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Friday, December 25, 2020

'Merry Christmas from the Family

You can tell a lot about a person by the way they handle three things: a rainy day, lost luggage and tangled Christmas tree lights.

- Maya Angelou

 

  Here’s something for you and your kids – 17 minutes of Warmth, Fun, Creativity and great Storytelling – it made my heart sing.  I hope it does the same for you and your loved ones. 

Christmas in Grasmere


I've heard about this baby boy
Who's come to earth to bring us joy
And I just want to sing this song to you
It goes like this, the fourth, the fifth
The minor fall, the major lift
With every breath I'm singing Hallelujah
Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah

A Hallelujah Christmas by Cloverton



Listen to a random forest – “People around the world recorded the sounds of their forests, so you can escape into nature, while in lockdown or unable to travel. Use this site to chill, meditate or do some digital shinrin-yoku. And while you are here, why not help to grow what keeps us alive? Wildfires, governments and corporation are still destroying our forests. Our grandchildren should have trees to climb. So let’s take some action…”



It’s the summer solstice, the shortest day and longest night of the year. Today we witness the “Great Conjunction,” when Jupiter passes 0.1° south of Saturn at 9 a.m. (EST) – a distance equivalent to roughly one-fifth the diameter of the full moon. At twilight, low in the southwestern sky, the alignment will become visible as the Christmas Star. The planets haven’t been this close and visible since 1226. More reasons to celebrate: December 21 is the birthday of Rebecca West (1892), Anthony Powell (1905) and Frank Zappa (1940). In this squalid age, taking my cue from Nige, the buoyant blogger, I see reasons to be cheerful. 

Rebecca West surprises me by saying in her Paris Review interview: “Well, I longed, when I was young, to write as well as Mark Twain. It’s beautiful stuff and I always liked him. If I wanted to write anything that attacked anybody, I used to have a look at his attack on Christian Science, which is beautifully written. He was a man of very great shrewdness.”

 

Anthony Powell has this to say about cowboys and narrative: “A sort of ignorance makes writing easier, I think. Simplification makes it easier. Take a fairly low form of novel narrative. You can write about cowboys perfectly easily, but you don’t contemplate what their inner troubles are, only Indians, broncos, etc. Nobody bothers what a cowboy’s psychology is like. (They probably do, nowadays. I don’t mean Midnight ones.)”

 

Frank Zappa would have turned eighty today. Listen to his 1969 cover of the Four Deuces’ 1956 hit “W-P-L-J.”

 

Lately, the song that has made me happiest is Count Basie’s “Shoe Shine Boy” (1936), with the great Lester Young solo.

 

On Sunday afternoon we attended the annual cul de sac Christmas party in front of our house. It was good to see so many kids and socially distanced neighbors, several of whom are musicians. They set up a stage and covered, among other things, the funniest Christmas song I know, Robert Earl Keen’s “Merry Christmas from the Family.”



Claim: We’re In A Literary Drought

Joseph Epstein: “Rich literary periods are often followed by stagnant ones. We in the United States, but not we alone, are now going through such a stagnant period. What is the last novel you can think of that caused a genuine stir?” – National Review