Monthly Archives: April 2009

Weekly Geeks 2009-15: Big Red and Other Great Dog Stories

WG Spock[5] For this week’s Weekly Geeks, we are being asked to share books (fiction or nonfiction) and/or movies which center around an animal or animals.

So I thought for mine, I’d highlight a series I may have highlighted here previously, but if I have, it’s been a while ago. The series of which I speak is the Big Red And Other Great Dog Stories series by Jim Kgelgaard. The books are, in order, Big Red, Irish Red, Outlaw Red and Stormy.

A shining, silky red from nose to tail, the dog was trotting up the path Danny was walking down. His eyes were fixed on Danny, and his tail wagged gently a couple of times. Ten feet away he stood still, his finely chiselled head erect and his body rigid. Spellbound, Danny returned the dog’s gaze. He knew dogs, having owned and hunted with hounds since he was old enough to do anything. The red dog was not a hound– Danny knew vaguely that it was called an Irish setter– but never before had he seen any dog that revealed at first glance all the qualities a dog should have. Danny walked forward, and knelt to ruffle the red dog’s ears.
“Hi, boy,” he said. “How are you, Red?

Like Danny Pickett, the boy who encounters the red dog, I was enthralled from the first moment I was introduced to the dog. After all, I was a boy who had his favorite dog, Scoot. I instantly could relate to the love that Danny showed for this dog that he didn’t even know but whom he would come to know over the course of 218 pages of what I consider the best dog story ever written, Big Red. Of the series, as often, but not always is the case, the first one in this series is the best.

The second and third ones, Irish Red and Outlaw Red, are about Big Red’s sons, Mike (Irish Red) and Sean (Outlaw Red). As in the first one, where Big Red has to do battle with a bear and a wolverine, in the second and third ones, Mike and Sean face their own challenges: Mike, a snowstorm and a puma; Sean, a coyote and himself.

Like in Sheila Burnford’s The Incredible Journey, another of my favorite animal stories, the stories aren’t so much about the humans in the story but about the animals themselves.

In the fourth of the series, Stormy, a boy Allan Marley is living alone on a lake  because his father is serving a prison term when he encounters Stormy, a large black retriever. Like the other three, this one focuses on the interaction between a dog and his master, but also throws in a little bit of a murder mystery. Of the four, I believe, this one is the weakest, but maybe that’s because I liked the connections among the other three, and this one was missing those connections.

However, if you have children, boys or girls, but probably especially boys, the entire series is a must-read for them, with each one a quick and engaging read.

WTF Wordless Wednesday #19: An oldie but a goodie, Suri Cruise’s bronzed poop

Don’t know why this is in my photo collection, except maybe for days like this when I really don’t have anything else because you can pull it out and go, “Can you believe this shit?”

suri-poop

No, seriously, can you believe it?

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BlogStorm

Don’t know much about beadwork, black hair, Boston or bowling, but that, hmmmm…

Today I applied for a job with a website, whose name I shall not say because I don’t want to jeopardize my chances. Instead I shall jeopardize my chances with this entire post.

The site to which I applied has a variety of topics from which a writer can choose, so I scrolled down through them to see if any caught my eye.

4-Wheel Drive/Off-roading
Beadwork
Black hair
Boston
Bowling
Camcorders
Coffee/Tea

Wait a minute, scroll back. Black hair? Really?

I read further in the description and came across black/ethnic.

Oh, OK.

Continuing on, then:

Columbus, OH
Composites/Plastics
Computer Peripherals

Needlepoint
Nintendo DS
Perl
Philadelphia
Podiatry

Oh, wait a minute, again. Scroll back to that…

Perl?

I think they’re misspelling it. Shouldn’t it be “p-e-a-r-l” as in the earring this girl was wearing in that famous painting?

Then I read the description, blah blah blah something programming, compare to Java, PHP, Ruby…

…forget it.

Keep scrolling…

Teen Advice
Thailand Travel
The Young and the Restless
U.S. Politics/ Current Events
Urology
Water Skiing/Wakeboarding

Hey, yes, scroll back slowly…

Water Skiing/Wakeboarding (no, that’s not waterboarding or watersports, dammit, either one of them and I’d be in luck)
Urology (ewwwww, gross)
U.S. Politics/Current Events (booooring)
The Young and The Restless…stop right THERE. There it is, I used to watch The Young and The Restless a lot, because this guy was such a bad ass:

And okay, I’ll admit it, her (I even watched that Dick Van Dyke medical show for a while with her in it):

Hmmmm. I wonder what’s left?

Scroll down. Oh, dammit, there’s only one more left.

Web Humor.

How lame, but I guess I’ll try for that one, since I know jack-all about any of the other ones.

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A Darkness More Than Night/City of Bones (TSS)

Titles: A Darkness More Than Night, City of Bones
Author: Michael Connelly
Publication Years: 2001, 2002
Genre: Mystery
Count for Year: 12, 13

How I discovered

I discovered Michael Connelly a few years ago and have been working my way through his Hieronymous “Harry” Bosch crime novels ever since as well as other books as they catch my eyes. As much as I have been enjoying the Agatha Christie Reading Challenge, it was good to have a break to the gritty present. Both of these are Harry Bosch novels.

The setups

A Darkness More Than NightIn More Darkness Than A Night, Bosch is second wheel to ex-FBI agent Terry McCaleb, who has been featured in other Connelly novels, most notably Blood Work. McCaleb is brought out of retirement by a murder of a loner that appears to be the work of a serial killer. Bosch, meanwhile, is lead witness and arresting officer in the case of a movie director murdering an actress during ex.

Of course, the two cases collide, with Bosch and McCaleb at odds over details of the cases, namely who McCaleb believes is the killer.

City of Bones In City of Bones, Bosch investigates a call of a dog finding what his owner, a doctor, believes is a human bone. It is — from a child from 20 years ago, whose remains are found in a shallow grave near the doctor’s house. During the course of his investigation, he falls in love with a rookie cop named Julia Brasher, which is a major no-no in any police department, but especially in the L.A. Police Department.

Out of the two, I preferred the latter to the former, because of the ending adding a little twist to Bosch’s story. Also the reader gets to see a somewhat softer side of Bosch in the latter, because of his relationship with Brasher. Perhaps the second one works for me more than the first one, because the focus is on one character instead of two, and I think Connelly is able to paint a more complete picture of one character than having his attention drawn to two different but equally interesting characters.

For these reasons, I give A Darkness More Than Night a 3 out of 5 and City of Bones a 4 out of 5. If you’re going to skip one, skip A Darkness More Than Night and cut to the chase with City of Bones.

My rating system:

5- Classic, must read
4- Worth
owning a copy
3- Worth picking up at library
2- Worth skimming at the bookstore
1- Worth being a doorstop