Sunday Dawg Day

Nature vs Nurture

Bouncy fluffy farmer’s pup
Fluffy bouncy baby sheep

Charging round the busy yard
Round the guarded field he leaps

Chasing angry butterflies
Head butting bossy relations

Unaware of their destinies
Or their impending integration

Dog & Sheep
Sheep & Dog

Alas friendship is not to be
For each will have a job to do

Sheep
Dog

Sheepdog


Ya, ya… it’s still morning and I’m not yet awake. It was better in my head. But it fulfils the remit of “poem” so there…

Saturday Reflection: Examine your source

Someone was trying to promote a Youtuber [Dr. John Campbell, RN, PhD] (https://www.youtube.com/c/Campbellteaching) as giving the expert advice on Covid. I poo-poo’d him and he took umbrance, accusing me of not even looking at his credentials:

Originally Posted by Midnight Son
He teaches Nursing in a Northern England University and is interviewed quite often on DW the German Television Network, about Covid issues.

So look before you bark please.

I told him I did look… And I had, I’d dismissed the guy months before because…well…


Seriously you actively want people to turn to YouTube for the “truth” on a subject as broad and deep as this pandemic? If I want to find out what’s the deal with Log4J or why the latest Space X blew up I totally go to YouTube and watch a synopsis. But I don’t walk away thinking I know anything more than a supposed SME can dumb down and squeeze into the 20 minute video format. And who know just how educated the presenter is or what his agenda is? All I have is a briefest whiff of the issue.

But our egos always make fools of us don’t they? There is a humorous trope in Universities that involves the undergraduate — having taken 40 hours of any given subject — spouting off like he was going to solve the world’s ill in one brilliant stroke (see Good Will Hunting for a fictionalization of this — I’ve see it in real life). Sometime they grow out of it, sometimes they don’t.

This stuff is complex. 80% of the people on these forums (and in the “real” world) just can’t/won’t wrap their head around that and so are just looking for the quick fix. They are like the supplicant going to the parish priest looking for the meaning of life…if that priest actually knew it I highly doubt he would be a lowly parish priest. Instead the priest does what he is good at and explains it some way the poor sod is capable of grasping and sends him away to contemplate his own ignorance.

But what of the other 20% (he says liberally making up statistics)? Some give facts as they see them and leave it up to us to recognize the depth of our cluelessness and some valiantly try to impart the, admittedly greater, knowledge they hold—of course they too often express that understanding as “fact” thus adding to the level of general misinformation. But a few accurate units of knowledge doesn’t mean they—or any youtube/twitter/self-proclaimed virologist/generic expert — can correctly interpret what’s going on out there any more than the parish priest. It’s complex. Thousands and thousands of scientists from many, many disciplines complex.

I’ve got 6 years of studying renaissance drama under my belt, some of that at the graduate level, and I tell you it is with profound humility that I approach the topic of Shakespeare and Marlowe. The depths of what I don’t know astound me and just catching up on the scholarship I have missed over the last 20 years would probably break me.

Dr. Campbell is not a virologist. He is not a sociologist. He is not an expert in international relations, internal medicine, supply-chain management, economics, city management or even bio-chemistry. He doesn’t know how to make a vaccine, distribute it, budget it, or figure out how to get a scared and/or ignorant population to take it. He doesn’t know the social and psychological factors that differentiate Canada from the US, or Britain from Australia and the unique political systems that each follows, and he sure as h*ll doesn’t know what backwoods Africa or India is making of all this.

What he is, is a teacher. So he is trying. Unfortunately — unlike the ill-educated high school English teacher I had that harmlessly tried to convince us that Shakespeare thought all nuns were whores — he has a world wide audience and is frankly, to me, so far from harmless as to be an active danger to the public weal.

So ya. I do comprehend…at least that little bit. The rest I am, like the rest of us, desperately struggling with. Rant over.

Sunday Poem Day

Seeing Spots

Ferocious cloud leopard
hidden in the rocks

Invisible predator
silent and deadly

creep
creep
creep

creep

An explosion
    of ferocity
Escape is impossible
entwined bodies roll and writhe
The prey is vanquished

Then Mama rises
knocking her kitten to the ground
Her long rough tongue
caresses the successful offspring

Learning to hunt is hard work.

Saturday Reflections

I know, I know 2 posts in a day…if you are looking for the annual book post scroll down.

But I think, once again, I will try to write “every day” in 2022. I did it back in 2012 (see link above) to bizarre effect and since have had sporadicly poor success at writing anything consistently.

The 2022 Rules

  • I will try and write something coherent e.g. fiction of some sort.
  • I believe I will take the weekends off from that stream and instead try to continue “Saturday Reflections” and maybe something like Sunday Poem-Day
  • At this point (I have two days to decide) I think I will keep the weekday writing offline — or perhaps start a new blog/subdomain. I will update later.
  • I will start with just tagging them writing and decided later if I want to move these maundering into a category (spoiler: I expect I will)

The point

Preventing brain fog? A curiosity to see if I can actually be more productive? An attempt to create a sense of order? A desire to be independently solvent (rich seems a bit much to ask for)? Ongoing Earl jealousy?

Today’s thoughts

Netflix, Youtube et al.

I mentioned on Earl’s blog that I had watched very few movies this past year. But what we have watched is a lot of sitcom-ish stuff like Modern Family, The Muppets, Letterkenney, Rick and Morty and a ton of British panel/comedy shows. It turns out I am increasing enjoying European (is British European anymore?) stuff.

