Tuesday, November 4, 2025
Monday, November 3, 2025
Halloween Haul
So here’s
my dilemma: I finished The Three Musketeers about a week ago and was planning
to end the year with John LeCarre’s The Spy Who Came in from the Cold followed
by Dickens’ Nicholas Nickleby. But something just didn’t sit right. Was
I intimidated? Was I worn down? The thrill of the hunt, which was there, was
there no longer. What happened?
I felt
like a World Series power hitter who, after coming so close to victory but falling
short, decided rest and recuperation were in order. Retooling, recalibration. My reading had
been in such high gear over the past, well, year, I suppose, that perhaps I
just craved a break. To return to baseball analogy, it seemed a couple of days
at the batting cages would be the best medicine.
During my
two-day vacation at the end of October I decided to drive to my local used bookstore
and see what might leap off the shelves at me. It had to be science fiction, I decided.
Where I got my start oh so many decades ago as a sprightly bright-eyed lad. I’d
only read seven sci fi novels in the past two years.(*) A return was needed.
So last
Thursday I dropped in to my store around lunchtime and left 45 minutes later
with four SF paperbacks, all for the price of a chimichanga at a high-end taco
store. My only criteria – they must appear interesting and must be quick reads.
Here they
are:
The Other Side of Time (1965) by Keith Laumer, 172 pages.
I last
read Laumer 20 years ago when visions of being a science fiction author danced
before my eyes. This is the most “fantastical” of my quartet of books. The back
cover describes hulking, cannibalistic ape men called “Hagroon,” an educated
monkey named “Dzok,” a place called “Xonijeel,” and an alternate universe ruled
by Napoleon the Fifth. It gave me Lin Carter vibes. It was also the shortest of
my picks; looking to read it over three or four days.
The
Jupiter Plague (1965)
by Harry Harrison, 274 pages.
Never got
into Harrison, but did read his “Planet of Death” novellas. This seems like a
70s-ish bad fashion low-budget SF flick, something that Rock Hudson might have
starred in, about a space probe that crashes back to earth at an airport,
unleashing a deadly virus. It’s been long enough since the Wu Flu that I can
read books about deadly viruses and take them at face value.
In the
Ocean of Night (1972)
by Gregory Benford, 321 pages.
The most
mysterious paperback of the haul. The back cover is very generic, almost to the
point where I can’t tell if this is hard SF or fantasy or a melding of the two.
But Benford is a legitimate physicist, and I haven’t read anything by him since
If the Stars are Gods back in 2002 when I lived in Maryland with the
Mrs. as newlyweds, so that novel, barely remembered, has fond memories for me nevertheless.
The
Reality Dysfunction (1996)
by Peter F. Hamilton, 1,225 pages (!)
Okay, I
went off the deep end with this. Almost as long as The Three Musketeers was
combined with how long Nicholas Nickleby will be, in terms of page
length. But – I liked the heft of the book (it felt good in my hands) and, this
is a first – I like the font. It’s easy on the eyes. I haven’t felt this way
about a font since I was a much more discriminating science fiction reader in
my late tweens. Looks like it could be a great example of Universe-building.
Anyway,
since each novel cost me an average of $3.25, if I get 20 or 50 pages in and it’s
just not doing it for me, I can set it down and move on to the next.
Looking to
start The Other Side of Time at the end of the week.
Happy reading!!
(*) = Going
backwards, Leviathans of Jupiter by Bova, A Matter for Men by
Gerrold, The Sirens of Titan and Slaughterhouse Five by Vonnegut,
Revelation Space by Reynolds, Starship Troopers by Heinlein, and Nexus
by Naam.
Friday, October 31, 2025
Thursday, October 30, 2025
Phrases I Hate II
“You guys’s”
Pronounced,
yoo guy ziz.
Example: A
cop at a traffic stop, addressing several people in car: “All right, I’m going
to need to see all you guys’s driver licenses.”
Forgive a little
pedantry to explain myself. I’ll be succinct. It boils down to a slight confusion
in the English language on how to pronounce the possessive of a plural noun.
Take, for
instance, the plural noun cats. There are a dozen cats at the animal shelter,
and it’s time to, I don’t know, wash their blankets. The “cats’ blankets” is
pronounced as “the cats blankets.” The apostrophe is when it’s written, but it’s
pronounced no different as if it was a singular cat with multiple blankets.
