Wednesday, June 18, 2025

Books, mishaps and Jireh House

 Thursday I attended the monthly Friends Of Mission meeting.  Our guest speaker was the head of Jireh House, a charity that helps mothers and children seeking shelter at times of crisis.  Daunting to hear that they now have 16 properties across the river but regularly still have to turn away people seeking assistance.

Felt tired when I got home and sent my apologies to Cary Lenehan's latest book launch this evening.  Might be just as well I did - when I finished watching Night of the Blood Beast on YouTube, I went to get out of my chair and had trouble standing up.  I pushed myself onto my feet and clutched at the piece of furniture next to me.  Missed it by an inch. I went backwards, bounced off my chair and fell forwards into a pile of clutter under the table.  Adding insult to injury, my croquet mallet toppled over and lay across me.

I wish there was such a thing as a slow-motion replay in real life.  I'd like to see how I managed to land on my right arm and my left shin in one go.  I sighed a little, pushed myself onto my face and got up on my hands and knees.  From there I got hold of my walking stick and shuffled over to the First Aid Kit.

Not a good night's sleep - the twitches from my barked shin kept waking me up regularly.  Oh well, it could have been worse.

*

Last week's book was PATRICIA BRENT, SPINSTER by Herbert Jenkins (1918)

Jenkins was PG Wodehouse's publisher for many years, and some of the master's magic seems to have rubbed off on him.  This tale of  a secretary who invents an imaginary boyfriend starts off slowly but becomes more and more amusing as the plot piles complication upon complication.  Sample - the aunt declares "Don't forget I am your only living relative", and Patricia thinks to herself "I wish you were neither."

Out of print for decades but available on-line.   https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/33353

*

Sunday morning attendance was down a little at church.  I wasn't surprised - that often happens in a long weekend;

however I was a little surprised when I stopped for lunch on the way home.  The New Town Green Store had so many customers that I had to look around before I found a table free. Decided these must be the folks who had studied the weather forecast and decided not to go away for the long weekend.  (It stopped raining for half an hour after sundown, giving me a chance to feed the animals without getting wet.)

*



Books - This week I re-read SLAN by A.E. van Vogt, one of the classics of 1940s science fiction.  Its plot of an underground group of mutants avoiding persecution by the proudly "normal" maj0rity has inspired many stories since then.  I was amazed at how much I'd forgotten since I last read it  -  of course that was about sixty years ago.  I closed the book, aware of the impact it still held.

From my TBR pile, the next day I browsed through the unread titles and selected almost at random a 1951 novel by SF master Jack Williamson.   After the first couple of chapters I had a strange feeling.  The plot was taking an all too familiar line - a group of superhumans were fleeing a group of ruthless hunters of the unhuman.  It was almost like I was reading a prequel to SLAN!   I suppose I should have put it aside till next month and read something different but by then I was too deep in the story to abandon it.  One for the Coincidence File I guess.




Wednesday, June 11, 2025

Birds, Books & Reunions

I felt I was having a senior moment.  When I checked my e-mails for the first time in a couple of days, there was a string of messages asking me to confirm my appointment for yesterday at 4.15  -  news to me, since I had the appointment written for tomorrow on my calendar.  I phoned the clinic and they confirmed that I had had a booking for yesterday.  I apologised and told them I'd be there on Friday.

It was troubling for a few minutes.  How had I messed up my annual visit to have my health plan updated?  Slowly a thought percolated through my mind.  I would not have made a late-afternoon appointment for a day when I was going out for dinner that night.  The chances of being delayed were far too possible.  It came to me that I must have asked for an appointment on Wednesday and the woman at the desk had written down the wrong day.  I know it sounds like "passing the buck"  but it seems a logical explanation.

We shall see if they're expecting me when I turn up on Friday.

*

A READER'S HAIKU:

O Literature!

Ninety three weeks of reading?

Thank you my Kindle.

May in the bibliosphere:

SCIENCE FICTION 101 by Robert Silverberg (2014) ***

THE CASES OF SUSAN DARE by Mignon G. Eberhart (1939) *

BRITISH COLUMBIA AND THE YUKON by Ryan Ver Berkmoes (2009) ** Lonely Planet

UNCANNY STORIES (1916)   from Pearson's Novel Magazine **

A COUNTRY DOCTOR'S NOTEBOOK by Mikhail Bulgakov (1927) ***

THE CODED BLUE ENVELOPE by Anna Elliott and Charles Veley (2020) Sherlock & Lucy #22  **

THE WILD ADVENTURES OF SHERLOCK HOLMES #5 by Will Murray *

UPPER FOURTH AT MALORY TOWERS by Enid Blyton (1949) *

100 GREAT BOOKS IN HAIKU by David Bader  (2010) *

YOU KNOW YOU'RE A CHILD OF THE '70S WHEN... (2006) by Mark Leigh & Mike Lepine *

IN THE FIFTH AT MALORY TOWERS by E. Blyton  (1950) **

FLYING TOO HIGH by Kerry Greenwood (2000)  **

THE OLD MAN IN THE CORNER  by Baroness Orczy (1908) ***

[Explanation of the symbols - 

* means I read the book to the end; 

** I read the book and enjoyed it;

*** I read the book and applauded the author; 

**** classic/iconic/sensational ]

*

The Bird Bulletin for May:



I know they say you shouldn't feed wild birds, because it makes them dependent on you and stops them foraging for their natural sources of food.  But when I inherited a flock of chickens from my sister, I soon noticed a pair of Spotted Turtle Doves hanging around looking for any leftovers when I fed the poultry.  Being a soft-hearted old codger, I put out a small dish and filled it with wheat every morning so they didn't have to compete with the hens for breakfast.

The routine went on since then.  After a while, another pair of doves joined them - kith or kin, who knows?

This year more doves joined the breakfast club, and I had to put out a second dish so they weren't competing to see who could get food before it was all snapped up.

Then last week I was a bit late getting up to feed the chickens in the wintry weather.  When I opened the back door, there was a line of doves sitting on the roof of the house next door, waiting patiently for me to start putting the food out.  I counted how many were assembled (it looked like a scene out of Hitchcock's THE BIRDS) -  the total was a startling 15 birds.  And that's why I went out this afternoon and bought an extra sack of wheat.

*

I may have mentioned my "flying visit" to Melbourne in May, but not the reason for it.  I went to Victoria for a family reunion six or seven years ago - just before Covid shut down any interstate pleasure jaunts - but as time rolled on, it was time for another such occasion.  As usual, I stayed at my favourite hotel in Little Collins Street, within walking distance of the luncheon venue  - Chloe's Restaurant on the upper floor of Young & Jackson's.  I sat between my cousins Ivan and Margaret, looking down at the famous Flinders Street Station clocks across the street.