Australia

Not really but the producers and original movie was Australian. What We Do in the Shadows is a mockumentary about vampires living in Staten Island. It also stars Matt Berry who is one of those sneaks-up-on-you-from-behind funny guys that I first encountered as a boss on The IT Crowd. Only 3 seasons but well worth a watch if you can find it!

L reminds me we also watched Aunty Donna’s Big Ol’ House of Fun. Very, very… err…pythonesque? Aunty Donna is a comedy trio from Australia and they are pretty darn funny in that bizarro way…

France

I highly recommend Lupin. Two series of 5 parts with a third promised. Very clever and suspenseful and with that perfect gentleman-thief vibe. If you know French at all you have the added enjoyment of arguing with the subtitle translator’s choices. Quite bizarre sometimes.

We also watched and enjoyed Dix pour cent which was strangely and, in my opinion, detrimentally translated to Call my Agent!. It has 4 seasons and a promised movie reunion coming soon. Very soap-opera but the French take keeps it from seeming inane like Dallas et al. We really enjoyed it.

Britain

We worked our way through Stephen Fry’s (and now Sandi Toksvig) QI. Funny and smart. And you learn (and relearn) so much…

8 out of 10 Cats Does Countdown is a must see. Countdown is a Jeopardy-type show involving solving anagrams and math problems and has been on the air forever. 8 out of 10 Cats was/is a comedy panel show hosted by Jimmy Carr with Sean Lock and Jon Richardson as team captains. Back in 2012 Channel 4 had a Mashup event where they mashed up a bunch of different shows from their channel into a special. 8 out of 10 Cats Does Countdown was a huge success and now is produced (alongside the originals) with 5–8 episodes every year.

We also started in on Mock the Week hosted by Dara Ó Briain and are slowly making our way to the present. There are currently 20 seasons starting way back in 2005 and we are somewhere in Season 10. Funny, irreverent and you learn a lot about Britain’s political and social scenes. We are still in the Obama era and I am looking forward to the Trump period…

TaskMaster has also been a highlight. Greg Davies and Alex Horne have made a fantastic series where celebrities are challenged to do ridiculous things. Another one we are all caught up in (12 series so far) and looking forward to the next season.


Suffice it say we have had our share of belly laughs this long dismal year. Thank god for British humour. And Youtube. And friends with Hulu.

Books 2021—The Last Year of the Covid

Year 10

What’s that about? 10 years? For all my mumbling I should stop, it seems I am addicted to counting. Could it be I am The Count’s illegitimate love child? His twin brother who for years was trapped in a foam mask? His doppelgänger recently unfrozen from the Antarctic ice?

Well…maybe not. With no further silliness, I present Year of the Covid: Part II — The Readening…


January (11)

  • The Sundering Walter Jon Williams (2003)
    Book 2 of Dread Empire’s Fall – ebook;
  • Praxis Walter Jon Williams (2002)
    Book 1 of Dread Empire’s Fall – ebook;
  • Conventions of War Walter Jon Williams (2005)
    Book 3 of Dread Empire’s Fall – ebook;
  • The Burning God R. F. Kuang (2020)
    Book 3 of The Poppy War – ebook;
  • Plague Ship Andre Norton (1956)
    Book 2 of Solar Queen – ebook;
  • A Sky Beyond the Storm Sabaa Tahir (2020)
    Book 4 of An Ember in the Ashes – ebook;
  • Investments Walter Jon Williams (2012)
    Book 3.5 of Dread Empire’s Fall – ebook;
  • Impersonations Walter Jon Williams (2016)
    Book 3.5 of Dread Empire’s Fall – ebook;
  • Silver in the Wood Emily Tesh (2019)
    – ebook;
  • Blood and Circuses Kerry Greenwood (1994)
    Book 6 of Phryne Fisher Mysteries – ebook;
  • Hive Monkey Gareth L. Powell (2014)
    Book 2 of Ack-Ack Macaque – ebook;

February (11)

  • Machine Elizabeth Bear (2020)
    Book 2 of White Space – ebook;
  • Three Cheers for Me Donald Jack (1973)
    Book 1 of The Bandy Papers – ebook; reread
  • That’s Me in the Middle Donald Jack (1973)
    Book 2 of The Bandy Papers – ebook; reread
  • Uneasy Money P.G. Wodehouse (1916)
    – ebook;
  • A School For Scandal Richard Brinsley Sheridan (1777)
    – ebook; reread
  • It’s Me Again Donald Jack (1975)
    Book 3 of The Bandy Papers – ebook; reread
  • Me Bandy, You Cissie Donald Jack (1979)
    Book 4 of The Bandy Papers – ebook; reread
  • The Accidental War Walter Jon Williams (2018)
    Book 4 of Dread Empire’s Fall – ebook;
  • Fleet Elements Walter Jon Williams (2020)
    Book 5 of Dread Empire’s Fall – ebook;
  • Range of Ghosts Elizabeth Bear (2012)
    Book 1 of The Eternal Sky – ebook;
  • Shattered Pillars Elizabeth Bear (2013)
    Book 2 of The Eternal Sky – ebook;

March (9)

  • Steles of the Sky Elizabeth Bear (2014)
    Book 3 of The Eternal Sky – ebook;
  • Ruddy Gore Kerry Greenwood (1995)
    Book 7 of Phryne Fisher Mysteries – ebook;
  • An Apprentice to Elves Sarah Monette and Elizabeth Bear (2015)
    Book 3 of Iskryne – ebook;
  • Women and Economics Charlotte Perkins Gilman (1898)
    – ebook;
  • Unwind Neal Shusterman (2007)
    Book 1 of The Unwind dystology – ebook;
  • Black Tide Rising John Ringo & Gary Poole (2016)
    Book 4.5 of Black Tide Rising – ebook;
  • Tigana Guy Gavriel Kay (1990)
    – ebook;
  • Four-Day Planet H. Beam Piper (1961)
    – ebook;
  • The House in the Cerulean Sea TJ Klune (2020)
    – ebook;

