My laptop is about to run out energy; the battery is down to 17 percent.
An iPad with 17 percent battery life left would last almost two hours.
The MacBook Pro might last another twenty minutes. And no outlet where I
am to charge the battery.
But I couldn't leave without this short note. Yesterday I didn't get the chance to read the weekend edition of the Wall Street Journal
(the older daughter had a swim meet a couple of hours distant in
driving time -- only a few miles away for a Canadian goose, but the meet
was in Salem, Massachusetts, on one of the last weekends before
Halloween, perhaps the biggest tourist month of the year for Salem;
think witches).
So, today, before the start of the second day of that same swim meet, I will read the WSJ
-- all the more so because Starbucks accidentally gave me a "grande"
instead of a "tall" which represents about twice as much coffee, three
times more than I need. But that's another story for another day.
Back to the WSJ. I used to know some friends (okay, one) who subscribed to Playboy Magazine for the stories. That's the way it is with me. No, not Playboy Magazine, but the WSJ. I subscribe to the WSJ,
not for the business news, but for the incredibly good writing, the
weekend edition, and the fourth section each day (in that order).
This weekend's issue might be one of the best in a long time. Or maybe
like meat loaf it just seems better because it's a day older and I've
been looking forward to it twenty-four hours.
The long, long lead story is fantastic -- read this story if you want to
know my reading habits: My 6,128 favorite books, by Joe Queenan.
Fortunately he only lists about 100 books. Most of those were books he
did not like, so he must have read more than 6,128. You know that any
article that mentions Middlemarch in the first few paragraphs is going to be a great piece of reading.
Paul Johnson's five favorite biographies: Macaulay, Sir Arthur Bryant; Ulysses S. Grant, Michael Korda; Lincoln at Gettysburg, Garry Wills; Rossetti: His Life and Works, Evelyn Waugh; and, A Portrait of Charles Lamb,
David Cecil. The authors are relatively unfamiliar to me; the lives
they have chosen to write about I know very, very well, except for
Charles Lamb.
And finally, before I run out of battery (now 13%): How the French Invented Love,
Marilyn Yalon. Four hundred pages of what appears to be an
exceptionally interesting book. I don't know if this was planned by the WSJ
editors or if it just happened, but earlier in the section there is an
essay on "the new face of infidelity" by Peggy Drexler. Her findings:
infidelity is no longer an exclusive domain for men (it never was, but
the statistics are starting to even out): 23 percent and 19 percent. You
can google the article to see what the numbers refer to. Something
tells me the former number is way, way low; the latter number is low,
but hard to say by how much. It will be interesting to see what a
similar essay reports 15 years from now. My hunch is that the definition
of infidelity will have changed. See Marilyn Yalon's book review.
And now I must sign off with less than 10% of my battery power left.
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