It was a most enjoyable lunch, and I extend my good wishes to all who were able to attend.  Sadly as the years go by there will be more empty chairs at the table.   Don't be one of those people who say "I must catch up with old so-and-so one day soon" !

*



OTR - Old Time Radio - this month's listening:


The Amazing Mr Tutt 1948-08-23 the liberty of jail

SciFi874 Wherever You May Be by X Minus One  1956

StrangeTales793  The Believers by The CBS Radio Mystery Theater 1979

Suspense 1956-06-12 A Matter of Timing

Suspense 1956-06-19 A Sleeping Draft

Suspense 1957-05-05 Celebration AFRS#629

Fibber McGee & Molly 1955-03-23 sales resistance

Tom Corbett, Space Cadet 1952 The Missing Rocket Scout

Redbook_32-06-30_ep06_The Goat of Private Hibbs

Challenge of the Yukon - A Swill O' Gunpowder

Sam Spade - The Red Star Caper 01_12_1951

Mark Trail_50-03-06_ep16_vampires_from_the_deep


Sunday, May 18, 2025

Farewell to a modem!

 


Thursday night I'd slept okay until I woke at 3 a.m. and couldn't get back to sleep for a while because I kept thinking about all the things I had to do before the weekend.  Nevertheless I arrived at the hospital early for my appointment, which was just as well because it took me sometime to find the right section - I was almost tempted to change the sign Dept of Nuclear Medicine to read Dept of Unclear Medicine.


If you haven't had an ultrasound before (as I hadn't) it's a bit strange.   You lie there half naked while a nurse/technician pushes a cold probe against your chest, telling you to change your position at intervals.  On the screen of her machine, a shadowy figure appears now and again, pulsing like a sea-monster in an old B-movie.  Every now and again it lets out a brief burst of sound.  I hope the doctor understands what the scan says,  because I have absolutely no idea.


After that I needed a cup of coffee so I stopped at my usual watering hole for something hot and caffeinated.  Then across the road to the pharmacy where we had a long and unproductive discussion about the price of my diabetes supplies,  which for some reason are tenfold what they were last year.  Not happy Jan.


Did the weekend shopping on the way home and called in at the newsagents to buy latest issues of THE PHANTOM and PEOPLE'S FRIEND (is there a Teresa Ashby story in the latter - yes there is!).  Went home and heated up something for dinner, then listened to the latest Reuters podcast, made some phone calls and went to bed early.


Tried to read "The Lady in the Car with Glasses and a Gun" a mystery-thriller novel by Sébastien Japrisot,  the 1966 French novel.   It wasn't what I expected and I had trouble getting into it.  Feels more like James Hadley Chase than Simenon.   Maybe I might try it again when I am less anxious.

*

MARCH READINGS:

ANALOG SF (March-April 2025)  Trevor Quachri editor

CHILDREN OF THE STONES  by Jeremy Burnham  (1977)

PLANETS FOR SALE  by E. Mayne Hull and/or A.E. van Vogt (1954)

SOD CALM AND GET ANGRY editor anon.  (2011)

THIRD TERM AT MALORY TOWERS by E. Blyton  (1948)

ORBITAL by Samantha Harvey (2023)  Booker Prize winner

THE ANGRY PLANET by John Keir Cross (1945)

*

Wednesday 16/04/2025 was a landmark in my domestic arrangements.  I was used to  not having any lights in my bedroom, relying instead on the bedside lamp.  At the end of last month, one of the fuses must have gone, meaning I had no electricity in the power points in my room - cue the battery-powered camping lantern for illumination.  I was getting used to this as well and started having some early nights.

Then I discovered Wednesday morning that - sometime between 10pm and 10am - a rat or a mouse had gnawed through both the power cable and the phone line that let the modem do its magic.  😒I felt despondent for a while, thinking of all the things that were now lost to me --  e-mail, podcasts, Wikipedia, Amazon, Facebook, Netbank, iView and everything else that starts with www.  

There is free wi-fi at any of the former phone booths, but you can't make yourself comfortable on the concrete steps of the post office.  Thank goodness I remembered our local coffee shop has free wi-fi;  I suspect they'll be seeing even more of me than usual.

*

April among the bookshelves :

THE ASTOUNDING ADVENTURES OF DR. BIRD by Capt. S.P. Meek (1930) **

THE LADY IN THE CAR WITH GLASSES AND A GUN by Sébastien Japrisot (1966) **  

JOURNEY TO THE UNDERGROUND WORLD by Lin Carter (1979) **

MR FORTUNE'S PRACTICE by H.C. Bailey  (1923) **

ZANTHODON by Lin Carter  (1980) **

CODE THREE by Rick Raphael (1963) ***

SEGOVIA: AUTOBIOGRAPHY 1893-1920  (1976) **

WE'LL PRESCRIBE YOU A CAT by Syou Ishida  (2023) *

WORRALS CARRIES ON.by Capt. W.E. Johns (1942) **

COCAINE BLUES by Kerry Greenwood (1989) ***  Phryne #1


My communication problems have improved.  My iPhone 6 has decided that it can, after weeks of thinking about it, actually install the update for Facebook Messenger, putting me back in touch with some of my activities.  And Telstra have supplied me with a dongle to replace my dead modem.  I never planned to go back to Telstra - I've been with iiNet and Southern Phone most of this century and had no complaints, but circumstances forced me back into the arms of the Telco colossus.  


Got to admit I felt less than happy when I woke up the next morning and ran through the previous day's events in my head, but I had a hot drink and read a chapter of this week's book WE'LL PRESCRIBE YOU A CAT and started to feel a bit better.


But why do they *always* make these gadgets black? I seem to be slowly filling the place with ebony electronic bits and bobs.  If I lose one I have to get down on my hands and knees and use a bright light to track down the lost sheep.  The alternative is to hope it turns up one day - and inevitably I find out where it is when I step on it and  break it.  Would it kill them to put a little dab of something bright on them at the factory?  I'd be willing to pay extra if they'd put a yellow stripe on the side!  As it is, I will have to remember to return the dongle to its little box every time I stop using it, just to be on the safe side.

*

I didn't make it in to the newsagents for a couple of weeks because of all the public holidays.  I was chatting to the girl at the counter while she fished out my orders, and I happened to mention my birthday.  She said "Oh really. So, how old are you now?"  I told her.  Had to admire her restraint for not saying "Aren't y0u too old to be reading comic books?"


Monday, April 14, 2025

Books, health and haiku

 


Tuesday night quiz we finally broke our run of coming second and managed to win, if only by two points.  We might have done a bit better if our sports man was there but 89 is a pretty good score.  The TV & Cinema round was only so-so;  I might have done better if they dropped the questions about shows that have been or will be on Netflix or Apple TV !