April (11)

  • Foundation Isaac Asimov (1951)
    Book 1 of Foundation – ebook; reread
  • Foundation and Empire Isaac Asimov (1952)
    Book 2 of Foundation – ebook; reread
  • Second Foundation Isaac Asimov (1953)
    Book 3 of Foundation – ebook; reread
  • The Life of Buffalo Bill William F Cody (1879)
    – ebook;
  • Forever Peace Joe Haldeman (1998)
    – ebook;
  • The Lions of Al-Rassan Guy Gavriel Kay (1995)
    – ebook;
  • Witchmark C. L. Polk (2018)
    Book 1 of Kingston Cycle – ebook;
  • Stormsong C. L. Polk (2020)
    Book 2 of Kingston Cycle – ebook;
  • The Life of Olaudah Equiano Olaudah Equiano (1789)
    – ebook;
  • City of Lies Sam Hawke (2018)
    Book 1 of Poison Wars – ebook;
  • The Curse of Chalion Lois McMaster Bujold (2001)
    Book 1 of Chalion – ebook; reread

May (11)

  • Paladin of Souls Lois McMaster Bujold (2003)
    Book 2 of Chalion – ebook; reread
  • Urn Burial Kerry Greenwood (1996)
    Book 8 of Phryne Fisher Mysteries – ebook;
  • Soulstar C. L. Polk (2021)
    Book 3 of Kingston Cycle – ebook;
    On the Trail of the Space Pirates Carey Rockwell (1953)
    Book 3 of Tom Corbett – ebook;
  • A Brightness Long Ago Guy Gavriel Kay (2019)
    – ebook;
  • Hollow Empire Sam Hawke (2020)
    Book 2 of Poison Wars – ebook;
    The Dispatcher John Scalzi (2017)
    Book 1 of The Dispatcher – ebook;
    The Dispatcher: Murder by Other Means John Scalzi (2021)
    Book 2 of The Dispatcher – ebook;
  • In Fury Born David Weber (2005)
    – ebook; reread
  • Shadows in Flight Orson Scott Card (2012)
    Book 5 of Ender’s Shadow – ebook;
  • The Stars Are Legion Kameron Hurley (2017)
    – ebook;

June (8)

  • The Chrysalids John Wyndham (1955)
    – ebook; reread
  • A Desolation Called Peace Arkady Martine (2021)
    Book 2 of Teixcalaan – ebook;
  • The Assassins of Thasalon Lois McMaster Bujold (2021)
    Book 10 of Penric & Desdemona – ebook;
  • Fugitive Telemetry Martha Wells (2021)
    Book 6 of The Murderbot Diaries – ebook;
  • The Baron of Magister Valley Steven Brust (2020)
    – ebook;
  • Star Rebel F.M.Busby (1984)
    Book 1 of Hulzein – ebook; reread
  • Rebel’s Quest F.M.Busby (1985)
    Book 2 of Hulzein – ebook; reread
  • Zelde M’Tana F.M.Busby (1980)
    Book 4 of Rissa Kerguelen – ebook;

July (14)

  • Me Too Donald Jack (1983)
    Book 5 of The Bandy Papers – ebook; reread
  • This One’s On Me Donald Jack (1987)
    Book 6 of The Bandy Papers – ebook;
  • Short Stories P. G. Wodehouse (1901 ff)
    – ebook;
  • Rissa and Tregare F.M.Busby (1979)
    Book 2 of Rissa Kerguelen – ebook; reread
  • The Long View F.M.Busby (1976)
    Book 3 of Rissa Kerguelen – ebook;
  • The Goblin Emperor Katherine Addison (2014)
    – ebook;
  • Tartuffe Molière (1664)
    – ebook;
  • Me So Far Donald Jack (1989)
    Book 7 of The Bandy Papers – ebook;
  • The Jew of Malta Christopher Marlowe (1589)
    – ebook;
  • Alien Debt F.M.Busby (1984)
    Book 3 of Hulzein – ebook;
  • Systemic Shock Dean Ing (1981)
    Book 1 of Quantrill – ebook;
  • Single Combat Dean Ing (1983)
    Book 2 of Quantrill – ebook; reread
  • The Country Wife William Wycherley (1675)
    – ebook;
  • Wild Country Dean Ing (1985)
    Book 3 of Quantrill – ebook;

August (8)

  • Hitler vs Me Donald Jack (1997)
    Book 8 of The Bandy Papers – ebook;
  • Stalin vs Me Donald Jack (2005)
    Book 9 of The Bandy Papers – ebook;
  • Velocity Weapon Megan E. O’Keefe (2019)
    Book 1 of Protectorate – ebook; reread
  • Chaos Vector Megan E. O’Keefe (2020)
    Book 2 of Protectorate – ebook;
  • Catalyst Gate Megan E. O’Keefe (2021)
    Book 3 of Protectorate – ebook;
  • The Witness for the Dead Katherine Addison (2021)
    Book 2.0 of Goblin Emperor – ebook;
  • Raisins and Almonds Kerry Greenwood (1997)
    Book 9 of Phryne Fisher Mysteries – ebook;
  • Rebels’ Seed F.M.Busby (1986)
    Book 4 of Hulzein – ebook;

September (8)

