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Steinbeck's Author Diary Leading to WWII

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California life chronicler John Steinbeck wrote diary entries each day before and after writing chapters of his best known book, "Grapes of Wrath", his eighth novel which won the Pulitzer Prize. The diary which begins February 1938 before he writes the first page, continues through Oct. 25, 1938 when he finishes the last page, and ends with a January 30 1941 entry, eleven months before Japan attacked Pearl Harbor. The diary was published after his death, at his request . A reader's hindsight knowledge throws Steinbecks' sporadic observations of current events into relief. The first mention of brewing European and Pacific conflicts appears in his June 16th, 1938 entry. Steinbeck orients himself to where in the pre-planned story he is, what he needs to write next. He purges to the page mind clutter from the night before, describes a dream he had, and describes an impression of distant, bombastic global leaders (March 12, 1938, Hitler had annexed Austria into Germany, 1...

Happy New Year - My Holiday Letter

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I snail-mailed a holiday letter to friends with article links that I believe prepare us for the turbulence ahead. I was careful not to preach. I see some problems developing, that I've watched develop over the last decade. I see a few solutions. I sometimes am struck with a panic - if we solve all three problem areas, will life be suddenly boring and adventureless? There must be a German word for such a fear. Like "scheudenfraude" but a word that means "the fear of civility-induced boredom that only arises in the space of continually escalating mayhem." Of course life will still be bearable with civility-induced ennui. I mean to say: of course life will be bearable should civility break out. In the wake of solved problems, there will be a vacuum, which will be excruciating and make us want to revert to the excitement of apocalyptic weather, violence, tragedy and news headlines that make us feel so alive. Honestly, how would you sell civility to people addicted...

Links Jan 1-? 2020

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Wednesday, Jan 8, 2020 How Rupert Murdoch Is Influencing Australia’s Bushfire Debate Critics see a concerted effort to shift blame, protect conservative leaders and divert attention from climate change:     nytimes.com This work by AJ Fish is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License .

How Do You Blog While Writing a Book?

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Not well. For the last month I've been following the techniques in a how-to-write book from the mid-1930s written for writers who are blocked and striving to focus amid "all the new distractions in our modern world." It has helped. It cost me $.99. I'm logging back off now. Merry Christmas and Happy Hanukkah. --------------------------------- Further Reading: "Becoming a Writer remains evergreen decades after it was first written."    amazon.com This work by AJ Fish is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License .

'The Utility Industry has Traditionally Been Hostile to Rooftop Solar Power'

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Maybe our lousy power grid unites us. If too many people run their own standalone rooftop solar plus home battery system, the grid infrastructure may fray from neglect : Solar advocates are worried other utilities will follow SMUD’s lead, in part because the utility industry has traditionally been hostile to rooftop solar power . Public utilities such as SMUD, which is governed by an elected board, don’t have a profit motive. But like their privately owned counterparts, they’ve long argued rooftop solar creates an unfair “cost shift” from customers who can afford rooftop systems to customers who can’t. The more homes go solar, the argument goes, the more rates will have to rise for everyone else to pay the costs of running the grid — a notion disputed by the solar industry, which says rooftop solar lowers grid costs. Why did so much of the media declare California unlivable this year when fewer people died in fires than in previous years? Maybe because PG&E preemptively brought...

Embers are Everything in Fire Prevention: How Loans for Vents Could Slow Climate Change

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  Every time a home or any fire fuel burns, CO2 is released into the atmosphere. The culture is slowly catching onto the counter-intuitive fact that tiny fire embers coupled with small twigs start more fires than do large old-growth trees. This was illustrated for the slacker general public in 2003 via the infamous tie-breaking challenge from "Survivor: Cook Islands": A later, more serious 60 Minutes segment from 2017 called "In the Path of Fire" reported the specific small measures that made an enormous difference determining which homes withstood fires unscathed . It took well over a year to distribute the information through the confusion silo that is Facebook before "embers" were reported on more widely in mainstream media. We Californians and other fire-prone state residents need to repeatedly spread this information. The L.A. Times this week reported the state legislature just stripped a program that funded loans to fire-proof homes : Meanwhile, t...

Orwell Explains Students' Writing Fears

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I've been tutoring high school AP English students and notice they all fear writing a sentence in front of me. I'm trying to internally time-travel back to the age I was when I first cleared the fear-hurdle of committing something to a paper that could be handed in to a despotic teacher. The writer George Orwell said totalitarianism was deadly to literature . "Even a single taboo can have an all-round crippling effect upon the mind, because there is always the danger that any thought which is freely followed up may lead to the forbidden thought. It follows that the atmosphere of totalitarianism is deadly to any kind of prose writer.” I had the scariest teachers in sixth grade who criticized what we handed in as not what was assigned. They would rant in front of the entire class. I was criticized for an assignment my parents had actually helped me write, probably the only time they helped me with my homework. The above pullquote is from Masha Gessen's New Yorker arti...

Hitchens Feared Libel Charges More When Writing in England

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This weekend, the late Christopher Hitchens cured my writer's block. For various reasons I won't explain in this post, I've been binging on Hitchens print and video media lately. In his essay on becoming an American citizen , Hitchens includes this passage: "As soon as I got my green card, immigration officers started saying 'welcome home' when I passed through. Moreover, as one who is incompetent to do anything save writing and speaking, I stood under the great roof of the First Amendment and did not have to think (as I once had to think) of the libel laws and the other grand and petty restraints that oppress my craft in the country of my birth. " I'd been suddenly concerned about libel laws after viewing Carol Cadwalladr's riveting TED talk on her blockbuster report for The Guardian on information that already was common knowledge or available, that of Cambridge Analytica downloading, even selling user data after Facebook had promised to...

Humiliation Collars Stop Cats from Killing Birds

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Part of the reason humans go so crazy for cats is their perceived dignity and elegance. But humans love birds. Will these collars catch on ? This work by AJ Fish is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License .

Edison on Social Molecules

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The late Edmund Morris' new biography on Thomas Edison is electrifying, no pun intended. I finished a fifth of it before I reached the cash register it was so hard to put down. Particularly interesting is his early home-schooled education in civil engineering, among a set of very well-balanced cross section of subjects. Here is a comment Morris made on C-Span as he was researching the biography, marveling at Edison's imaginativeness : "So, this guy was talking to Edison about this subject and Edison said, if this theory is correct and we are indeed all composed - all matter consists of atoms. He said, I suppose it be possible for me to take a few atoms of myself and transfer those atoms to a rose. And then I could retrieve those atoms and put them back into myself and thereby acquire some of the sensibility of a rose." -------------------------------- Further Reading: An Inventor’s Life That Was Incandescent Any Way You Look at It:     nytimes.com This w...