06. June 2014 · Comments Off on Last Thoughts on Upstairs, Downstairs · Categories: Random Book and Media Musings · Tags: ,

We watched the final episode this week; the last of the season that I had never seen, even though I knew perfectly well what was supposed to happen during it. Still, it has been rather interesting, looking at the series, so many years later, charting the lives of an upper-class political family from the turn of the last century to the 1929 crash of the stock markets … and picking out, with a merciless eye, things like inauthentic costumes, hairstyles and attitudes. The fortunes of the series changed almost in reverse of the Bellamy fortunes; very much on a budget at first, then expanding; better and more historically correct costuming, more scenes shot out of doors, the characters jelled … well, some of them did. Others were just adjusted according to the needs of drama. Like Georgina, the ingénue turned battlefield nurse, who … turned into a frivolous flapper for the entire decade after the war in which she served? Just don’t see that; no matter how much she would have wanted to get back to something resembling normality after three years of hard and responsible work as a nurse … I just can’t see going on ten years of pleasure-seeking arrested development. A year or two to decompress, and then back to pursuing something, something earnest and useful, even marrying might have been more true to character and history … but the story arc dictated that Georgina be a Bright Young Thing for the duration of the season. And side note – my, did Anthony Andrews ever look so young! My daughter always loved the series with Jane Seymour where he played the Scarlet Pimpernel. Edward and Daisy – that was a bit more real, I think; she developing a spine of steel sufficient for both, but tactfully letting him take the lead publically, in most circumstances. Edward would have been a bit fragile, always – but Daisy would have looked after him in a way that wouldn’t have reminded him of that … except when it was the right time and in private.

Lord Bellamy was stalwart, and so was Hudson, in the tradition of Englishmen of that generation … of whom I can honestly say that I knew one example, very, very well – my paternal grandfather, a child and teenager of the Edwardian upper level working-class. (They were those who wore a proper 3-piece suit and polished shoes to do their work, of course – not the equivalent of boots with jeans and t-shirt.) Of course, his father – my great-grandfather, the gentleman’s gentleman, a valet and butler both –was thrusting into the middle class, thanks to a generous inheritance from his employer. The employer was fabulously wealthy, and left £600 to Great-Grandfather George in his will, sometime in the 1880s. GG-George must have been as treasured every bit as much as Hudson – and twice as canny, for he parlayed that inheritance into a society catering business and real estate, and eventually relocated to the New World. And Grandpa Alf reflected the values of his age, faultlessly, even down to the mustache and general bearing.

Anyway, back to Upstairs and Downstairs, and the world at the beginning of the last century: James – sigh. Self-involved to the end; a prime example of the truism that suicide is a hostile and passive-aggressive dagger directed at the heart of close kin and loved ones. I’ll show you – I’ll be dead and you’ll be sorry that you weren’t nicer to me, and didn’t live up to all my expectations of you! Impatient, unthinkingly, casually cruel – he was the sort of man, as my daughter observed – who was always after the next glittery, shiny object which attracted his interest, or the next glittery, shiny woman. Oh, charm and savoir-fair with bells on … but once achieved, he lost interest. Considerate of him to do the deed offstage and elsewhere than Eaton Place, but still … there still is something nastily passive-aggressive about his suicide.

Anyway – being done with this series, we are going on to watch Deadwood. Contrast much?

01. June 2014 · Comments Off on Another Lovely Garden · Categories: Domestic

This one is from this week’s linkage on Houzz – a downtown Seattle commercial building with parking lot, converted to a private residence for an artist and family … and a gorgeous, jungly garden where the concrete parking lot used to be. Of course, this is Seattle, where it rains and everything grows as if it were a jungle. But I love how such a fantastic garden can come from such an unpromising space.

29. May 2014 · Comments Off on Sisterdale, June 8th · Categories: Book Event, Old West

BattleofWalkersCkSaveDatePC

All righty, then – this is where I will be, with my books. It’s only fair, since Jack Hays is a reoccurring character. This was really a last-minute thing, since I didn’t see that they had local authors involved until this week. Well, that’s what the bright pink pavilion is for, isn’t it? And I am very fond of Sisterdale and would like to have a house in the countryside near there someday.

26. May 2014 · Comments Off on For Memorial Day · Categories: Uncategorized

American Cemetery at Chateau Thierry (Picture by Sgt, Mom, August, 1985)

They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old:
Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.
At the going down of the sun and in the morning,
We will remember them.