You don’t
say, the cats’s blankets, “the cats-iz blankets.” That just sounds stupid. That’s
just the way it is.
The confusion
comes, I believe, with proper nouns – names – that end with an “s”. For example,
“Thomas.” If Thomas has a couple muffins, you would write Thomas’s muffins and pronounce
it as “Thomas-iz muffins.”
Guys’s,
pronounced guy-ziz, just sounds stupid.
To be
honest, I don’t hear it a fraction as often as I hear “Does that make sense?” –
but I hear it enough for it to register in the old ear/brain/mind. I watch
about two dozen YouTube videos a day (hey, it makes the spreadsheets reconcile
to the billing faster), and I probably catch a “guys’s” every other day.
Now, this
may just be a momentary anomaly. Or it could be one of hundreds of examples of the
English language being dumbed down. Maybe it’s a typical eddy in the stream of
linguistic evolution. Not sure. Though I am no scholar of the English language,
I do recognize that slang contributed to the growth of the mother tongue. Think
of how “dude” and “hippie” came into existence, grew to acceptance, then faded
after overuse. More recently, think of all the goofy words the Internet has
given us: blog, phishing, Google, Goop, dox, and such. And maybe it’s now hip
to be dumb – or at least hide one’s intelligence. I read somewhere that we are
entering the post-literate age, and I fear that may be true.
Or maybe I’m
just beginning to outlive my time. My youngest daughter at 17 speaks a lingo
with her friends completely alien to me. I dunno.
What do
you guys’s’s’s think?
Monday, October 27, 2025
Phrases I Hate
A long,
long time ago I did a series of posts here at the Recovering Hopper entitled “Words
I Hate.”
These were
(and still are) linguistical objects that, for some reason I’d try to explain, somehow
would hurl out a harpoon into the thick adipose tissue of my eardrum. And once
snagged, would wiggle back and forth, hooking deeper and deeper with accelerating
and accumulating levels of annoyance. So much so that I’d lose focus of the
original thought the writer or speaker was trying to impart. An earworm, albeit
of the nastiest, parasitical kind.
Well, since
I’ve been watching a lot of videos on the YouTube and listen to all sorts of
Zoom and Teams calls second hand, my attention has been called to a number of
Phrases I Hate.
Here’s the
first, and probably the most prolific one I’ve noticed:
After a
number of explanatory sentences, the speaker utters an apologetic, “Does this make
sense?” often in a faux self-deprecating manner, as a kind of Final Boss grammatical
period at the paragraph’s conclusion.
Does
this make sense?
Ugh,
forgive me, but that’s an illustration of the heinous phrase in action.
Anyway, I utterly
hate this lazy phrase. I encourage you to surgically incise it from your verbal
lexicon immediately and with brutal efficiency.
Boiled
down to its logical skeleton, the phrase Does this make sense? can literally
mean one of two things:
1) I am
such a poor communicator that I need to periodically confirm, several times in
a conversation, whether I am getting my point across to you, no matter how simple
it may be.
or
2) You are
a retard and can’t be trusted to understand possibly very simple ideas.
Both
explanations assume a lowest-common-denominator, dumbed-down approach to communicating.
If 1, why be so hard on yourself? If you truly are a poor communicator, for God’s
sake man take some lessons or hone your skills with a speaking coach. Or if 2, then
please stop communicating until you learn to treat the person you are in
dialogue with respect.
So I beg
of any users of this dopy phrase: Do better. Please, for the sake of Hopper’s poor thick
adipose tissued ear drums.
Grrrr.
(This
message brought to you after a well-meaning podcaster – I assume, since I give
the speaker the benefit of the doubt – just used the phrase twice in the
span of three minutes giving his for-the-everyman interpretation of a speech
given by a Catholic bishop.)
Wednesday, October 22, 2025
The Worst Feeling in the World
Is when
you excitedly crack open a book newly purchased …
… and
discover that the prior owner has graffiti’d it all up with either a
highlighter, a heavy-handed black pen, or both. It’s even worse if the highlit
chunks are pink.
I’ve been
an avid reader all my life, and I’ve probably bought somewhere in the
neighborhood of four hundred books over the past 25 years. The vast majority
have been used books, since I only buy new for the best and the keepers. When I
consider a used book I do give it a thorough examination, checking the spine,
the brittleness or lack thereof of the pages, the smell (can’t have a moldy
book, mind you), dog-earedness and, most importantly, if it’s been marked up.
