Rare, Collectible, & Otherwise

Tag: used (Page 25 of 47)

Boom. Pow. Lightning. Thunder. Darkness.

When those leaves blowing across the road are brown, we know fall has arrived. When they’re blowing green, we Okies know that indicates thunderstorms and damage. Obviously, I’m not sleeping like I ought to be.

The drive to the shop had downed trees in the headlights – a couple of them anyway, good-sized, but confined to front yards. There were large branches in the roadway, but fortunately they were in the other lane and I didn’t even have to swerve.

Travis Meyer has just reported that 30,000 folks are without power – the house I just drove away from among them. That’s why I rolled out of bed and donned the clothes. I had an idea I could buy some QT ice and save the inventory in the bistro kitchen.

No more than a couple of pitch-black-driving blocks later, I saw lights shining over several driveways. Emergency lights, I figured. Later, I decided that the power grid must split right down the building-subdivision and the houses to the east still had power.

Sure enough, Reasor’s, Kum-&-Go, and Sonic are operating with lights blazing. Still, along the course of my drive there were dramatically waving trees and more debris and blowing leaves. The green ones ripped from from the trees. On Main Street in the newly-named Rose District, at least one stop sign is blown down and a couple of orange traffic barrels are on their sides.

Power at the bookshop? We’re blazing with lights here. (Couldn’t have been reporting the latest KOTV news offerings without that power thing.)

Which brings us to a couple of present-day technological difficulties. When the bedroom fan choked and quit, it immediately grew warm, but I could switch on the Kindle and check out the latest from the TV weather folks. Wrong-a-roo. Remember that wireless modem thing? Powered by electricity?

It’s dead.

No connection. No problem, I thought. I’ll just read until the power comes back on. (I’m admitting here that I have that tech in hand. Gotta know what a bookseller is up against, you know…) Then, I realize that I can read until the power drains down and I won’t be able to charge it back. No electricity. Since its main function is to serve as my alarm clock, I can’t afford to let the battery run down and risk oversleeping. I am able to do that sort of thing, you know. No power, no lights, no alarm clock? No fun.

That’s when I decided I ought to check on the kitchen and the fridge and freezer situation.

As it turns out, all is well here. Now the KOTV folks are reporting 42,000 homes without power and some twisters down by Eufaula, others near Tenkiller. Circulation feature. Feature, like it’s a drive-in double-bill or something. McAlester, Hartshorne, Pittsburg County, my old stomping grounds – under the gun: “You need to take cover,” they are imploring, as the storm barrels through at more than 50 miles an hour.

I had lodged the store sign from the old location into a wedgie-location, thinking it would not move. It did. Smacked up against the van. New dents are not noticeable up against the old dents. Apparently, there were some strong winds downtown BA, even if the power stayed on.

I’m thankful that the keep-cold items are safe. I feel bad for the 42-thousand (at last update) without power, because I was plenty beyond-warm when I abandoned the darkness for a drive to the shop. The Air-Con is working fine in the bookstore, thank you very much.

It looks like a bed-down here is in the works as it’s already early morning. (Actually, no bed here – more like a balance-on-some-chairs thing. On the up-side… I can’t be late getting here in the morning.

Those of you with the smarty-phones will be able to keep in touch. High-tech. Those of us who have washed our phones in the past week are slaves to internet hotspots. I hope you have power and that alarm clock is working fine in the morning.

If not, you have the perfect excuse for sleeping in on Wednesday.

If you’re out and about, come visit!

McHuston

Booksellers & Irish Bistro
Rose District
122 South Main St, Broken Arrow OK!

Another Tradition to be lost…

The price of progress? Expensive if you’ve enjoyed driving down to Bixby for fresh corn. I don’t know why, but that had become a Sunday afternoon, “Why don’t we…” sort of thing, at least once during the season when bushel baskets were full and lined the front of Conrad Farms.

My email hotline from the Tulsa World says the long-time farming operation is shutting down in October.

Not selling to someone else to grow and harvest. The land will go to developers, presumably so that Tulsa suburb can continue to grow. The space along Memorial is pretty much filled in, these days.

When I was grilling Reuben sandwiches at Paddy’s Irish Restaurant at 81st and Memorial, our place was about the only spot between Tulsa’s restaurant row and the Sonic and Taco Bueno at the intersection in Bixby proper. By the time I sold to my partner, construction was in full swing.

Progress, I suppose.

For folks in the Bixby area, I’m sure it will mean a lot more offerings – retail-wise – which will ultimately result in more tax dollars for the city and its services.

