Rare, Collectible, & Otherwise

Category: About (Page 11 of 21)

It’s about books

On the Book Harvest

Three phone calls within the past hour. All three – “Do you buy books?”

Ah – if only they grew on trees! I could spend a few moments in the orchard every morning plucking bestsellers. But then, I suppose I’d have to spend all that extra time cleaning up trashy novels that end up dropping to the ground and rotting there.

I do buy books. I look for them all the time. Drive around looking for them. Visit garage sales and estate sales and church sales. People bring in books to sell and I buy some of them. I wish I could buy them all. Every book in the world. Then, when someone walked in asking, “Do you have that book by Norman Jacksprat?” I’d answer, “Of course I do. I have every book in the world! Now, if I only had a filing system!”

It turns out, I have a filing system (of sorts) but not every book in the world. There are some books people don’t want. Some people don’t want ANY books. I’ve had people open the door and lean in, looking around furtively, as though the books might be foaming at the spine with book-rabies ready to pounce down on any nearby head. Then, gaining confidence, the person will step inside, look at me and admit – with visible pride – “I knew someone once who liked to read.”

Now, there are the electronic books – Kindle and such. Will they make reading less scary? Will I be buying used electronic John Grisham novels?

Hard to know the future. Wait a second! I’ve got that fortune telling book in the back…

Did the Big-N know he’d be a continuing seller?

No News is Good News?

This bulletin just in to the local newsdesk. CBS is planning to air a program called Survivor: Nicaragua. It isn’t a new show. It isn’t a new idea. A new setting and cast maybe.

Why does it merit coverage on the local news program?

The average newscast has about seventeen minutes to report everything that happens, once the commercials, sports, weather, and happy talk are subtracted. Last night we got a forty-five second promotion for the next night’s primetime offering instead of news. (I’m sorry, but being old school, I don’t count Survivor: Nicaragua‘s debut as news.)

I’m also crusty enough that I don’t consider what other people are thinking about the news as news either. (This blog – OBVIOUSLY – isn’t news. Just an opinion.) Another news item was knocked off the broadcast so we could all hear Soonermom’s thoughts about singing the national anthem at OU games. Important stuff. And it isn’t enough to hear only her feelings on the subject. We’ve got to wait while the anchor reads the deeply held beliefs on the subject from three or four other viewers who ran to the computer and submitted through the internet. Letters to the editor, modern style.

After every second or third news item, the anchor explains that you can get the rest of the story on the internet. Why bother turning on the television? There isn’t enough time on the newscast to include the news, because time must be allowed for showing the anchorpeople riding in parades or judging chili-cookoffs. And extra time has to go to that perennial top story, in which the Department of Transportation spokesman stands out in the windy construction zone explaining once again that the expressways are under construction.

News flash… We know that already. Not new. Not news.

Whew! I feel ten pounds lighter after airing that rant. We now return you to your regularly scheduled blog.

Broadcast news that is truly entertaining:

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