Three
times I’ve failed this most important of tests.
The first
was a thick but flexible introductory book on the Revolutionary War. I found it
at a library book sale and scooped it up for a few bucks. It felt good in my
hands. This was in the first phase of my military history interest, sometime
around 2012 or 2013. I anticipated learning about the main players, the
battles, the tactics and the strategies that enabled the United States to
secure its independence from Great Britain. It sat on a shelf for a little
while as I finished up my current reads and then I cracked it open … to that
pink highlighter! Some high school or college kid marked up the early chapters
which somehow didn’t reveal itself to me in my initial scan. I was crushed. I
simply could not read it. I think I donated it to Goodwill.
The second
was purchased at a thrift store on Hilton Head where my mother-in-law
volunteered. This place has an enormous selection of books of all sizes,
shapes, genres and age levels – several aisles’ worth. The family always scored
there when we’d visit. I found a thick paperback biography of Albert Einstein,
which instantly leapt off the shelf and into my hands. Excited, I paid the few
dollars and, opening it to page one on the ride home, discovered some dude both
yellow highlighted and black pen underlined most of the opening chapters (about
70 pages) covering Einstein’s youth and his scientific thought. I was crushed
and again could not read it. However, it sits to this day in my closet atop my
dresser. Not sure why, but I haven’t given up on it. Though I probably won’t
read it.
The last
was a book I ordered online. Don’t remember the title, but it was a one-volume
history of the Catholic Church that was fairly well received. I ordered it from
a local used book store (most likely right here in Dallas) and only because the
condition was marked as GOOD on the website. Well, I supposed “good” is now a loosely
subjective term. When it arrived in the mail I hurriedly opened it, only to
observe that some prior reader had underlined sentences and whole paragraphs
throughout the entire book in pencil. An irrational thought popped into my
head: I could just erase it! Sure, it wouldn’t leave any indentations and
wouldn’t take any longer than six or seven hours – but I’d still have a
potentially awesome read ahead of me – then I slapped myself hard and
yelled “STOP IT!” The book is a lost cause, man, put it down. And slowly I did.
So on that
last book I was sorta deceived, and don’t count it against me.
It’s not
the money – I think I’m out maybe $20 thanks to these three charlatans. It’s
the smothering blanket of disappointment that envelops you, tamping down joy
and hope and the promise of adventure and discovery.
So … don’t
mark up a book, unless you intend to keep it forever.
This
public service message provided by Hopper, Lifelong Reader.
Thursday, October 16, 2025
Fishing
Okay, here’s
something a little unexpected and unusual.
I’ve never
been an outdoorsman. Had I lived in medieval times I’d probably have been a
cleric enclosed in a monastery or a hermit in a Carthusian cell. Or I’d be an
apprentice to a merchant, stocking shelves by day and reading scrolls by candlelight at night in my tiny attic room. What I would not have been would be: farmer or a
hunter. I have no natural affinity for the Great Outdoors, for Mother Nature,
roaming the great plains or the tundra or lush forests or sailing the deep seas. I am not an
outdoorsman. Don’t have the genes.
Like home
repair and auto mechanics, that gene has passed me by. In fact, whatever
genetic propensity I might have had for that particular love skipped me and was
passed on to my younger brother, who has it in spades. I mean, he’s currently
an automotive technician, and as a teen was an amateur taxidermist and
considered a career as a forest ranger.
It was not
for lack of trying – on my father’s part. Yes, I did have a shotgun license, thanks to my dad.
But I enjoyed the clay pigeons about as much as I hated tromping through the
bushes hunting rabbits, pheasants, and grouse. And fishing – forget that! I
would much rather read the Merriam-Webster dictionary than cast a line off a
bridge waiting for a bite. (That is not an exaggeration – I once purchased a 25-pound M-W at a book fair and I was enraptured.) True story: I
read chapters 4 through 8 of The Fellowship of the Ring in a rowboat in
the middle of the lake while my father and brother fished for sunnies.
All right, now we come to the unexpected and unusual part: I’ve been binge watching fish and wildlife law enforcement videos.
Now … hear me out.