  • Architects of Memory Karen Osborne (2020)
    Book 1 of The Memory War – ebook;
  • Engines of Oblivion Karen Osborne (2021)
    Book 2 of The Memory War – ebook;
  • Oath of Swords David Weber (1995)
    Book 1 of Bahnakson – ebook; reread
  • The War God’s Own David Weber (1998)
    Book 2 of Bahnakson – ebook; reread
  • Wind Rider’s Oath David Weber (2004)
    Book 3 of Bahnakson – ebook; reread
  • A Summoning of Demons Cate Glass (2021)
    Book 3 of Chimera – ebook;
  • War Maid’s Choice David Weber (2012)
    Book 4 of Bahnakson – ebook; reread
  • The Paladin C.J. Cherryh (1998)
    – ebook; reread

October (11)

  • Guardians of Porthaven Shane Arbuthnott (2021)
    – ebook;
  • Her Majesty’s Wizard Christopher Stasheff (1986)
    Book 1 of A Wizard in Rhyme – ebook; reread
  • The Element of Fire Martha Wells (1993)
    Book 1 of Ile-Rien – ebook;
  • Sheepfarmer’s Daughter Elizabeth Moon (1988)
    Book 1 of The Deed of Paksenarrion – ebook; reread
  • Divided Allegiance Elizabeth Moon (1988)
    Book 2 of The Deed of Paksenarrion – ebook; reread
  • Oath of Gold Elizabeth Moon (1989)
    Book 3 of The Deed of Paksenarrion – ebook; reread
  • Victories Greater Than Death Charlie Jane Anders (2021)
    – ebook;
  • Cultivar Sharon Lee & Steve Miller (2017)
    Book 25 of Liaden Adventures – ebook;
  • The Death of the Necromancer Martha Wells (1998)
    Book 2 of Ile-Rien – ebook;
  • The Witches of Karres James H. Schmitz (1966)
    – ebook; reread
  • A Deadly Education Naomi Novik (2020)
    Book 1 of Scholomance – ebook; reread

November (8)

  • The Last Graduate Naomi Novik (2021)
    Book 2 of Scholomance – ebook;
  • Finder Suzanne Palmer (2019)
    Book 1 of The Finder Chronicles – ebook
  • Driving the Deep Suzanne Palmer (2020)
    Book 2 of The Finder Chronicles – ebook
  • The Scavenger Door Suzanne Palmer (2021)
    Book 3 of The Finder Chronicles – ebook
  • The Oathbound Wizard Christopher Stasheff (1993)
    Book 2 of A Wizard in Rhyme – ebook; reread
  • The Last Watch J. S. Dewes (2021)
    Book 1 of The Divide – ebook;
  • Penric’s Demon Lois McMaster Bujold (2015)
    Book 1 of Penric & Desdemona – ebook; reread
  • Penric and the Shaman Lois McMaster Bujold (2017)
    Book 2 of Penric & Desdemona – ebook; reread

December (14)

  • Penric’s Fox Lois McMaster Bujold (2018)
    Book 5 of Penric & Desdemona – ebook; reread
  • Masquerade in Lodi Lois McMaster Bujold (2020)
    Book 8 of Penric & Desdemona – ebook; reread
  • Penric’s Mission Lois McMaster Bujold (2017)
    Book 3 of Penric & Desdemona – ebook; reread
  • Mira’s Last Dance Lois McMaster Bujold (2018)
    Book 4 of Penric & Desdemona – ebook; reread
  • Prisoner of Limnos Lois McMaster Bujold (2019)
    Book 6 of Penric & Desdemona – ebook; reread
  • The Orphans of Raspay Lois McMaster Bujold (2019)
    Book 7 of Penric & Desdemona – ebook; reread
  • The Physicians of Vilnoc Lois McMaster Bujold (2020)
    Book 9 of Penric & Desdemona – ebook; reread
  • The Assassins of Thasalon Lois McMaster Bujold (2021)
    Book 10 of Penric & Desdemona – ebook; reread
  • Knot of Shadows Lois McMaster Bujold (2021)
    Book 11 of Penric & Desdemona – ebook;
  • The Exiled Fleet J. S. Dewes (2021)
    Book 2 of The Divide – ebook;
  • The Witch Doctor Christopher Stasheff (1994)
    Book 3 of A Wizard in Rhyme – ebook;
  • The Devil You Know Kit Rocha (2021)
    Book 2 of Mercenary Librarians – ebook;
  • Live Free or Die John Ringo (2010)
    Book 1 of Troy Rising – ebook; reread
  • Citadel John Ringo (2011)
    Book 2 of Troy Rising – ebook; reread

((\
(-.-)
o_(“)(“)


Numéro dix

Quel est le nombre?

read 124
rereads 42
10.3 books/month
2.38 books/week
.34 books/day:

Books by women: 57
Oldest 1589 (- The Jew of Malta)
2021 18
2020 14

Unread? Not so much!

The ebook library sits at 966 these days. I imagine I will break 1000 sometime this year. Of those the dreaded unread count is now a much more reasonable number than a mere two years ago. Ah, but just what is that number? To answer that oh-so-pertinent question, let’s indulge in some logic, math and philosophy:

Unread according to the library software: 37 books
Classics and other books in the “backup, but not likely to ever read stack”: 13 books
Phryne Fisher: 12 books (see below)
Christopher Stasheff: 2 (see below)
37-13-12-2=10
Total Unread according to me: 10 books!

The logic

Well, I really have only had those “classics” in my library as emergency backups and I legit don’t foresee a future where I say to myself “Hey self, don’t you think we should ditch all those books you really want to read and just tackle Middlemarch?” So I think I can discount them.