Wednesday I spent quite a while musing on my plans for next couple of months.  My cousins are meeting up for a lunch in Melbourne and I'm invited.  I haven't seen them for a while - our last family reunion was the year before Covid.  If I can work it out, I may go over.   Hopefully this time I won't get lost in Melbourne airport.


Haiku for the feline: 

Cats are like the clouds,

Ever changing and graceful, 

No two quite alike. 

Dedicated to Olivia, who sat on my knee until I finished writing this.

*

Facebook is often hard to fathom.  This year I've been seeing a lot of updates by or about Cynthia Rothrock, an American actress known for her martial arts roles.  I don't remember ever mentioning her or liking a post about her.  Still, it's better than a couple of years ago when I was deluged with photos of movie star Salma Hayek -- 90% of which were obviously fakes produced by AI.

*

The woman behind the counter at the local newsstand is getting to understand me.  When I went in today for one of the magazines I buy every week, she said "Have you read last week's yet?"  I just showed her the Kindle I had in my jacket pocket and said "I'll get round to it as soon as I finish the novel I'm halfway through."  She gave me my change and didn't comment further.  I have had some people in similar situations say "You buy a lot of stuff."  The temptation is to reply "I can buy less if you'd like me to" but so far I've resisted.

*

The book I'm reading at the moment is PLANETS FOR SALE by … well, that' s complicated.  It was first published in 1954 as by E. Mayne Hull... who happened to be Mrs A.E. van Vogt!  For years, he was asked about it but always answered it was written by his wife.  However recent research suggests that he needed a pen-name for some extra stories he was asked to write for "Astounding Stories" and for some reason he signed them with his wife's name.  Of course it's quite possible she may have typed them without necessarily having written them!

*

I had a phone call from Keith Curtis to say he wouldn't need a lift to the Op Shops on Thursday. Apparently he bought so much stuff on Wednesday that he

(a) doesn't have any money to buy more,

(b) doesn't have any room in the house to store more, and

(c) doesn't have the time to catalogue any more items.

*

Now reading ORBITAL, one of only a handful of novels set in space to have been nominated for the Booker Prize over the years, and is the first space-set winner. At 136 pages, it is one of the shortest ever Booker Prize winners.  Samantha Harvey's lush prose style takes some getting used to at first;  after the first few pages I thought "She makes  Ray Bradbury feel like Ernest Hemingway" but gradually I warmed to it.  After all, if you can't wax poetic about the view from the Space Station, when can you be?

*

A few weeks ago I had lost my health card, but I hadn't worried because I was due for a new one in April.  However two weeks ago my doctors office told me they needed the card or they couldn't bulk-bill for the ultrasound my doctor had ordered.   I phoned the Health Department straightaway and they said it would be with me in ten working days, the same date as my ultrasound.  I crossed my fingers and waited.

This morning I looked in my mailbox and there were two identical envelopes.  "I wonder....." I thought to myself.  Inside I opened them.  The first one was the replacement card with an expiry date of 2025.  The second one was an identical card, except the expiry date was 2027.   From not having a card at all, I now have two of them.  :)   I wonder if this entitles me to twice as much medical care for the rest of the month?

*

Haiku for Possums....

  Like furry ninjas, 

  throwing themselves into space

   twixt branches and roof.


Wednesday, March 19, 2025

Summer marches out



My Kindle tells me I have read for 83 weeks without missing a week, but I did miss a couple of days when I was in hospital last month.  Now it seems I still have four chapters of Russell's THE SPARROW to read, which is annoying because I had planned on finishing the novel by the start of March.  I am almost tempted to take Wednesday off and just stay home till I finish the damned book.

*

Tuesday I was tired and did little.  At least I was able to go out to the quiz night this week after taking last week off due to ill health.   We didn't do so  badly, finishing in second place.   Probably my favourite moment was the Acronym round where I was asked to say where the word Taser came from;  you should have seen my team mates when I confidently wrote down "Tom Swift's Electric Rifle" !

*

Well, I carried out my idea of staying home on Wednesday and finishing the novel THE SPARROW.  After the last chapter I put the book down and stared into space for a while.  It's certainly an intriguing book, with echoes of Jack Vance, Philip Jose Farmer and Harlan Ellison (three of my favorite authors).  Because of the way the story jumps around in time, place and character, you aren't absolutely sure where the plot is going -- as you get closer to the end, you have the feeling that something bad is going to happen soon.  But unless you're psychic, you have no idea just how bad.   I don't think I've had this sort of reaction to a book for decades.  If this was a TV show, it would be freely decorated with warnings about "mature themes".  I didn't start reading anything else for two or three days - it took me that long before I could face a new story.

*

Thursday attended the FOM annual general meeting.  Travelled in by car instead of bus for once, so I wasn't quite as tired as I sometimes am afterwards.  But still felt happy to get to bed on time and clock up a full eight hours sleep.  Don't often remember my dreams this year, but I do recall that night's.....

I was back home at our old place in Liverpool Street with the family.  I was getting ready to go out, and my sister happened to ask me whether there was anything worthwhile on TV tonight.  The morning paper was in front of me so I picked it up and started glancing through it to find out.  Then I stopped and groaned.  My sister asked me what was the matter.  I stared down at the newspaper.  "There's a full page of comic strips," I said glumly.  "They haven't had comics in Australian paper for years.  So if ever I see them, I know that I am still asleep and this is all a dream."  She looked at me, plainly baffled.  When I looked through the rest of the paper, I found a big lift-out full of comic strips I'd never heard of.  A disconcerting experience, knowing that you are dreaming and not being able to do anything about it.

Plainly my subconscious has not forgotten the sixty odd years I spent reading the comic strips in the local paper.  Apparently it knows that I miss them, and tries to make up for it by providing them in my dreams.   I'll bet Freud or Jung never had a patient with these sorts of dreams !

*

Tuesday quiz night we came second yet again.  I thought 81 points was a good score but the folk at the next table got 85.  However in the movie round I  was the only person who recognized the film clip from THE WILD BUNCH  😳

Wednesday I was leaving a meeting in Sandy Bay to drive home and not only did it start to rain but we saw a lot of silent flashes in the sky ("dry lightning").  Between that and a couple of crashes on the highway, it seemed a long time before I got home.  Heated up something for dinner and ate while listening to a Maigret audiobook.

A Warning !   Went  out  to do the weekend shopping on Friday.  When I started on the trip home, I  noticed an unfamiliar warning light on the dashboard - it looked like nothing so much as one of those signs by the roadside that warn you of dangerous driving conditions in case of ice or snow.  [see above]  I drove home carefully while the light stayed on, even though ice or snow would be unprecedented at the end of summer in Tasmania.