It’s more
law enforcement than fish and wildlife. Basically, Fish and Wildlife Commission
(FWC) officers pull aside boaters and bust them for all sorts of violations.
From poaching to catching over the limit to not carrying registrations and
licenses or having the requisite number and type of safety jackets, fire
extinguishers and even horns. Mix in the occasional boating while intoxicated
or smoking by a fuel pump at a dock, and you have a recipe for some quite
interesting videos.
Most of
the perps are contrite and, well, a little embarrassed and taken aback at the
seriousness of which the FWC regards these infractions. After all, who thinks
taking an extra four or five fish helps deplete the coastal population? But
some go crazy, some get irate, and once in a while one gets arrested.
Yes, it’s
a current fad because I’m bored with everything else on YouTube and am sick of
the death and destruction filtered into my head from the news media. But my
accounting job requires the analysis of spreadsheet after spreadsheet, and most
of us at work listen to some form of music or videos on headphones to make the
clock hands move quicker. This week for me it’s FWC enforcement videos. Next
week, who knows?
But, rest
assured, you won’t find me perusing fishing rods and reels at the sporting
goods store. The closest I’ll come to a fish is my next reading of Moby Dick
or Jaws.
Note: As a
non-outdoorsman and non-fisherman, I am not responsible for the accuracy of any
outdoors- or fishing-relating content in this post. Thanks!
Monday, October 13, 2025
Columbus Day
All
kidding aside, I’ve had a biography of Christopher Columbus stored along with
two or three dozen other books of miscellaneous genres in a plastic bin in my
garage, and one day, I vow, I will get to it. It’s old school – and I mean purely
old school –written quite the while back, the 1930s I want to say, meaning it should
be fairly free of the post-modern contagion that rots so much of the historical
nonfiction put out today. I bought it at a library book sale a decade ago, and
I can feel it in my hands right now: strong and sturdy like your grandparents’
living room tv set, five or six hundred pages of hefty thickness, shielded by a
hardcover that could stop a .38. One day I’ll get to it. When I need a break
from all the religion, science, military history, classic lit, and pulpy sci fi
that seems to be my daily bread.
One day.
Maybe
Columbus Day 2026.
Monday, September 22, 2025
Hopper Yet Again a Year Older
Weird
birthday this year. It fell in the middle of the week, during a stressful time
for the Mrs. – she had CEOs from Europe touring her stores and would be overnighting
in Houston on my birthday. No problem; I’m a big boy. Little One was stuck in
school 45 minutes away; student teaching during the day and taking a class or
two every night. Patch, however, has a birthday that falls the day before mine.
So the agreement the family decided on was that we’d all celebrate Patch’s
birthday the Sunday before and mine the Saturday after.
Patch, as
always, made out like a bandit. The Mrs. took care of all the makeup, beauty,
and clothing gifts, with some help from Little One. I bought her a “Five Nights
At Freddy’s” stuffed animal, an LED-strobe light thingie for their upstairs
apartment, and a gift card to B&N. We had ramen at a highly-rated
restaurant in downtown Dallas, and cake afterwards at home.
Me, all I
wanted was a home-cooked meal. And the wife, as usual, outdid herself: homemade
lasagna (half-veggie for Little One, half-meat for the rest of us) and –
brownies for dessert! This we did last Saturday. I mowed the lawn and took
Little One on errands on me while Patch worked at the boutique. I chilled in
the afternoon watching a bad movie from my youth (1978’s The Medusa Touch,
starring a drunk or hung-over Richard Burton) while the ladies went to the town
pool. Then, lasagna, and after we ate I sat down in my chair in the living room
to open up gifts. And what did they get me?
Well, for
starters, I got this card from Patch:
Loved it. I know deep down she wants to read Tolkien but will never admit it. I’ll have to work on that.
She also
gifted me two records: Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 6 in Bm (“Pathetique”) and a
dual record of “Death and Transfiguration” by Richard Strauss on one side with
Wagner’s “Siegfried Idyll” on the other. Both records are older than me by four
and seven years respectively. I plan on listening to both later today. My
collection is now up to 56 albums.
Little One,
my impoverished college student, bought me a large Yankee candle for my desk, pumpkin
flavor. But she spent the early afternoon with me, which is more priceless than
any gift I could receive. She also bought me a card showing a smiling slice of
pizza wishing me a Happy Birthday, with a heartfelt message inside.