The Phryne books? Well those are L’s. I just “borrowed” them in case I wanted to read them. Not my pile. 🙂 From last year:

I’ve only read 5 so far but that forced me to file the other 15 in my to-be-read ‘pile’ rather than dump them as I had originally intended.

I’ve read up to book 9 now.

As to the two Stasheff titles, well, it’s a conundrum and I think they will be going to the big digital trashcan in the sky if I can bring myself to do it.

Not aging well?

I read Her Majesty’s Wizard by Christopher Stasheff many years ago and loved it—the oldest version of it is a tattered paperback in my hardcopy collection, one that has been read many times since. I also read the sequel The Oathbound Wizard at some point but I never actually bought it and didn’t really remember much about it (which should have been a clue). This year I realized Stasheff had written another 3 follow-ups and decided to acquire them. A decision I think I regret.

Book 3 of a “Wizard in Rhyme” was The Witch Doctor and it was really, really disappointing. I don’t know if Stasheff was getting old and tired and just didn’t care or if he had fallen into some self-indulgent trap of believing that the philosophical questions raised in book one could be rehashed a bunch more times in what is essentially an light-hearted fantasy series without boring the crap out of his readers—but whatever the reason it really, really dragged. AND he actually repeated a complete scene from a previous book, just not-so-subtlety replacing a few words and plunking in the current protagonists. I mean WTF Christopher? I so have no incentive to read the next two.

But this brings up an interesting digital-age question. Deleting and ownership… since the bizarre, ridiculous and completely bogus rules surrounding ebooks means I don’t “technically” own any of my ebooks, throwing one away (aka deleting) is potentially a much more casual act than physically chucking a 300-page paper book in the garbage—something, fwiw, I have never done.

I’m just not sure I can do it though. And I am legally (and I admit morally) constrained from giving the book away which is what I would “normally” do (not that I have done that either…I think I am a bit of a hoarder…but I am guess a lot of you understand where I am coming from…at least when it comes to books…but at least I am not as bad as L…now there is someone with a problem…)…

Where was I? Oh, right. Well I guess only time will tell. Keep, chuck or give away? I guess I will let you know next year.

Novellas, profit and loss, and making money in publishing

Some interesting trends out there. If one pays any attention at all to John Scalzi, one can’t help but admire his very workmanlike approach to being a professional writer. He unabashedly admits he is in it to make a living — and as a result explores a lot of avenues writers have traditionally ignored. Among other things he has dabbled in serial publishing and audiobook-first publications. As a result he’s managed to net himself an unprecedented 3.4 million dollar, 10-year book contract and sell a lot of tv/movie rights. Nothing has been produced yet but time will tell. Good on him.

And novellas are a thing now. Lois McMaster Bujold, one of my favs, has been publishing the “Penric” novellas for a bunch of years now and as far as I can tell after the first one her agents took over the role of publisher. The first one’s metadata listed : Publisher: CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform but lately it seems to be: Publisher: Spectrum Literary Agency, Inc.

She has written and released 10 novellas and one full-length novel since 2016 (all ebooks) which is pretty good output. Unlike some other “self-published” short works by mainstream writers I have encountered these seemed to be well-edited (or maybe she is just that good?) and professionally produced. And, like Scalzi, Subterranean Press have picked up the hardcopy/special edition rights.

This has resulted in Baen picking up the first ones and publishing them again in a couple of omnibus editions. This is a great business model and I hope she makes scads of money from this approach. My only real beef is that Amazon seems to be the distributor of choice and it forces me to buy and crack the azw files — which I would rather not be forced do, especially as Amazon might some day change their formats (again) and I won’t be able to do it anymore. I would truly hate to miss a Penric book…

Series Completion

It was good years for finishing serieses (sic). I bring this up because I won’t be finishing “The Divide” series by J. S. Dewes. That’s because since the first two books were released in 2021, I foolishly let myself get sucked into reading them, and they were good, maybe even great. But now I suspect she turned in an overly-large book one and the publisher decided to break it up into 2 books because Book 3 apparently isn’t due until 2023… oooh I hate waiting!

Finished!

Some of these I started decades ago and either didn’t realize there were sequels/prequels or couldn’t find them in a proper format. I also can’t guarantee that a few of them are “really” finished, but time, as they say, will tell…

Book 4 of An Ember in the Ashes – Sabaa Tahir
Book 5 of Dread Empire’s Fall – Walter Jon Williams
Book 3 of The Eternal Sky – Elizabeth Bear
Book 3 of Iskryne – Sarah Monette and Elizabeth Bear
Book 3 of Kingston Cycle C. L. Polk
Book 3 of Quantrill – Dean Ing
Book 9 of The Bandy Papers – Donald Jack
Book 3 of Protectorate – Megan E. O’Keefe
Book 4 of Hulzein – F. M.Busby
Book 3 of Chimera – Cate Glass
Book 3 of The Finder Chronicles – Suzanne Palmer

In the new year:

These two are on my list for January and should be done within spitting distance of this post:

Fonda Lee’s The Green Bone Saga: Jade Legacy
James Corey’s Expanse: Leviathan Falls

In conclusion

It was a great year for reading. I hope some of the books I listed appeal to you. There are very, very few I would hesitate to recommend. But if you want some…

  • Silver in the Wood Emily Tesh (2019) drove me to the edge before redeeming itself. A great read.
  • The Life of Buffalo Bill William F. Cody (1879) is worth it for the historical perspective, especially in these days where we wonder where we came up with some of our more idiotic beliefs. I also read The Life of Olaudah Equiano Olaudah Equiano (1789) at the same time and feel the same way.
  • The Goblin Emperor Katherine Addison (2014) was one of those rare internet recommendations that turns out to be spot on.
  • A Deadly Education Naomi Novik (2020) and the sequel The Last Graduate. Loved the first one and the second is a worthy successor. Beware the cliffhanger endings.
  • The Last Watch J. S. Dewes (2021) As noted watch out for the missing book 3. It doesn’t really leave you hanging though.

