Harp
I'll Lock Up
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New York Times article on the Supremes' latest hit, Hurst v. Florida-Sotomayor and Scalia-together at last!- take the Sixth but Alito strikes a relevant chord in dissent.
Looks very interesting indeed and I shall look these up.Over the course of the last 2 years (with other books thrown in, of course) I finished reading all 8 "Bruno Chief of Police" books by Martin Walker. Not sure how I got sucked into the series, but I am indeed sucked-in. The series is basically about a good natured, very justice/fairness-minded policeman who's beat is the very small French town of St. Denis, located in the Perigord. Murders and criminality abound and he is always solving cases and locking up bad guys... at least when he is not cooking up magnificent meals for his regular circle of friends and pulling corks from wonderful bottles of local wine. He also spends a good deal of time riding his horse in the woods or hunting or attending various village celebrations. Then there is "the Brigadier", a shadowy big-wig in the French intelligence service who is always dragging Bruno into covert affairs of State. And let's not forget Bruno's love life: He longs to find "Ms Right" and settle down and have a family, but he always seems to fall for free-spirited, career-minded beauties who rake his heart over the coals and then decide that country life is not for them. Bruno's cases often deal with the ghosts of WWII, etc. Some of the books are better than others. It doesn't matter: I'm hooked. Book #9 will be coming out next summer. I am already looking forward to it.
For a new liberty. Murray Rothbard
... you can't help seeing Fitzgerald in the lead role (as we know so much about his life and how his fiction was very close to home for him) and wonder, why did this man never grow up....
I still have a paperback copy of Margaret Cooper Gay's How to Live with a Cat, originally published in 1949 or so. Her writing style is infectious and engaging, the more so because she uses her own cats as examples, and they come across as true and charming individuals. Some of her advice is sort of dated, but the humor in her writing, and her simple clear style, comes across to this day. "Certainly our cats love us; otherwise they'd leave.""A Practical Cat Book," by Ida M. Mellen. Published in 1939, this volume offers an eye-opening look at cat care practices in the Era. Mellen wasn't just a cat breeder, she was a militant advocate for feline health, and was very much a forward thinker in her approaches.