Rare, Collectible, & Otherwise

Category: Uncategorized (Page 16 of 45)

One man’s pet is another man’s….

Pest.

I can’t imagine keeping one in the house, intentionally.

Rat

Please, may I have some more?

In fact, I was pretty certain I had misread the line in the newspaper. The eyes being what they are, and all.

Upon closer examination, sure enough. The word was R-A-T.

The “Ask the Vet column in the Tulsa World isn’t one I usually read, living in a pet-free home, as I do. Sometimes things will simply jump off the page, like the start of the letter to Dr. Suzanne Hurst:

My one year old female rat has a grape-sized swelling behind her front leg. I know that rats are prone to tumors and I am afraid this is what she has. Do you think I should have this removed?

The answer, of course, is a resounding YES! The rat should be removed immediately!

The question of how she determined a swelling exists behind the leg is one I’d rather not have answered. It might involve actual handling of the animal.

At the risk of sounding anti-pet, I assure you I have in the past kept wildlife and domesticated animals, from snakes to kittens (not in the same cardboard box). It strikes me though, that rats are not pets, but pests.

The doctor informed the rat’s owner that tumor-removal can be done, with surgery in the $100 range.

Cats can be had at a much less expensive rate.

Flush Times: Different in 1853.

It’s described as the best example of “humour by a Southerner” before the Civil War, but it’s probably no Larry-the-Cable-Guy. And when author Joseph Baldwin was describing “Flush Times” in 1853, it would not have brought to mind the same connotation as today.

Flush Times

Deep South Humour ca. 1853

Some of the first ‘flush’ toilets were installed that year in New York City, and for the rest of the country, the ‘flush times’ were those of abundance. In his book Flush Times of Alabama and Mississippi attorney and author Joseph Baldwin recorded sketches of colorful characters he had encountered. He did so in a humorous vein, without entering the “cable-guy” arena.

The book is old enough that it has jumped into the reprint arena, with digital copies readily available. Original copies, like this one from the pre-Civil War deep South, are somewhat scarce, but in the same price range as a reprint.

This particular copy is currently listed on eBay.

Find Tulsa area news at inlandia press.

Helmerick Award: Furst a First?

By most estimations, Alan Furst is an accomplished author. Still, the choice of the spy novelist as the winner of the 2011 Helmerick Award is somewhat of a surprise.

Alan Furst

Helmerick Winner Alan Furst

The Peggy V. Helmerick Distinguished Author award has been given in previous years to John Grisham, Ian McEwan, John Updike, and Neil Simon, names that might be considered ‘household’ compared to spy novelist Furst.

The author has a Tulsa tie, however, in that one of his novels contains scenes set in Tulsa. Furst visited the city in 2007 to give a reading at a local bookstore, and included some of his observations in the 2010 novel Spies of the Balkans.

Although his earlier career included writings so diverse that a collection of his works and manuscripts at the University of Texas describes them as writings “for which no common denominator can be found,” the New York author has become known for spy novels set before and during the second World War.

However novels are grouped, the selection of Furst as the Helmerick winner places the domain of Tom Clancy and Robert Ludlum on the same elevated plateau as the works of Norman Mailer and John Updike, authors who might be considered ‘literary’ as opposed to ‘genre fiction.’

In each genre, there are authors and individual works with that rise to loftier attention. Just as the Charles Portis western True Grit may be considered an American classic to be placed alongside works of literature, perhaps the espionage of Furst will find a similar place of timelessness.

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