Have a great 2022!


My fellow book counters: (Coming soon!) Dr. Leslie’s 2021 book and music list and the one, the only, the original, Earl J Woods’ Books I Read.

Links to previous years’ book count posts:

Rsync…

Or, How tech support isn’t all that supportive

In our last exciting instalment we were quite happy with our new web home except for one feature…the lack of rsync. Today, the exciting conclusion…

The issue

I use Hugo to generate a static files for several of my sites. One Hugo site is hosted on Netlify and is based off GitHub. So all I do is edit the files and sync them to Github. Netlify then grabs the files, compiles them and updates the site. It’s a great system and, FWIW, completely free.

The other main site that employs Hugo is my professional site (astart.ca) and with it I went a different route. I make the changes and using a handy script from the Hugo site, I run a command — ./deploy — and it automatically compiles the site then uploads it immediately to my web host. Or at least it did. Rsync didn’t seem to work on my new host.

Call support

Of course in the new a modern age you can just click on a link and chat with support. So I did. They informed me that my shared hosting did not include root access and I would need root access to use rsync. If I wanted I could upgrade to a cloud server… only ~$43/month. Lol. Seriously ROTFL. I mean ROTFLMAO. That would magically transform my $148 cad investment into $1584. Did I mention Lol?

I thanked him politely and went looking for another solution.

Everything is somewhere on the internet

One search phrase and a couple of clicks later and I arrived here: http://oerinet.net/wordpress/synchronizing-files-with-rsync-on-godaddy-shared-hosting/. It was GoDaddy specific so I wasn’t 100% sure it work but what the heck. But it did. After following his instructions I had to change one word in my script as well as the login credentials and I was in like Flynn.

For posterity

So what I did was (all according to the above link):

ssh into the server — I had already set this up.

mkdir ~/bin

echo '#!/bin/bash'>~/.bash_profile
echo 'PATH="$HOME/bin:$PATH"'>>~/.bash_profile
chmod +x ~/.bash_profile
cd ~/bin
wget http://www.oerinet.net/files/godaddy_bin/rsync.gz
gunzip *.gz
chmod +x *

Grab the path

cd ~/bin
pwd

and edit the deploy script.

Abracadabra!

Sweet, sweet success

Apparently I could also install nano this way. I will have to grab his copy of the rsync and nano installers and store them somewhere. I am not sure if they are commonly available in single packages although I would guess they are…

Because “Everything is somewhere on the internet”

A New Home!

But hopefully you won’t notice.

I decided it was time

For a number of reasons I have been maundering about moving my webhosting and I finally made the leap. The last time I moved was back in January 2014. So it was time, right? The first move was January 2010 from a home server to GoDaddy… that was barely 4 years. Complacency must have set in.

The reasons? Well, in no particular order:

Speed

My old host was dreadfully slow sometimes and I could never figure out if it was my site design and years and years of clapping odds and sods together and shoddily attaching them to the site or just them. Moving gives me a chance to experiment with a new provider and to clean up a bunch of crud that has accumulated.

Money

2 more years of hosting on the old site was going to be $216 usd ($276 cad). Taking advantage of a “new customer” deal netted me 3 years for only $148 cad.

Canadian laws

I have become increasing disturbed by the slowly eroding privacy laws in the U.S. L had needed a Canadian-based server for her research project last fall and I did a bunch of research on Can-based hosts. Since I was moving, why not move to a Canadian company and avoid any increasingly privacy-creep that seems to be the American judicial system. And I know, it really is more symbolic that actual, but still. Oh, and it’s “buy Canada” too! So I get loyalty points.

Python

One of the things I noted when I was doing my research was that some hosting companies allowed python and ruby apps. It was a point of great frustration a few years ago that I had to host my apps on my home server. This new host allows such apps to be hosted. I probably won’t move my old ones now but any new apps can be hosted off my home site.

Downsides?

Time and effort

It took half a day of planning most of a day work to move everything and I am still not sure its been 100% successful. But I like puttering and I learned some shit so why not.

rsync

So far the only big downside is rsync doesn’t seem o work on the new host. I will have to ask when I get to that point. Rsync was what I used to deploy my hugo website automatically: syncing my desktop files to the server. I can use ftp in the mean time but just typing deploy was a great way to update things.

What do I spend this money for?


My new host! Oddly enough L’s research project is hosted here and they suffered a nigh-on-catastrophic breach this past summer. Luckily, at least for us, everything was restored pretty thoroughly. So why did I pick them? Well I figured that the security breach probably taught them a huge lesson and, at least for a while, they are going to have some pretty hot and up-to-date security in place. And all the reasons above.

And I learned a lesson about my own back-ups as well. 🙂

webhosting

I host a number of sites.
macblaze.ca—my personal home since 2005
neverforever.ca—our boating site
astart.ca—my professional site
theboozephiles.com— my, L’s, C’s and Z’s cocktail site. Check it out if you like booze!
beakerwood.ca—my brother’s woodworking site. permanently under construction these days

And two more for C which are little more than placeholders but I keep hoping she will let me make her some spiffy sites.
reluctantlyyours.ca
littlefirecreative.ca

subdomains

I also use a bunch of subdomains to direct web traffic to various projects and my home server. This is an offshoot of my handy Pi Nginx project!

email

At least 4 site-specific email addresses. I have no idea why people shell out for mybusiness.com and then use mybusiness@gmail… seems a waste of resources. Most of them just forward to my existing addresses but at least one is standalone.

various projects

I have hosted api’s, static sites, otehr people’s domains etc. It gives me a lot of flexibility—and as I mentioned above I can now host python web apps.