(from Laurence Binyon’s For the Fallen)

25. May 2014 · Comments Off on Found Objects · Categories: Domestic

You know, now and again I wonder if the habits of frugality ingrained by almost fifteen years of living pretty close to the poverty line have turned me into my grandmothers – especially Grannie Jessie who was reputed to pinch pennies so hard that a booger would come out of Lincoln’s nose. I have never had a brand-new car, a totally-new-to-me house, and only occasionally a new piece of furniture or major appliance – the last two such items have come from the Scratch-and-Dent Store. Now and again I do have a brand-spanking new minor appliance – usually freebies from Amazon Vine. There was an electric kettle, gotten for the price of having to write a review of it. The same for the shop-vac, a great clumsy thing and no prize for appearance, but by god, it will suck the paint off a Buick fender. The usual small appliances though, are lightly second-hand; there was the once-top-o-the line Zojirushi bread machine, from a vast community-event garage sale, almost untouched and in the original box for $5. My most recent favorite small appliance toy was the vacuum-sealer, also bought at a yard sale for $5 – and also once top-o-the-line as well as also being barely used. Now, though – I think I have struck some kind of nadir, as far as slightly-used kitchen appliances go. But there is a bit of a back-story.

My kitchen is a small one; storage space at a minimum, you see – and I have a constitutional dislike of kitchen gadgets which only do one thing, and one thing only. Not for me an item like the electric waffle-maker that I remember that Mom had in her kitchen; about twenty-two inches square and eight or ten deep and which only made waffles. These appliances that I give shelf and counter space to ought to be good for more than one task, or amazingly, dazzlingly efficient at that one task … and for extra points, small and easily stashed away. I bought a KitchenAid stand mixer, yea those many years ago, precisely because it had multiple useful attachments, many of which I also purchased.

The current stove does not have a griddle option. (Once we lived in a rental house which had one, and I loved it.) Such things are, apparently, only an option in the high-end gas stoves these days, which is fair enough. One can make do with any number of electric griddle appliances, and there … there is where my multi-tasking option comes in. We have a small electric Delonghi indoor grill (bought at Williams-Sonoma when they were on sale and I was working at one of the reliable but deathly-boring corporate jobs) and a Toastmaster electric griddle, gotten through one of my daughter’s employers who intended donating it to a thrift shop. Both of them are quite adequate to the tasks required … but I had a hankering for something that would neatly combine their various functions … two, two, two in one! And maybe even more … I saw information on-line about a Cuisinart multi-griddle which would do all this and more; it could be a Panini-press, fold out and lay flat to be a griddle, or a grill, and had any number of different dish-washer safe plates, which could be swapped out … yes, that would be exactly the ticket! I put it on my Amazon wish-list, and some months ago, I spotted the exact same multi-griddle for an enticingly-reduced price at an HEB-Plus supermarket. Yes, I’d have to do a bit of finagling; including going halfsies on it with my daughter … but we put it into the shopping cart, and continued through the produce section. There we were approached by a middle-aged woman and her husband who asked most politely if we were going to buy it. I answered yes, I had been looking at and thinking of buying one for months and it all seemed providential … and she launched into her tale of woe. Yes, she had one, had been given it as a Christmas present from her husband … and to make a long story short, it proved to be a total disaster. The handles and catches for the interchangeable plates melted, it didn’t work anything as advertised, bits and parts had been replaced by the manufacturer, it still didn’t work anything like it had been represented to … and. It’s kind of more personal than reading a one-star review on Amazon, when a total stranger comes up and tells you that the item is a total dog. She advised us very strongly to give it a miss.

Which I did, sneaking it back onto the shelf from whence it came, with considerable regret; yes, it was a bargain, compared to the original price, but not at the price of the hassle involved. My daughter and I concluded that maybe Cuisinart was going to come out with a new and improved model soon, which would fix many of the problems, and that was why this one was on sale. I’d wait until the new and improved model to be available. There’s always time.

This week, though – when I was doing the early-morning jog that my daughter insists that we ought to do, in the interests of our health and well-being – I joggled past a house in the neighborhood where the residents had put out a stack of stuff on the curb. Look, I pay attention to this sort of thing, especially at bulk-trash pickup time. We’ve scored no end of useful elements for the garden, this way. We know the family in this house to speak to, since they put out some nice things on the curb before. Paring down the possessions, they said; a relatively-newly-wed blended family. (These days, two adult persons marrying and merging their once-separate households usually have two of everything … so, yes; good and usable stuff extraneous to current needs being put out on the curb. I can totally understand that.) Among the items extraneous to need was a bright red George Foreman grill – the model with a number of extra and interchangeable plates. We took it home, plates and accessories and all, carefully detailed the main unit, ran the washable items through the dishwasher, looked up and printed the owner’s manual, and gave it a test run … and yes, it works beautifully. It’s only lacking one of the grill plates, and they are available for a small sum.

It’s not quite what I had in mind – but if it works out very well, I might later get one of the later models which does open up all the way to offer two flat surfaces for grilling or griddling. But most importantly … the price was right.