It took me about fifteen minutes paging through the car manual before I found the right section.  It turns out the DSC may be turned off  -  that's the Dynamic Stability Control.

I couldn't help it, I had to laugh.  Anybody who has watched me walk more than a few steps knows that it's not the car that needs Dynamic Stability Control, it's the owner !

[The light must have healed itself;  it did not come on next day.]


Friday, February 28, 2025

Goodbye [and good riddance] to February

 As February goes on, we have had a few cooler days - and more importantly cooler nights.  There's nothing like a hot and humid night to set you up for a bad start to the next day.  Although I did manage to get uncomfortably warm today when I dozed off in my chair in the afternoon sun after I got back from a meeting of the Sunday lunch club.

  (This is  similar but different to the Friday lunch club; there have only ever  been two people who have belonged to both of them.  I wonder if I could start calling the monthly meetings of the Friends Of Missions group the Thursday lunch club?)  Maybe I could blame my nap on reading a chapter of a Henry James novel after I got home --  no, that wouldn't be fair.  Probably the plate of lamb's fry I had at the hotel in South Hobart was the culprit.

*

The 11th was a Tuesday.  I slept reasonably well and had a light breakfast while the morning news show A.M. filled my ears with the (mostly bad) news of the day.  The usual routine of feeding the animals and downloading yesterday's podcasts, then morning tea while I read the first six chapters of my new novel THE SPARROW (1996) the first novel by Mary Doria Russell. It won the Arthur C. Clarke Award, James Tiptree Jr. Award and the British Science Fiction Association Award. 


Light drizzle for a few minutes at midday.  The weather forecast for this week is confounding.  They predict a heatwave for Thursday, then a cool change late in the week, possibly including snow flurries up on Mount Wellington!   In the meantime I have to go out to buy bread to replace the loaves that went mouldy during the warm weekend afternoons.



Here's the longer version of how I ended up in hospital on Wednesday.  Skip it if you want to.

Lunchtime on Wednesday I left home intending to be away for a couple hours at the first meeting for the year of our church's Bible Study Connect Group.  I got to my destination, a house in the hills above Sandy Bay and parked out front.  I took my walking stick and carefully picked my way across to the path that led uphill to the house.  Now because it was almost three months since I'd been there, I had partly forgotten the steepness of the slope, particularly that I usually walked up the left hand side of the path which was the easier and more level side of the path.  I absent-mindedly pointed myself straight at the house and walked forward - straight into the steeper and more curved side of the path.


You can guess the rest.  I took two or three steps and couldn't understand why I suddenly felt unsteady and out of balance.  I jammed my stick into the ground behind me, trying to steady myself, but the path was concrete and it didn't help at all.  I felt myself falling backwards and a moment later I felt my body and my head hit the ground;  I later found that I had come down on my right buttock, my right elbow and the right side of my head.


A nice young couple who were walking down the street saw me fall and hurried  to my aid.  Another member of the Connect Group was just arriving and she hurried up to the house to summon help.  With support, I made it into the house and the lady of the house (an ex-nurse) tended to the grazes on my elbow, the only place that was actually bleeding.  I was vaguely surprised at how quickly the right side of my head had swollen up, and when I phoned my doctor he was quick to advise me to seek attention at the hospital where I could be checked for concussion.


So that's how I ended up in the waiting room at the Emergency Department.  This wasn't my first fall,  but all the other times I'd been brought in by ambulance.  I composed myself and took a seat among the crowd, knowing I might be sitting there for some time.  There were young men, old women, mothers with children, the whole variety of humanity waiting patiently to  be fed into the system.  I gradually worked my way from one waiting room to another, seeing various doctors and being X-rayed, ECGed, blood-tested, blood-pressure checked and given all the usual tests to see if I was "with it" or not.


By the end, I felt I was right on the cusp of going/staying.  I had nothing except the clothes I stood up in, my wallet, my phone and my walking stick.  I had spoken to some of my friends, and promised to keep them informed if any decision was made.  Finally a doctor told me that they'd like their physiotherapist to assess my walking, so they'd like to keep me in overnight so I could see him first thing in the morning.  Okay then.  I was placed in a wheelchair and whisked through the rabbit warren that is the Royal Hobart Hospital and into a section of the building I didn't recognize.


They stopped at the door of a room that looked unusually modern.  It reminded me of nothing so much as a smaller version of the astronaut's room in the movie 2001.  There was a comfortable bed surrounded by all manner of  machinery, thankfully none of them beeping at me.  I was given one of those hospital robes that feel like a sarong and some sandwiches and a hot drink.  They even charged up my mobile phone for me, enabling me to text people and say I'd see them tomorrow.


One of the staff came round with the inevitable form for me to sign  and initial.  I duly did so, reflecting on how my signature had deteriorated in the last decade.


As I drifted off to sleep, it struck me that nobody had looked at the bandage on my elbow.  I guess it looked so professional that all the staff must have assumed somebody else had dressed the wound.  I made a mental note to mention it to my friend;  she would probably be amused to discover she hadn't lost the knack.


So the next day,  I woke up and looked at the clock, wondering how the animals were faring at home  They had probably gone to sleep last night thinking I must have gone out and forgotten their supper.  I hoped to be home in time to feed them lunch.  It was odd to think that my clock radio would be broadcasting the latest news to an empty bedroom.  It reminded me of that Ray Bradbury story about the automated house that kept to its routine even after its owners had been vaporised in a nuclear war.


A nice woman with a clipboard came round with some personal questions to ask me.   I've done this before, though last time I had regarded the questioner with some suspicion, wondering if she was a spy for the Public Trustee.  This was a much jollier occasion, with my inquisitor and I sharing a laugh at some of my answers.  At one point, she asked me the routine question "Do you know where you are?"  I thought for a second and said I knew I was in hospital but I had no idea what part of it.  "This is the EMU" she said.  I looked blank and she added "The Emergency Medical Unit."   Trust them to have thought up a new three-letter-acronym!


So the Physiotherapist came round, watched me walk around and asked me a few questions.  He was surprised when I told him I'd been on the waiting list for a cardio consultation for 53 weeks.  He said he would write to my GP.  He said I'd be told I could go home shortly, and I was.  I asked at the nurses' station was there any paperwork before I left and they shook their heads - "There isn't even anything for you to sign," they said.  "You're free to go."


And so I did just that.  While I waited for friends to pick me up and go down to Sandy Bay to pick up my car, I cautiously ran my hand over my scalp.  I could still feel the swollen area, but it was definitely going down and I suspected nobody would even notice it if I didn't regale them with the story of my latest head injury.


And if you've read this far, congratulations.

