But those are just records our parents owned
My day has been unexpectedly rocky. Have a string of links.
1. Three poems that got my attention: Amit Majmudar's "Newsquiz," Jack Mapanje's "Skipping Without Ropes," and Sandra McPherson's "Spill."
2. An article I found useful in discussing police abolition without assuming that at step two a miracle will occur: "Confessions of a Former Bastard Cop." "The question is this: did I need a gun and sweeping police powers to help the average person on the average night? The answer is no."
3. I was not sure I had heard of Lotte Laserstein, except then I recognized her self-portrait with cat. I like her style.
4. I had definitely not heard of Louise Page, but I am fascinated that she wrote a stage adaptation of Margery Allingham's The Fashion in Shrouds (1938), since that's the one Campion novel I actively dislike, intellectually mitigated only by my knowledge of the circumstances of its writing. I hope Page's version is produced; I would love to know what she saw in it.
5. According to the Globe, our fireworks problem last night [edit: tonight] is a popular one, right down to the boom-spooked cats: "With so many illegal fireworks going off in Boston, who you gonna call?" I hadn't realized fireworks were wholly illegal in Massachusetts. I still miss sparklers.
1. Three poems that got my attention: Amit Majmudar's "Newsquiz," Jack Mapanje's "Skipping Without Ropes," and Sandra McPherson's "Spill."
2. An article I found useful in discussing police abolition without assuming that at step two a miracle will occur: "Confessions of a Former Bastard Cop." "The question is this: did I need a gun and sweeping police powers to help the average person on the average night? The answer is no."
3. I was not sure I had heard of Lotte Laserstein, except then I recognized her self-portrait with cat. I like her style.
4. I had definitely not heard of Louise Page, but I am fascinated that she wrote a stage adaptation of Margery Allingham's The Fashion in Shrouds (1938), since that's the one Campion novel I actively dislike, intellectually mitigated only by my knowledge of the circumstances of its writing. I hope Page's version is produced; I would love to know what she saw in it.
5. According to the Globe, our fireworks problem last night [edit: tonight] is a popular one, right down to the boom-spooked cats: "With so many illegal fireworks going off in Boston, who you gonna call?" I hadn't realized fireworks were wholly illegal in Massachusetts. I still miss sparklers.

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Massachusetts does not allow sparklers! I never noticed as a child because we always spent the Fourth of July with my grandparents in Maine, where my brother and I ran up and down the street merrily covering our wrists and hands with tiny burn scars of showering magnesium. Nothing worse ever happened to us. The adults in our lives were always very clear about safety. I still feel we could be trusted with the little fizzy light-up sticks, but the Commonwealth does not agree.
(Professional firework displays are not illegal: Boston traditionally puts on a nationally broadcast show for the Fourth and various satellite towns have their own, smaller-scale versions in the surrounding days. Not this year.)
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It may have happened in our lifetimes—I want to say I found out as an adult, after I had moved back from Connecticut and suddenly noticed their absence again, but I think it had been true for some time by then. I still think it's silly. Most obviously, the legal unavailability of sparklers has done nothing to deter our neighbors from setting off military simulators in the parking lot behind our building.
They give children a pleasant buzz of danger without actually risking anything but a teeny spark-scalding! I'm sure you could accidentally start a fire with one, but that's true of plenty of legal implements too.
And you can put your eye out with plain old sticks such as drop off trees all the time!
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Thank you. Then I just didn't notice because of Maine.
I don't remember that going on when I was a kid, and I currently live a 10 min walk from the house where I grew up.
I suspect the non-stop nightly amateur fireworks of the last couple weeks are some kind of political reaction combined with stir-craziness, but that doesn't make it hurt my ears and scare my cats less.
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- U K LeGuin, The Dispossessed
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I can see that. I once briefly caught on fire while cooking.
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And therefore valuable to me, because on a literal, logistical level, I have no idea what should come after "??????" that will actually work. I appreciate even pointers from people who do.
Much less elevatedly, I also like this comparison.
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I wouldn't mind some of them being legal! I just don't want them set off near us every night!
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I am glad the author was able to write it.
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The store clerks at No Frills wear black t-shirts with stick figures and the words “6 ft” on them in yellow; they also have the image of a smiley face with the eyes X’d out, which is surprisingly punk for the Loblaws chain.
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I like how many simultaneous possibilities that style incorporates.
The store clerks at No Frills wear black t-shirts with stick figures and the words “6 ft” on them in yellow; they also have the image of a smiley face with the eyes X’d out, which is surprisingly punk for the Loblaws chain.
Wow.
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I hope today had less rockiness than yesterday.
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It just stuck with me as a snapshot. I imagine it is entirely fictional, but it felt like it could have been a story from the author's adolescence.
I hope today had less rockiness than yesterday.
It did until the end. Thank you.
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Welcome, June 13th.
Re: The Fashion in Shrouds
This MAY be a mere coincidence.
https://pulpcovers.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/10-Story-Detective-April-1949.jpg
Or it's an understood cultural reference that I would not have even suspected were it not for this entry of yours.
Re: The Fashion in Shrouds
I lean toward coincidence just because of the kinds of nouns that do well in hard-boiled titles, but I hadn't known about that one, and I am delighted.
Re: The Fashion in Shrouds
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian_Dior_SE#.22New_Look.22