REMEMBER when motherhood meant being more concerned about your child than your sexiness?
But I am not going to criticize Kim Kardashian here as she is too easy a target.
But it got me to thinking what other things are also dying in our society --
LIBRARIES --
Keith Wynn (Optimistic Existentialist)
He wrote how libraries had been magical places when a child. Me, too.
I remember when I sat in a darkened corner of a library and saw in my mind when Triton rose up out of a wine-dark sea, blowing death from his spiral horn.
I remember when I sat in a darkened corner of a library and saw in my mind when Triton rose up out of a wine-dark sea, blowing death from his spiral horn.
Edith Hamilton's MYTHOLOGY was tucked happily under my arm that day.
But the Day of the Library may be nearing its end:
Library patrons want more e-book choices, but libraries can’t afford to
purchase e-books at the inflated prices.
Effectively, libraries are
leeching money by purchasing fewer e-books at higher prices to keep
patrons happy.
Where will we take our future children to discover and enjoy reading if
libraries are gone? Where can I go to browse the shelves for weird
books?
“In a good bookroom you feel in some mysterious way that you are
absorbing the wisdom contained in all the books through your skin,
without even opening them.”
― Mark Twain
― Mark Twain
“I like libraries. It makes me feel comfortable and secure to have
walls of words, beautiful and wise, all around me. I always feel better
when I can see that there is something to hold back the shadows.”
― Roger Zelazny
― Roger Zelazny
Have you lost any favorite comic strips lately?
The
print industry is dying. Newspapers were the first to sink with
magazines following close behind. Now print books are dying as well.
One problem with the dying newspaper industry is that comic strips are disappearing as well.
In the old days, every newspaper had a comics page so every newspaper was a potential market for a new comic strip.
One problem with the dying newspaper industry is that comic strips are disappearing as well.
In the old days, every newspaper had a comics page so every newspaper was a potential market for a new comic strip.
CALVIN & HOBBES and PEANUTS were the last strips I daily read.
I've just bought a collection of the first year of ALLY OOP strips
to bring back the wistful dreams of childhood when I read the last of his strips as a young boy.
to bring back the wistful dreams of childhood when I read the last of his strips as a young boy.
Do you look forward to reading any comic strips daily?
The Fading Art of Letter Writing
Letter-writing is among our most ancient of arts.
Think of letters and
the mind falls on Paul of Tarsus, Abraham Lincoln, Jane Austen, Mark
Twain;
OR love letters written during the American Civil War, or letters
written to a parent by a frightened soldier at the battlefront.
A good handwritten letter is a creative act, and not just because it is a
visual and tactile pleasure.
It is a deliberate act of exposure, a form
of vulnerability,
because handwriting opens a window on the soul in a
way that cyber communication can never do.
You savor their arrival and
later take care to place them in a box for safe keeping.
Yes, e-mail is a wonderful invention.
It links people across the world,
destroying in an instant the hurdle of geography that confronts snail
mail.
Yet it is by its nature ephemeral and lacks the spark of character
that only handwriting can provide.
When you get an e-mail, you can
never be sure that you are the only recipient — or even that it’s
original.
We have always liked to pore over the letters of great figures like
Winston Churchill and Abigail Adams for the insight this offers into
their lives:
the writing, the crossings-out, the very feel of history on
paper.
I MISS WRITING THAT CONTAINS EMOTIONS RATHER THAN EMOTICONS.
WHAT ABOUT YOU?