*

I sneezed as soon as I walked though the back door this afternoon.  Obviously the climate indoors isn't as variable as it is outdoors.  (Headline in today's paper SNOW FALLS AS FIRES STILL RAGE).

*

Could make a party game out of this  -  who would you like to be shipwrecked with?  My choice would be Sorrel Wilby. Sorrel Wilby is an award-winning adventurer, becoming the first person ever (with hubby Chris) to traverse the Himalaya (6500km) on foot in 1991.  I have selfish reasons for this choice.  I know that on the first day  she would have located a source of fresh water and gathered edible fruits and nuts.  On the second day she would have built a makeshift shelter for us.  By the fourth day she would probably have constructed a raft for us to escape the island.  (I used to watch her on television leading expeditions up the side of active volcanic mountains, so I feel not much is beyond her.)

*

An anecdote I forgot to put in my story about my trip to hospital...   Halfway through the afternoon I had worked my way up the ladder to one of the smaller waiting rooms with half a dozen other patients.  We were sitting around waiting;  every so often one would leave or another one would arrive.  I was sitting there in a semi-trance, afraid to look at anything on my phone because I was afraid of flattening the battery.  I read all the posters on the walls and amused myself by trying to make anagrams out of the words in the warning notices.


One thing didn't amuse me though.  Looking straight ahead from where I sat,  there was a rack of boxes on the wall that held various sizes of disposable gloves.  There were four of them.  Three were one way up, the other one was upside down.  Whenever my gaze passed over them, I involuntarily read the labels on three of them.  Trying to ignore the fourth box was a losing battle.  Finally, I stood up and walked across to the waste paper basket on the other side of the room.  I dropped some scrap paper into the basket, standing so my body blocked the view of the rack from outside the room.  Quickly and quietly I grabbed the miscreant box out of the rack, reversed it and slid it back into place.  Order was restored to the universe. It took about two seconds, and nobody would have seen me do it.


Then I heard a woman's voice from the other side of the room.

"Oh thank heavens.  That's been driving me crazy ever since I sat down!"

*

Tuesday I woke from a good night's sleep.  That's the good news.  An hour after breakfast, my stomach started doing handstands.  You would have thought it was trying to stage a coup d'état.   I wasn't game to leave home for quite a while.

In the evening, I took a cab out to the Quiz Night.  It was only a 15-minute ride and somehow I spent ten minutes of it answering questions about the Bible from the cab driver.  I must remember to turn down my halo before I go out in public in future.

Only three of the usual team were present, but between us we covered a lot of general knowledge.  I may note that I scored 10/10 in Science & Nature and we finished in second place with a respectable 75 points.  As usual there were a couple of stumbling blocks (try as I might, I could not remember Jerry Springer's name) and I'm still scratching my head over the question that asked for a word with all the vowels in it.  I came up with "aqueous" but the word they wanted was "queuing".

*

I am not a doctor, I'm not even a hypochondriac.  But we all know our own bodies and wonder at any unexpected changes we experience.  While suffering from my usual summer cold, I had two bouts of diarrhoea in ten days - the second one fairly spectacular.  I cannot think of anything unusual in my diet this month.  Is it possible that the mucus I've been coughing up (and mostly swallowing) has somehow acted as a lubricant on my digestive tract and caused the process of peristalsis to  become unexpectedly rapid, fast-tracking the waste products through the gut?  Or am I just suffering from the age-old layman's problem, trying to ascribe a simple cause to a complex problem...


Books for the shortest month:

A LONDON LIFE by Henry James, 1888

CALL MR. FORTUNE by H.C. Bailey, 1920

THE DAGGER AFFAIR by David McDaniel, 1965

THE SPARROW  by Mary Doria Russell, 1996 

THE CINEMATIC LEGACY OF FRANK SINATRA by David Wills, 2016

Saturday, February 01, 2025

a New Year note


 
AI pic of me and Caroline Munro out shopping

Dear friends, I find it hard to believe we have reached the end of January already. At this rate we shall soon be stocking up on calendars and diaries for 2026. At least we have a (temporary) break from the hot weather, which won't be back till next Monday if the forecast is accurate. It reminds me of the 1980s, when my first chore on returning from work in the summer months was to open the front and back doors, to allow the sea breeze to blow through the house - Mother Nature's air conditioning.
 
Since getting my cataracts done a couple of years ago I have been able to resume my old habit of reading for an hour or more each day, in consequence of which I received a message from Amazon saying I had achieved a new personal best, reading on my Kindle for 77 weeks in a row. I'm glad they are keeping track, since I certainly wasn't. This afternoon I finished reading the Strugatsky novel ROADSIDE PICNIC (a.k.a. STALKER). I am now contemplating my to-be-read list, wondering what to tackle next.
 
My poultry population has now sunk to ten, I think, with the body of the blind hen curled up in her usual sleeping spot. She has, unless I am very much mistaken, left us for the Great Barnyard in the sky. (I don't mind feeding Julie's chickens for the rest of their lives, but I do wonder how long this will go on for; I think most of them must be ten years older or more.) At least I have finally rid myself of the last of the roosters.
 
I am typing this on my secondary laptop, the one I bought in a sale last year because I sensed the old HP laptop was getting a bit old and cranky. Last year it started being a bit erratic and this month most of the keys in the middle of the keyboard stopped working. Until you can't use them, you don't know how often you use the letters M Y U and J !
My secondary machine is an Acer, which I bought mostly because it had a clear white-on-black keyboard which I could see a lot better 
than the HP's black-on-silver layout. Of course I had never noticed that the Acer lacks two of the frequently used keys, Page Up and Page Down. Apparently there is a work-around that lets you use the keys 3 and 9 instead, but old dogs and new tricks....
 
I assume that the owners of the house next door are off on holidays, leaving the younger generation in charge of the premises. Two Saturdays in a row they have had noisy parties full of music, loud voices and other such noise. In fact after the first Saturday night I went to sleep and dreamed I was back in my 1970s job running an inner-city bar.
*
BOOKS OF THE NEW YEAR -- January's reading report 🗯
ROADSIDE PICNIC by A&B Strugatski 1971 (filmed as STALKER)
RENTAL PERSON WHO DOES NOTHING by Shoji Morimoto 2019
WILD ADVENTURES OF SHERLOCK HOLMES 3 by Will Murray 2023
WHISTLE STOP by Maritta M. Wolff 1941
TROUBLE IS MY BUSINESS by Raymond Chandler 1950

 

Tuesday, December 31, 2024

2024 ends


 

 I'm getting too old for all this stuff...