A bit more complicated but…

So how was the move compared to last time? A bit more efficient, but also a bit more complex wth all the various sites. 3 of them were WordPress sites with associated mysql databases and structures and the other 4 were just static. So I did a massive host-wide backup and downloaded the 9-gig zip file to my desktop. I also exported the 3 mysql databases using the  backup tool.

After that I, one-by-one, starting with the smallest and easiest (beakerwood.ca), worked on a site:

  1. Create a subdomain
  2. Upload the files
  3. Changed the nameservers (on GoDaddy)
  4. Made a small edit to the index.html/php file for checking purposes
  5. And waited about 10–20 minuted for the domain name to propagate through the internet

And voila!

The WordPress sites started with creating a new, empty mysql database and the using phpMyAdmin to import the files downloaded from the old server. Then it was simply a matter of zipping the dowloaded wp installation, uploading it and then extracting the files. Like last time back in 2014 I tried uploading the un zipped files first and it was excruciatingly slow. But I clued in quicker this time. You would have thought I would go back and read those notes (since that is primarily what this site is for) but no… dumb, dumb, dumb  😉

The only thing I had to do was change the wp-config.php file to use the new database name and credentials. It all worked smoothly except for macblaze.ca but eventually I got my silly errors straightened out.

add emails

Since they were mostly forwards this was simply a matter of adding new emails tot eh new host. Everything else (smtp servers etc) stayed the same.

ssh

I had a bit of trouble getting ssh to work but it was because they use a different port. A quick chat with tech support straightened me out. Now I just have to figure out the rsync thing.

C’est tout

That’s pretty much it. So far, so good. I cancelled my account at Stablehost and already got back a “please don’t go, here is 6 months free…” note, but I am committed now. We shall see…

An introduction to dashboards

As I have been playing with my Pi I have been introduced to a bunch of new concepts and terminologies. The first is Homelab. Apparently it is a thing to build a your won server and set it up wth some high powered stuff. If you watch the YouTube videos you get the sense that these tare might powerful systems but reading between the lines you realize that’s just because they are YouTubers and need to keep ahead of the curve. My Pi and Shaw’s router qualify just fine as a homelab. It seems all I have to be doing is installing shit, breaking shit and adding even more shit. Check.

The next one, and more relevant to this post is dashboard. After you get your home server all set up you start to realize that most fo the services are web-based and it get to be a lot of book marks for things you go back to again and again. So the idea of a custom start page was born (reddit even has one of those reddit forums thingees dedicated to it: https://www.reddit.com/r/startpages/). Taking the idea further a bunch of developers have made apps to manage the underlying code as the whole idea of a homelab is that it changes pretty often and hand-coding a new webpage every time would get monotonous.

Homer

Homer was the first dashboard I encountered and frankly, IMHO, still the best. I will look at some of the others later. Homer is a project developed by Bastien Wirtz and is available as a docker container.

Out of the box it is pretty basic and frankly ugly:

But it does come with a bunch of easy configuration options to make improvements pretty quick. And if you dig deeper you can tweak it pretty significantly. I came across walkxcode’s modded theme and immediately started stealing some of his settings to get it the way I wanted.

The config is all based on yaml (yet another markup language) which I learned for my Hugo web pages so I was already pretty familiar with the format. Adding or deleting items on the page is simply a matter of editing the config file.

items:
- name: "Awesome app"
logo: "assets/tools/sample.png"
subtitle: "Bookmark example"
tag: "app"
url: "https://www.reddit.com/r/selfhosted/"
target: "_blank" # optional html a tag target attribute

It features colour-coded tagging, as many categories as you want 2, 4, 6 or 12 column layout, a link/menu bar, optional header and footer, additional pages and a list view. You can add in a custom background, use light or dark mode and a few cool applications like hooking up to a Open Weather api to display your local weather.

Homer does have a few major downsides. Although there is a search function it only searches the startpage. Many of the other dashboards integrate google or duck duck go searches into the search field so you can use it as your browsers’ default page. And it uses vue.js (which is Greek to me) and scss (which is more Spanish—I understand some of it, but wouldn’t dare try and speak it) so making changes is not as straightforward as I might like. Hence the borrowing of walkxcode’s work.

But all in all after I got it where I wanted to be. For now 🙂

Page2

The Competition

If you look in the fourth column you will see Flame, Heimdall and Dashboard, which are all other dashboards you could use and I tried them all to one degree or another.

Dashboard

Dashboard (https://github.com/phntxx/dashboard) is the simplest (and I think the oldest). It works from json files which I have played with but is harder to parse than yaml and much more visually complex which makes it harder (for me) to make quick edits without screwing up the format. Other than that I didn’t like the lack of custom icons and the strict layout format.

Flame

As far as I can tell Flame (https://github.com/pawelmalak/flame) is mostly a fork of Dashboard…at least visually. It added in a web interface so you could add icons and links using a browser rather than having to edit a config file. Which put it ahead of both Dashboard and Homer, but, in the end I didn’t like the restrictions imposed on the way info was displayed and was frustrated with what kind of info you had to show.

Heimdall

The last dashboard I tried was Heimdall (https://heimdall.site/) which seems to be pretty popular and much more professional. My big issue with it (and indeed with Homer but there I could fix it) was the size of the app “buttons.” I still run a 1920 x 1080 screen and you just can’t fit many buttons onto one screen. Add in a search bar (disabled in the screen shot) and it just looked bloated. But it did have the web interface, lots of custom tags and categories and would probably look way better on a higher resolution screen.