The Mrs.
bought me a desperately-needed pair of khakis and a book written by Charlie Kirk,
Time for a Turning Point. I told her honestly that I may need a bit of
distance before I crack the book. I was a huge Charlie Kirk fan for several
years. He was one of the twenty or so YouTube channels I watched almost daily,
and I agreed with about 98 percent of his message. If rumor was correct and he
was contemplating converting to the Catholic faith, then that would up it to
100%. I’m thinking of starting the book early in the new year. To round off my
gifts, she bought us tickets to see the Dallas Stars play in early October.
And that’s
that. Another year round the sun, another year older. Sands through the
hourglass, waiting for nobody. I’m in a good place in most of the categories I should
be in a good place, save for two major areas I’m struggling with. Other than
that, we now look forward to Little One’s birthday next week, the wife’s three
weeks after that, then Halloween, Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year’s. Time
marches on …
Friday, September 12, 2025
Wednesday, September 10, 2025
Wednesday, September 3, 2025
Re-Reads Redux
Over the
past two or three years, I find myself more and more revisiting books I
encountered in my teens and twenties. Some by choice, others by chance. It’s not
unlike reconnecting with an old friend after two or three decades of living
separate lives. I’ve done this twice in my life, via Facebook friends from the
past, and one time was very nostalgic and fulfilling, while the other was kinda
cringy and uncomfortable.
Anyway, I enjoy
the tension of whether or not I’ll experience the same feelings I had upon the first
read through a work. Or, if the book was something assigned to me in school and
I didn’t get The Message back then, perhaps I would upon a re-read? Either way,
whether a fantastic re-read or a certified dud, I find myself an enthusiastic re-reader.
Off the
top of my head, I’ve re-read at least 24 books since 2023. Most have been
rewarding; few have failed the re-read test. If I had to categorize them, it’d
be something like this:
Great
My Tom
Clancy re-adventure: Without Remorse, Patriot Games, The Hunt
for Red October, The Cardinal of the Kremlin, Clear and Present
Danger, The Sum of All Fears, Debt of Honor, Executive
Orders
Watership
Down (Richard Adams)
Moby
Dick (Herman
Melville)
Half of my
Dean R. Koontz re-reads: The Bad Place, Dragon Tears
Conquerors
from the Darkness
(Robert Silverberg) – childhood nostalgia!
The
Grayspace Beast (Gordon
Eklund) – childhood nostalgia!
Okay …
Just Okay
The War
of the Worlds
(H.G. Wells) – had some great parts, though
The
Once and Future King
(T.H. White) – also had some great parts
Floating
Dragon (Peter
Straub)
The Old
Man and the Sea
(Hemingway) – still didn’t “get it”
The other
half of my Dean R. Koontz re-reads: Cold Fire, Midnight
Disappointing
Altered
States (Paddy
Chayefsky)
The Wolfen (Whitley Strieber)
Jaws (Peter Benchley)
Imajica (Clive Barker)
I mention
all this because a few months back I decided that Stephen King’s It would
be 2025’s Halloween read. Since the book is about 1,150 pages long, I figured
it would be best to start early, September 1st. Problem is, I’m now just shy of
200 pages in. Yep, still a page-turner. I’ll probably get it done – and review
it – in about three weeks or so. Which gives me another pleasant dilemma: Do I
give another Stephen King a go, or move on to the next book waiting patiently in
the On Deck circle. If I do another King, should it be one I haven’t read since
high school (I’m thinking The Shining) or one I’ve never read (Under
the Dome, since I had a lot of fun watching the corny series with my girls when
they were little)? Or pick up The Three Musketeers, staring balefully
down upon me as a write these words?
Well, let’s
just wait for the spirit to move me. Come October 1st, I might be in the thick
of a book I’m currently unaware of at the moment. We’ll see.
Happy Fall
Reading!
Friday, August 29, 2025
Feeling Guilty ...
Over the
lack of posting this summer.
Truth is, my
attention lay elsewhere, by choice and necessity. I’ve also been pursuing a lot
of non-blogworthy topics and trains of thought. Couple that with a lack of inspiration,
drive, and energy, and that should explain the dearth of posts.
It’s not that
I’ve had no inspiration, drive, or energy this summer. But it’s been expended
on … real life. A lot of busyness. A lot. Much familial growing. And we’re
already back in school.