Monday I went out to my GP to get a prescription for a new drug they've put me on.  One of those silly made-up names like Ferrofibroton which tells you nothing about what it actually does.  :(
Tuesday morning I felt too tired to go out and play croquet, but was okay for the Quiz Night.  Missed out on winning again, but we have one more chance this year.
Wednesday I was still tired (why can't I get to bed on time anymore?)  but I did make it to the final meeting of the Connect Group for 2024.  Happy to see Phillip Mitchell there;  his father used to be my boss back in the 1970s.
Thursday I spent the day driving around with Keith Curtis. Keith wanted to gs to the South Hobart tip shop before the end of the year, as well as a final visit to Kookaburra Books. I thought I might get Friday off, but he rang up and said "Want to meet for coffee?"
Saturday was the annual Croquet Club Christmas Lunch.  As usual I presided over the quiz, and one member won a prize for getting 15/18 answers right.  Afterwards I polished off the leftover champagne (only half a glass full) and drove into town to deliver a big bag of cleaning supplies to the church hall. (No way I was struggling into the hall with them Sunday morning.)
Sunday I arrived punctually for the Communion Service and took my place.  All went well till the final moments when the minister announced that for our final hymn we would be singing something new, an American hymn titled "O Come, All You Unfaithful".  We sang it but I could see some of the congregation were taken aback.
After a quick lunch, I returned to the city for the annual Organ Society concert at Collegiate school.  Liz Barsham came over for a chat before the concert, and we discussed her recent art exhibition in Salamanca Place.  Then the mighty Wurlitzer started up, and we sang a few Christmas songs.  Believe it or not, the first one we sang was "O Come All Ye Faithful" !
https://worshipmatters.com/2020/12/18/the-story-behind-o-come-all-you-unfaithful/
*
Monday I looked at the weather forecast and decided to stay indoors all afternoon.  After lunch I retired to my bedroom and shut the door while the temperature soared to 32C outside - that's 90F in the old scale.
I stayed inside all afternoon, finally venturing out to feed the chickens when the temperature had eased to a more tolerable 27C.  The forecast said that there would be showers between dusk and dawn as the hot northerly winds changed, and I felt a little drizzle in the air as I finished in the backyard.  Let's hope we have better weather for Christmas week.
*
Birthday greetings to ABC Tasmania.  It's 100 years today since they began broadcasting in my home town.  Of course radio was very different in 1924.  You had to wear a suit and tie when you were on the air representing the national broadcaster and you probably had a cultured English accent.  There was also an ashtray next to every microphone and a piano in the studio in case you had somebody providing live music.  Happy birthday ABC.
*
"The Christian faith is the odd one out in the world. Christianity tells you that you are accepted by God, not by working work your way up to Him, but because God has worked his way down to you."
-  Alistair Bain 2014.
*
Christmas being over and done with (and that tiring pre-Yule three weeks) I had resolved to stay home and do absolutely nothing on Boxing Day.  Which is just what I did.  After morning tea, I relaxed with a book in the garden.  At the end of one chapter I put it down and just enjoyed the silence.  No traffic, no voices from passing pedestrians, no power tools from next door, no dogs barking.   Not even any birdsong.  Complete and utter silence.
Then the phone rang.  It was Keith, alerting me to the fact he was in town at the Boxing Day sales.  Apparently the place was so full of shoppers, people were lining up on the footpath waiting to get into some stores.
I put the phone down and said to myself "I think I made the right decision."
*
Books of December  -  
it's a long time since I kept a reading log, but here is my book list for the last month.
1Q84 book three  (Murakami)
Vhast 02 • Engaging Evil (Lenehan, Cary J.)
Tales From the Cafe (Coffee 2) (Toshikazu Kawaguchi)
Vhast 03 • Clearing the Web (Lenehan, Cary J.)
Forever Rumpole  (John Mortimer)
White Face (Edgar Wallace)
First Form at Malory Towers (E. Blyton)
Finders Keepers (Emily Rodda)
Wild Adventures of Sherlock Holmes 2 (Will Murray)
If you lived here, you'd be home by now (Christopher Ingraham)

Sunday, December 15, 2024

Winter woes

I've always said that we get the worst weather just at the end of winter, as we're about to move into Spring.  It was certainly true this year - I can't recall a year when we had so much wind.

Saturday morning it looked too wet and windy to go round the op shops, so I was ready to settle in for a quiet afternoon at home, but...
After I'd fed the chickens I was sitting down enjoying my morning coffee when there was a mighty gust of wind and something went <CRASH> overhead.  A quick inspection of the backyard showed nothing amiss, then I raised my eyes to heaven and LO the truth was revealed to me.   The wind had come in the back of the house, flown up the stairs and blown out the attic window.   The decades-old pane was now a heap of broken glass on the roof above the back door.   😟
I haven't been in the attic for some time, in fact not since I had my cataract operation,  My failing eyesight had made me cautious about climbing the stairs.  I had a second cup of coffee to give me extra get-up-and-go,  then I began the ascent.   Once I moved the fallen books off the steps and cleared away the cobwebs, it wasn't as bad as I thought it might be.   I passed my desk and typewriter (both covered in dust) and went past the rows of bookshelves, pausing only to pick up some 1963 annuals featuring Dan Dare and Supercar.
The window was pretty much as I expected;  the lower pane was still intact but the upper half had vanished completely.  I rigged up a crude cardboard cover in its place and then slowly and carefully descended the staircase.  Covered in dust and cobwebs I would have looked like the family ghost to anyone who had just wandered in the back door.   I'll decide  to do about it tomorrow, I thought to myself (channeling Scarlett O'Hara).

 
The first Tuesday of Spring, I opened the back door and stood there for a moment, basking in the sun and the warm air.  The sun was shining, the birds were singing and a gentle breeze blew across the backyard.  I felt like a groundhog emerging from his burrow.   For the first time in a week I was able to breakfast on the patio, enjoying my tea and toast while I finished the Edgar Wallace novel I was reading on my Kindle.  I don't suppose it will stay like this for long, but it was a great start to the day.
*
The Australian government wants to stop underage people accessing social media.  Some are saying a whole new agency may have to be set up.  Possibly the expression "the Facebook Police" could become a real thing.  Your worst nightmare - a chatbot with a badge.
*
Hoped that this week might be a bit quieter, but not the way it worked out.  Tuesday and Thursday I was out driving around the op-shops with Keith ($1 CDs at Lifeline!), Tuesday night was quiz night, Wednesday I went up to New
Norfolk to visit friends on their farm while the weather was good, Friday I did the weekend shopping after I met up with a friend from Claremont who wants me to take a look at his laptop.  Saturday I plan to stay inside out of the cold weather and rehearse my reading of chapter 3 of Ecclesiastes for church on Sunday morning.   Aside from that, nothing special happening !