On the other hand, the loss of Conrad Farms highlights the latest long-standing tradition that will bite the cob… so to speak.

Good luck to the Conrad family in their future endeavors, and thanks for the farmer’s market atmosphere for so many years!

For corn-flavored cookbooks, come visit!

McHuston

Booksellers & Irish Bistro
Rose District
122 S. Main Street, Broken Arrow OK!

True Lies and other Honest Observations.

Time changes things. Hey. I used to be 165-pounds and thin. Well, relatively thin. Since then, some time has passed. Things change. In the race between grey and bald, I used to root for grey. Now, I’m just pulling for a peaceful draw. Maybe a tie ‘tween the two. Resolved quickly.

I’m old enough to remember when women used to wear underwear on the inside – like, Under their clothing. Then along came the singer/performer Madonna and the cones. Like I said. Things change.

Thongs used to be footwear. Now, thongs are… –well, you know. Probably, Madonna wears hers on the outside. I don’t keep up with her that much. On her feet are flip-flops, probably. Not sure when that changed, but like I said… (Time changes things, in case you’ve already forgotten.)

Perceptions change too. I remember when – well, we don’t need to go into all that. I’m guessing if you put ninety seconds to it, you can remember a couple of your ways of thinking that have changed. Hint: Remember that guy Santa? Tooth Fairy? Not every perception is so grandiose as that which led to the discovery of the New World. Remember that one? Perception: The WORLD is FLAT.

Oops. Wrong-a-roo.

Concede the point yet?

Enough build up. Time has passed, but some things are the same. In particular, they have not released an Anniversary or otherwise-altered version of James Cameron’s movie TRUE LIES. When it is shown these days, is still the same film that was released back in 1994. Just as a reminder, that was the same year that Nelson Mandela won a majority vote in South Africa, when Blacks got the right to vote. Ireland and Northern Ireland called a cease fire. (Some of you are young enough to know nothing of the Troubles.)

OJ Simpson set out in his Bronco in the most-covered non-action video of all time, as he raced (sort of) to keep away from police over the murder of Nicole Brown Simpson. Kurt Cobain committed suicide, former president Richard Nixon died, and Michael Jackson married the daughter of Elvis Presley. (He was still alive, back then.)

I know you’re catching on how those events seem like long ago. In fact, they were – relatively speaking.

So, when I was watching the James Cameron movie True Lies, with Arnold Schwarzenegger and Jamie Lee Curtis, I was actually viewing it with new eyes. The events of that particular year didn’t play into the thing. No politics. No pressure. No hype.

This doesn’t happen often, I promise you. But I laughed out loud. It’s an action movie. But, it has more than its share of laughs – more than many films labeled as “comedy.” Remember, Arnold was strictly an actor when this was filmed. Not former governor of California. Or governor of California. He was actor-Arnold. That long ago.

The website Rotten Tomatoes has its infamous Tomatometer that rates the reactions of critics and audiences. True Lies has a 72% and 69% score. One of the rare occasions when critics like a movie more than regular viewers. I’m thinking both were a bit jaded. But, the scores are recorded and they are on the internet and cannot be withdrawn.

I – for one – would give the film a much higher score. But I have the advantage of time. As in, the passage of time. Times have changed. The film hasn’t. It’s a funny, action-packed movie. The Feel-Good movie of the Summer? I dunno. But I laughed. Out loud.

Perceptions.

A lady came in to the bookshop looking for old history books. A home-schooler. She didn’t want anything new. “They’re changing history,” she said to me. And, you know, she’s correct. What with political correctness and social responsibility there are difficulties owning up to the past. So we change it.

I just finished reading a history from an area of the south not particularly noted for grand race-relations. It was clear that the authors were aware of that fact. There were numerous occasions in which historical civic actions were purported to have been influenced by sympathies for a race-relations cause. Hard to swallow and I hated to brand it as such, but I thought: Revisionist.

The narrative written on the electronic-pages of the internet will be around forever (assuming that those predictions of the total-global-electronic-apocalypse are incorrect). Those ratings, praises, condemnations, thoughts-in-passing, curses, slanders, praises, observations (even this one) may ultimately be absorbed into the total human educational posture. Our collective history. History.

Be careful in stating what you mean. And be careful to truly mean what you state.

I’ve got Scooter Libby’s tell-all, and other relevant offerings (I don’t really, but do have some really good reading… And that’s no True Lie.) Come visit!

McHuston

Booksellers & Irish Bistro
Rose District
122 South Main Street, Broken Arrow, OK!

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