Calibre Web Scraping Update

Stupid security

One of the recent updates to Calibre Web (I am on v0.6.14 now) introduced some security to the login in the form of a csfr token. I had no idea why my script wouldn’t work anymore until I started taking it all apart.

What I ended up having to do was use Beautiful Soup to load the html content of the login page, find the csfr_token and then add it to the login data. I also added in the cookies, although frankly by that time I wasn’t sure if it was necessary or not. But it works so I left it.

Just a note, if any of you have found this page wanting to scrape Calibre-Web, if you search the site for the tag calibre you find the whole journey

The current python script

#! /usr/local/bin/python3
# coding: utf-8

# python script to import shelfs of books from Calibre-Web
# and save them as a markdown file

# import various libraries
import requests
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup
import re
import os
# enable sys.exit()
import sys

# set header to avoid being labeled a bot
headers = {
    'user-agent': 'Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/67.0.3396.99 Safari/537.36'
}

# set base url
urlpath = 'https://MY_CALIBREWEB_URL'

# calibre-web login data
login_data = {
    'next': '/',
    'username': 'MY_USERNAME',
    'password': 'MY_PASSWORD',
    'remember_me': 'on',
}

# login as a session
with requests.Session() as sess:
    res = sess.get(urlpath + '/login', headers=headers)
    login = BeautifulSoup(res._content, 'html.parser')

    # find security token and extract value
    csrf_token = login.find('input', {'name': 'csrf_token'})
    csrf_token = (csrf_token.attrs['value'])
    # print(csrf_token)

    # append securtiy token to login dictionary
    login_data['csrf_token'] = csrf_token

    # login with token
    res = sess.post(urlpath + '/login', data=login_data, cookies=res.cookies)
    # print(res.text)


# set path to export as markdown file
path_folder = "FOLDER_PATH_MOUNTED_BY_SHELL_SCRIPT"

# check ifserver is already mounted and change path if so
if os.path.isdir(path_folder):
    print('valid drive')
elif os.path.isdir("/Volumes/www/home/books/"):
    path_folder = "/Volumes/www/home/books/"
else:
    path_folder = "/Volumes/www-1/home/books/"

# open the file
file = open(path_folder+"bookfile.md", "w")

# Set Title
file.write("# Books Read since 2012\n")
# print("# Books Read\n")

# Set intro blurb
file.write("This is an automatically generated list of books scraped from my Calibre ebook library (  Making A “Books Read” Page  ). As a result it does not include any  paper books I may have read as they do not exist in that library.\n\nI update it regularly and finally went back and added all the previous years. Links to previous years’ book count posts: \n-  2012  (85)\n-  2013  (95)\n-  2014  (106)\n-  2015  (92)\n-  2016  (101)\n-  2017  (120)\n-  2018  (142)\n-  2019  (123)\n-  2020  (112)\n")


# find list of shelves
shelfhtml = sess.get(urlpath)
soup = BeautifulSoup(shelfhtml.text, "html.parser")
shelflist = soup.find_all('a', href=re.compile('/shelf/[1-9]'))
print(shelflist)

# reverse order of urllist
dateshelflist = (shelflist)
dateshelflist.reverse()
print(dateshelflist)

# loop through sorted shelves
for shelf in dateshelflist:
    # set shelf page url
    res = sess.get(urlpath+shelf.get('href'))
    soup = BeautifulSoup(res.text, "html.parser")

    # find year from shelflist and format
    shelfyear = soup.find('h2')
    year = re.search("([0-9]{4})", shelfyear.text)
    year.group()
    file.write("\n### {}\n".format(year.group()))
    # print("### {}\n".format(year.group()))

    # find all books
    books = soup.find_all('div', class_='col-sm-3 col-lg-2 col-xs-6 book')

    # loop though books. Each book is a new BeautifulSoup object.
    for book in books:
        title = book.find('p', class_='title')
        # print(title)
        author = book.find('a', class_='author-name')
        #print (author)
        seriesnamea = book.find('p', id='series') # I have to manually add this id to the shelf.html template
        seriesname = (seriesnamea.text if seriesnamea else "").replace(
            "  ", "").replace("(", " Book ").replace(")", "").replace("\n", "")
        if (seriesname != ""):
            seriesname = "*" + seriesname + "*"
        #print (seriesname)
# NOTE: pubdate is custom added by me to /templates/shelf and won't work in a standard install
        pubdate = book.find('p', class_='series', id='pubdate')
        if pubdate:
            #print (pubdate)
            # extract year from pubdate
            pubyear = re.search("([0-9]{4})", pubdate.text)
            pubyear.group()
            pubyear = pubyear.group()
        else:
            pubyear = "n/a"
        # construct line using markdown
        newstring = "* ***{}***  — {} ({})\n{} – ebook\n".format(
            title.text, author.text, pubyear.group(), seriesname)
        #print (newstring)
        file.write(newstring)

file.close()

NOTE—July 18, 2023 Added some new code from various updates (see calibre updates)

Instagram Since Last Time

Instagram Since Last Time
It occurs to me that I stole that bandanna from my mother in the late 70s. I wonder if it’s worth anything in a vintage store?
Instagram Since Last Time
It’s just not Halloween without tequila!
I have never actually seen this many geese in one place. I want to be there when they all take off. Conservatively there were at least 3000 and I wouldn’t be surprised if the total number was closer to 8000.
Instagram Since Last Time
CF-100 100784 in St Hubert — Electronic Warfare Unit ~June 1965#lestweforget??