Friday, July 19, 2024

On the road again


My bank account took a bit of a battering in May. The car was increasingly unreliable so I put it into the garage for its long delayed annual service. It seemed fine the next day then the day after it broke down (first symptom: couldn't drive uphill!). So one of my friends who is more mechanical than me had a go at fixing the engine, which only resulted in a bill for spare parts that didn't seem to help any.

So after a week or two, we lost patience and went round the corner to the nearest car yard. While I am browsing through the high-priced models out the front, my friend marches up to the manager and says straight out "Have you got any good cheap cars?" Well, if you don't ask you don't get. He takes us over and shows us a very clean and impressive Mazda that's about a quarter of the price of the cars out front. 

 Then we haggled a bit and he knocked 15% off the price.

So I now have a new(ish) car that seems to run well; it even came with half a tank of petrol, which is nothing to sneeze at these days. And I am slowly getting used to the newfangled digital display! 😏

 



Monday, April 01, 2024

Driving or dining, I have my habits


 

Lately my listening is divided up between the shows I listen to while driving and the ones I run while I'm at the dinner table. Plus the odd one at bedtime.

My dinner time list last month:

Boston_Blackie_-_Marked_Money_10_06_1948
CaseClosed886 Squad Cars 1968
The Adventures Of The Abbotts 1955
Challenge of the yukon_s51e016_the third strike.
Cisco kid_s53e051_key of death.
Escape_-_The_Brute_04_11_1948
Have gun will travel_s59e021_in an evil time
Hopalong cassidy_s50e022_the letter from the grave
RelicRadio883 Escape 1953 and The Shadow 1941
Suspense 1949-12-22 Double Entry
The Horror1166 Where The Dead Sleep by The Creaking Door 1965
Frontier Gentleman (10-05-58) The Librarian
The_Mysterious_Traveler_-_Death_has_a_Thousand_Faces_09_21_1948.
The_Whistler_-_Fateful_Friday_05_26_1947
Thriller831 The Birds by The Hollywood Radio Theater 1953
Wild bill hickok_s52e048_the mayor of mule mesa
Grand ole opry_s58e001_WSM radio
      -- C:\Users\61408\Music\2024-03-06 L

And my listening on the road :

A Happy Heart, A Taste of Honey, and a Banana Boat - Pgm BMP
ACADEMY AWARD--THE WATCH ON THE RHINE
BURNS & ALLEN, MAY 20 1948
Broadway-is-my-Beat_09-18-22
Challenge of the Yukon (ep0805) 1950 The Gold Behind the Waterfall
ESCAPE Earth Abides by George Stewart 1&2
Frontier town_s49e046_where men are men
Hopalong cassidy_s50e018_bullets for ballots
Music Box - Connect Radio 02-05
R-U-R_ Project-Audion_5-29-20
Sunset Melodies - Connect Radio - 02-07
Wild bill hickok_s52e044_a letter of warning
Sunday Bandstand 10 December 2023
-- D:\2024-02-02 H

 Thanks to Relic Radio, Andrew Rhynes, You Tube and the Internet Archive for sharing so much good stuff.

Friday, February 09, 2024

Into the new year we go

 Someone on a Facebook page for vintage paperbacks said to me "you seem to have read just about everything! I feel both admiration and envy!"

My response was it just seems that way. I did some research once and found the older a book was, the more likely I was to have read it. As we approached the present day, my strike rate sank to zero.

I was fortunate that my teenage years where I was reading almost constantly coincided with a wave of paperbacks in the 1960s that offered SF titles old and new at affordable prices. My notebooks of the time reveal I was consistently reading six paperbacks a week,month in and month out. (The average paperback in those days was seldom bigger than 192 pages, remember.) Under that set of circumstances, it was easy to cover the field fairly well !
*
Got through Christmas without any drama.  I drove in for the morning service at church where we sang all the old favorite Christmas songs.  Home and had time to sit down down for a while before joining my niece Anita and her son for lunch in the city.

I had never been to the Crowne Plaza before - it was built after  I moved out of the city - and it has a deceptively small frontage (a bit like Doctor Who's Tardis).  We enjoyed a very pleasant meal, and I managed to stop eating just at the stage where I felt I could have eaten one more mouthful.  That's the time to stop!
*
Tuesday I skipped the usual croquet morning and the evening quiz night,  so I had plenty of time to meet up with Dr Ali, my new medical adviser.  He had received the results from the scan I had early in the year.  Good news and bad news.  There was no sign of Problem A, which they had been looking for.  But they had noticed some signs of Problem B, so I have to go and see a specialist.  Sigh.   Oh well, better to get it done than not know about it at all.
*
The television set hasn't been switched on since before Christmas.  Oh, I have watched a couple of movies on You Tube (seeing THE MONOLITH MONSTERS again was a real treat, haven't seen it in fifty years).   In the milder weather, I have been eating my meals out on the patio, and I have a new radio by the back door -- i was initially attracted to it because it has both a cassette deck and bluetooth, a hybrid of two different centuries.   This means I can listen to old radio shows while I eat.

Over the last couple of weeks, I've listened to HAVE GUN WILL TRAVEL, FRONTIER GENTLEMAN, THE HERMIT'S CAVE, THE HAUNTING HOUR, GANGBUSTERS, THE WHISTLER, ESCAPE, WILD BILL HICKOK, THE SEALED BOOK, DRAGNET, CHALLENGE OF THE YUKON, THE CISCO KID, and HOPALONG CASSIDY.

Monday, December 11, 2023

Memories


While I was sitting out the back having my morning serve of tea & toast, I was flipping through a magazine and looked at one of their short stories; it turned out to be about a brother and sister who didn't get on in younger years but came to love and respect each other as they grew up.  The story ends with the brother proudly being part of the wedding of his younger sister.

After I finished reading, I closed the magazine and sat there lost in my thoughts for a while.  What were the odds, I pondered.   Just this morning, Facebook had reminded me that it was seven years to the day I had been best man at the wedding of my younger sister.  I'll never forget how happy she looked that day.

We miss you, Julie.   God bless.

*

Even last Sunday was busy this week.  I read from the Old Testament at the communion service this morning (and got the usual two or three comments from the parishioners - maybe I should start selling my autograph for the missionary fund).

Then picked up three bags of feed from the Animal Tucker Box store.  Home for a light lunch and closed my eyes for an hour.  Went next door to a birthday party for my neighbor's big-seven-oh celebration.  The family dogs didn't seem upset by all the visitors, though one of them brought her ball in and kept dropping it at stranger's feet and looking hopefully at them. 

*


Here's a poem I wrote back in 2014:


A MONDAY POEM

Somehow 

at this time of life 

the day seems to go out of focus

so easily. 

Too much coffee

or maybe too little. 

You feel as though 

in some way

you haven't quite connected

with reality. 