The wife and
I met Little One’s new boyfriend over dinner and drinks in July. My daughter’s
happy, he seems great, and we approve. She finished her day care job mid-August
and jumped immediately into student teaching, helping with fourth- and
fifth-graders in an impoverished city school. For commuting she bought my car
(actually, paid off the remaining loan with her funds from the day care job)
and I had a great experience at Carmax buying a new used car, which I’ve been
driving three weeks now.
Patch has
started her first retail job, working in a boutique a couple miles away,
necessitating drop offs and pick ups at odd hours. She started her senior year
in high school two weeks ago already. We had Back to School Night and met her
teachers, and are happy with all. I particularly bonded with her new English
teacher, who’s reading Watership Down for the first time. When meeting
her statistics teacher, I opened with, “Tell me, what percentage of parents
show up for Back to School Night?” Patch also got her driver’s permit, and we’re
looking to head out to a parking lot this Monday for her first parent-taught
lesson.
We drove
out to Hill Country near Austin for a long lazy weekend, hanging with my wife’s
sister and her extended family. They have a sprawling ranch with a pool, barn,
and guesthouse, and are fresh from a year working in Barcelona. Many stories
and much laughter. I actually got a little sunburnt swimming. Oh, and I saw my
first scorpion – hanging out in the middle of the guest house where we were
staying, where I was walking around in bare feet! I hurriedly covered it
with a drinking glass. Per my brother-in-law, they can’t kill you, but a sting
feels like a hot lava injection and is excruciatingly painful for about ten
minutes. He promptly squashed the critter. And he warned us not to go behind
the guesthouse, as he heard rattlesnakes back there.
Last
weekend we moved Little One into her first off-campus apartment. She rooms with
two other girls – one of whom has a very famous parent I cannot talk about. The
other girl’s parents were there, and the father and I spent three hours
assembling IKEA bunk beds. The apartment is across the street from her college
and has (I’m told) a very Melrose-place vibe. There’s a central pool and
courtyard where all the college kids relax and party. There’s also a stray cat that’s
made the courtyard its kingdom and prowls up and down, begging at doors.
Man,
senior year for both girls is going to fly by. Next May we’ll have two graduations,
and that follows right on the heels of our 25th wedding anniversary.
Don’t ask to borrow any money off me in 2026 – I’ll be tapped out for a long
while.
My reading
has improved. I devoured a fascinating if somewhat dumbed-down-for-the-masses book
called Math in 100 Numbers that’s got me inspired again. Those who know
me know that every September when school starts, when that crispness floats in
the air, I get an urge to read science and math. I also powered through a
pretty good Ben Bova sci fi soap opera (Leviathans of Jupiter) and
re-read the sci fi horror Altered States, a book I remember reading at
the town pool 15 years ago with my toddlers in the kiddie pool. I am excited
because September 1 I am going to start re-reading Stephen King’s It,
one of my favorites of his, and one which I last read as a teen in 1987.
Healthwise,
I did re-gain some weight this summer, but I resumed lifting weights and
walking. I’d like to be under 200 by my birthday next month. But lifting gives
me confidence and an overall sense of well-being, and I’m reconciled to have to
do it for the rest of my life. Nothing nearly Schwarzeneggaresque. Just heavy enough
that I won’t have a heart attack and my muscles will firm up and my belly
shrink. And I still enjoy listening to my history podcasts while walking.
Other
random summer 2025 events: played Mr. Mom for a couple days while my wife was
on a short business trip to Houston; had a wonderful confession experience with
a wonderful priest one Saturday; bought five more classical records for the
collection; one daughter with a scary inexplicable hive breakout one night;
another daughter hosting her bff at our house for a movie night / sleepover; and
perhaps the biggest adrenaline rush – helicopters overhead and police cars
zipping around the neighborhood one night searching for a possibly dangerous
fugitive.
Toss in
some other non-blogworthy stuff, and it’s quite a busy five weeks. This weekend,
however, should be restful, relaxing, and chill. We’re expected to have blah
weather. Overcast, spots of rain, temps not too hot but kinda muggy. The wife
wants to get some pool time in with Little One, but we’re not sure if that’ll
happen. I want to wrap up my current read, watch some movies with and without
Patch, keep lifting weights and get a few walks in. I need desperately to mow
the lawn but need 24 hours of rain-free weather to accomplish that. Then,
September, the Hopper birthday month.
