But, Kyle had his reasons for thinking I might enjoy this one.

Author Louis Bayardhas painstakingly brought to life Victorian London—and not just that.  He’s done it in the style of Charles Dickens and he has given us Dickens’ own Tiny Tim as his main character.  As the title implies, the beloved child from A Christmas Carol, Tim, is now all grown up. And, as imagination would have it, he carries the baggage of a child born into poverty and suddenly thrust into the middle class, in a world and a time when who you were was all about your “station.”   In the course of this creative novel, Timothy explores the resentment he feels toward a father who loved him too much and has just died and an “uncle” who loved him for reasons he never understood and of which he now wishes to be free.   He walks the streets of Dickens’ London— a picture painted for the reader as clearly as if written by Dickens himself.   He meets along the way, colorful characters who could easily have walked off the pages of Oliver Twist or even the largely autobiographical David Copperfield.  And, in the process, he evolves from a self-absorbed, angry young man into one who willingly risks his own life for those of others.  He doesn’t start out as much of a hero, but by the end of the book, he certainly becomes one.

My reaction after my first bedtime reading session with Mr. Timothy, was that although it was interesting, I did not know if I’d stick with it, or not!  I love Charles Dickens—he’s among my favourite authors.  But, it’s been quite some time since I read any of his works, and reading his style, complete with rambling sentences and gritty settings, seemed so odd when I knew it wasn’t his own.  Louis Bayard has truly channeled Dickens.   And, frankly, I wasn’t sure I wanted to work that hard!

But, a second night of reading soon made me realize how rich and well-rounded was the world being created for me in these pages.  And, not just the places, but the people!  I’ve been reading things lately, that have been strong on the story-telling, but not so deep in the characterizations.  Here, in the style of what is arguably Dickens’ greatest strength—fully-developed characters compelling the reader onward—Bayard has created characters so complex and so engaging that instead of giving up on this book, I now found myself fighting to put it down and get enough sleep!  Add to that, the occasional nods to Dickens’ own places in the recycling of place names and locations  from various of his books, and I couldn’t turn the pages fast enough.

Although the pages sometimes presented me with descriptions and therefore visualizations of horrible events, and the genre of mystery/thriller is not my first choice, I found myself so caught up and drawn into the story and the lives of these characters, that I rushed to finish this book, and learn what would become of them.  My final night of reading lasted far longer than intended, because I simply couldn’t stop reading before I reached the end.

I believe that if handed a copy of Mr. Timothy, Dickens himself, would be honoured and proud, and completely swept up in this world of fog and intrigue and plot twists.

The book is published with wonderful addenda including an interview with the author, some facts about Dickens and A Christmas Carol, and a brief study guide.

Louis Bayard has apparently already begun his next novel—the Pale Blue Eye, where Edgar Allen Poe will be our main character and mystery solver.  I can hardly wait!

First sentence:  Not so tiny any more, that’s a fact.

~MB

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