It's all -- somewhere a little removed. 

You run on tramlines of routine,

vaguely baffled by your own steadfastness.

The things you used to love

no longer give you the same pleasure. 

The things which were a chore 

are so familiar 

they no longer

even bore you.

Voices on the radio 

talk of interesting things

and play new pieces of music 

but it seems to come 

from a space station 

in orbit 

around some other planet. 

The calendars and diaries

tell of an old year ending

and a new year beginning, 

but there are none 

of the markers you were used to. 

Where are the cards 

from those uncles and aunts, 

so punctual every year?

All gone, every one of them.

And you realize that now

you are the older generation.


Monday, October 30, 2023

Down I go again !

 


Broke my glasses again.  Don't really know how it happened.   Last year when I had my first bad fall, I could sort of understand it -- I was walking uphill in the dark when I lost my balance.  But this time?  I went out to vote on Friday, got out of my car, took two steps and down I went.

I hit my nose when I went down, so a gratifyingly large number of people appeared from all directions when they saw me lying there bleeding profusely.  At the hospital, they gave all the usual tests - scans, X-rays, blood tests, and the old "I'm going to shine this light in your eye" standard.   A paramedic asked me if I knew the date and I replied less than enthusiastically "Yes, it's Friday the 13th !"

One young nurse leaned over me and said "I want you to grasp my hands and pull me towards you..."   I thought my luck had changed, but she was just testing me.

Later, when I was beginning to feel very dry, two nurses came in and one said
"You might be a bit dehydrated.  Could you drink these two bottles of water in thirty minutes?"   I said "I'll give it a go!"  I must have had a gleam in my eye because I heard the other nurse murmur "Challenge accepted."

They finally let me go home about 7.15  -  as I sat in the cab going home, I was vaguely surprised to see the sun was only just going down.  it felt like I'd been in the hospital for a whole day.  Needless to say I took two paracetemol and went to bed early.

 ---------------------------------------------

Once again I thank You Tube and the Internet Archive for uploading so many great movies.

 AGAIN THE RINGER  [1965]  Neues vom Hexer
Another German movie based on Edgar Wallace's novels.   This one features Heinz Drache as Inspector Wesby, the previous sleuth having been married off in the last movie.   A rich but unlikeable man is murdered and the killer tries to blame the crime on the notorious vigilante The Ringer.   Any reader of thrillers will know this is a bad idea and the Ringer is on the next plane to London to clear his name.  Two notable things  -  firstly, two of the leading ladies are played by Barbara Rutting and Brigitte Horney (really!) and secondly how did they do that scene where a young boy is locked in a room full of tigers but he makes friends with them???

PLAGUE OF THE ZOMBIES  [1966]
Hammer Films' only zombie movie and one of their better thrillers.  A visit to Cornwall in  1860 by an eminent doctor ends in the discovery that a local squire is using the reanimated dead to work in his tin mine!  Good perforances by Andre Morell and Jacqueline Pearce [pictured] who madc this movie back-to-back with THE REPTILE.  Michael Ripper is the village policeman.

 

RAID ON ENTEBBE [1977]
TV movie based on the 1976 hijacking of an airliner.  Packed with familiar faces.    There have been three or four movies based on this incident -- at two and a half hours this one is a bit long and I wasn't surprised to hear that 20 minutes were cut for the theatrical and home video releases.

LONDON BY NIGHT  [1937]
Amiable little mystery B-movie featuring George Murphy, better known for his song and dance roles.  Here he's an American newsman in foggy London who becomes involved in the hunt for a serial killer known only as The Umbrella Man.  With the help of his dog, a beautiful socialite and Scotland Yard man George Zucco, he tracks down the killer.   All Is Not What It Seems.

MAN BEAST [1956]
Reputedly the second movie ever made about the  Abominable Snowman, and debut production for director Jerry Warren.  Lots of stock footage spliced into the mountain scenes make this movie look better than any ultra-low-budget film has a right to.  Vexingly, the start of one vital scene seems to be lost (but you can guess what was said without much trouble).


THE SLIME PEOPLE   [1963]
A group of refugees battle for survival after Los Angeles is invaded by a subterranean race of reptiles.   Robert Hutton starred and directed, but the result is a thoroughly generic horror flick.   Most of the budget seems to have gone on the fog machine and the nasty-looking creature suits.

FROM LIFE  [2018]
Could you make a version of THE SIXTH SENSE that only runs 8 minutes?  Director Uli Meyer has done it.  See it on the Omleto channel on You Tube.

INVADERS FROM SPACE  [1965]
One of four "movies" edited from the Japanese television show about super-hero Starman.   This one is supposed to be the best of the four  -- heaven help us if that is true!

SHARKNADO 3
Following on from the inexplicably successful tongue-in-cheek action movie SHARKNADO,  it's clear that the law of diminishing returns has set in, as it often does with movie series.  Probably the stupidest film I've seen this year.

BRIDE OF THE GORILLA [1951]
Jungle film noir !  Barney  (Raymond Burr) kills his elderly employer in order to get to his beautiful wife (Barbara Payton). However, an old native witch witnesses the crime and poisons Barney, who soon after finds himself turning nightly into a rampaging gorilla. But is it real or is it all in his head?  Director Curt Siodmak also wrote the screenplay, perhaps harking back to his script for the first Wolfman film.  Also starring are Lon Chaney (the original WOLFMAN)  and Tom Conway (who had similar problems in THE CAT PEOPLE).    Tolerable B-movie stuff.

GHIDORAH THE THREE-HEADED MONSTER   [1964]
Lots happens in this one, but basically a princess prophecies the arrival of space monster Ghidorah and the possible doom of humanity.  Can Mothra persuade Godzilla and Rodan to unite and save the Earth?   Considered by some to be one of the best of the early Godzilla movies.

POLICE DOG  [1955]
Both my sisters would have loved this movie.  They were big fans of the TV series INSPECTOR REX.  In fact the dog in this one is also called Rex!  Supporting cast includes John Le Mesurier and a young Christopher Lee.

HOUSE OF THE DAMNED [1963]
Marketed as a horror movie, but actually a suspense story about a supposedly haunted house.  Ron Foster and Merry Anders are pleasant as the leads, and black-and-white Cinemascope makes the movie look good.  This is one of three movies director Maury Dexter made at the Greystone mansion in Los Angeles.

MURDER IN TIMES SQUARE  [1943]
Edmund Lowe is a struggling playwright who finally has a hit on Broadway.  But an irascible old woman puts a curse on him and he's soon implicated in a string of "snakebite murders".   Passable B-movie thriller with some telling dialogue about the nature of fame.  Imagine if Damon Runyon and Edgar Wallace had met and decided to write a script together......