Until
then, here’s Charlie:
And here’s a review I posted in 2010 about Altered States. It’s a quick read worth a look.
Wednesday, July 23, 2025
Some Thoughts on Ozzy Osbourne
1948 -
2025
While I
was never a real fan of Ozzy per se, I was a huge fan of Black Sabbath, the
band that first brought him success in the late 60s and through the 70s. As a
teen in the 80s who had absolutely no interest “80s music,” I rebelled by
diving full force into such 70s rock bands as Led Zeppelin, AC/DC, The Who, and
Sabbath. I never saw Ozzy live, but I did own most of his CDs with Black
Sabbath. I also owned his groundbreaking first solo venture, Blizzard of Oz
and his 1991 smash CD, No More Tears.
I kinda
remember the first time I heard him, sometime around age 13: “Iron Man,” on one
of the new classic rock radio stations. I have to say I was floored. Never
before in my short musical life had I heard something like “Iron Man.” What a
unique tune – deceptively simple, or, rather, a simple riff surrounded by more
musically complex “choruses,” solo, and ending. It stuck in my mind for a few
years. I also heard the lesser impressive but somehow more popular “Paranoid”
on the dial.
The winter
of my senior year one of my friends lent me his cassette tape of Black
Sabbath’s greatest hits. Yes, there is such a thing – and I devoured it. I
listened to it nonstop for weeks if not months. My family took a car trip out
to Wisconsin and I, with a new driver’s license, took a late night shift behind
the wheel and popped the cassette in and listened to the entire thing while the
family slumbered in minivan.
Somehow I
obtained a Black Sabbath songbook. How obsessed I was with that book! In the
pre-Internet age, where nobody told you anything unless you paid for a tutor or
read it in a magazine (Guitar magazine), the songbook unnecessarily
complicated all these Sabbath songs I loved from their first four albums.
First, it was in piano notation (not guitar tab). Second, I later leaned Iommi
detuned his guitar 1.5 steps (low E string down to C# and all other strings
tuned standard to that). Third, the piano notation was in C#, making all the
riffs more difficult to play than if it was transcribed in E with a note to
detune to C#. So I could not physically play all the songs, whereas now I can,
albeit tuned 1.5 steps higher than the record.
Back to
Ozzy.
Ozzy’s
persona in the 70s was of a drug-addled unpredictable madman. Eventually his bandmates,
fed up with all his excessive drug intake and personality swings, fired him in
1979. He assumed a “Prince of Darkness” persona which may have been shocking
back then in the early 80s to Tipper Gore and her crew (I wasn’t too shocked as
a teen listening to his solo stuff). But that persona quickly became cartoonish
and sometimes buffoonish (to me, at least) only salvaged temporarily by his
magnum opus, No More Tears.
In the
summer and fall of 1991, when my band was playing out and partying and doing
the recording studio and writing songs, No More Tears came out and was
played a lot. A lot. It blew me away, particularly the eponymous tune. I bought
the CD, put it into regular rotation, and became a proselytizer for 90s Ozzy. About
a decade later I purchased the only other Ozzy CD I ever owned – his equally
phenomenal debut, Blizzard of Oz.
Ozzy’s
main superhero talent was finding superb guitarists to play with. Iommi is
fantastic and was a pretty big influence on my guitar playing as a teen. But Ozzy
also brought to the forefront Randy Rhodes, Jake E. Lee, and Zakk Wylde. Rhodes
is a genius, perhaps the only guitarist to seriously challenge Eddie Van Halen
in the early 80s. But I didn’t care for that style of playing. I much more
enjoyed Zakk Wylde. If you are into it, go to YouTube and check out some of his
solo videos – particularly those of him playing Sabbath songs in a parking lot
and those of him doing a guitar solo live on tour. Phenomenal.
The wife
was into Ozzy’s reality show in the early 00s. I watched a few. It was
fascinating, if a little sad. When we learned of his death yesterday, we were –
as many were – amazed that he made it to the ripe old age of 76. I texted her
reminiscing that we both though he was teetering on the edge of death watching
him on cable twenty years ago.
I also
found it fitting – as just about everyone else in the know – that he died three
weeks after the “final” Black Sabbath reunion show, where he performed the
entire concert seated upon a black throne. The “Back to the Beginning” show was
a benefit concert that took place in Birmingham, England – where Ozzy and the
other members of Black Sabbath grew up. Something like $190 million was raised
for charity, and part of the take went to Cure Parkinson’s, a disease which
Ozzy was suffering from since at least early 2019, and which may have
contributed to his death.
Well done
and good show, old chap.
RIP.
Friday, July 18, 2025
Summer Moving Along
Haven’t had the energy or the will to post anything of interest. Not that it hasn’t been an interesting summer so far. But what is currently occupying my mind and my time are private thoughts, deep thoughts, self-directed thoughts which might not interest you.
The most I
will say, however, is that I have been expending a great deal of effort trying to figure
out how to proceed to a new career. For twenty-three years I have been handling
people’s money, in the form of payroll or tax prep. To be honest, similar to the
three years I spent in IT at the start of the century, I am kinda sick of listening
to people complain. I’m trying to find a niche that hits the ikigai sweet spot:
something I’ll enjoy, something fairly in demand, and something that pays. I don’t
need nor want to be a multimillionaire, but my salary over the past few years
hasn’t risen with the costs of just about everything else, and that scares me a
bit. Haven’t had any breakthroughs yet, but I’m still working on it.
The girls
are spreading their wings, testing the air above and around the nest. Little
One is getting valuable experience running a classroom of twenty-three children
ages five to nine full-time. Patch is doing lots of odd jobs and is getting
ready for the drivers exam to get her permit. They and the Mrs. are currently
in Pennsylvania with my folks while they investigate a couple of northeast
colleges for Patch and visit old friends. I’m stuck here in Texas, working and
babysitting the dog. The $1,000+ we’ll save that would’ve gone to a round-trip
ticket for me and a dogsitter is going to the cost of their rental car.
This week
my routine has been fairly, well, routine. Wake up, let the dog out, feed him,
go to work, do my spreadsheets and chat to my small circle of workmates for
eight hours, go home, walk the dog, feed him, then feed myself and watch a
movie. This week I watched Knocked Up, The Meg, Dream Scenario,
and The Mummy. Then I try to read a bit, play fetch with good old Charlie,
then go to bed. Rinse and repeat. Much like my bachelor days in the 90s, but
with no beer, no cigarettes, no band and no night school.
Oh, wait!
I have been playing my electric guitar. I usually practice for about an hour
every weekend; been doing so since February – by the end of the year I should
be up to speed. I’ve been focusing a lot on Led Zeppelin; got down the solos to
Whole Lotta Love, Stairway, Misty Mountain Hop, Living
Loving Maid – simple stuff, but fun stuff. Might try to learn Gilmore’s
solo to Another Brick in the Wall. And I also got down the little solo
and heavy bridge break in Beck’s Bolero. Sometimes I play along with an
album, such as AC/DC’s Powerage or The Cult’s Sonic Temple. I
find it a great distraction from the stresses of life, and now that guitar
playing has no stress associated with it (auditioning band members, hauling
everything to shows, balancing egos and having to keep pace with bandmates,
etc.) I’m having a blast.
One area I’m
not having a blast with is my literary life. I finished a cheesy beach paperback
the first week of the month – I think I’ll save that for a review – but after
that, I’m striking out one after the other. I tried my hand at a new fantasy
novel (got 45 pages in), a philosophical history of German idealism (got 30
pages in), and indecision over whether to crack open an unread physics book on
deck or an unread World War II book on deck. Even Little One attempted to help
me out by lending me her copies of The Merchant of Venice, History of
the Peloponnesian War, a book on Catholic teaching, and another on the 300-year
history of the Medici family of Renaissance Florence. I thumbed through the
first few pages of the Medici book last night, and will try to break into that
later tonight.
I’m
scheduled to pick the girls up from DFW late Sunday night, so I have another
two days to myself. I think I’ll do some long walks both days and relax with a
book at the park one afternoon (it’s supposed to be a high of 95 this weekend).
And I also plan on driving over to the used book store to pick up my 50th
record. I’m hoping to score a Wagner, but since they’re all good, I’m not
picky.
Enjoy the
weekend!
Monday, June 30, 2025
June Recap
In light
of the dearth of postings, you may surmise June has been quite the busy month.
And you’d be surmising correctly. A lot’s been going on down here at Chez
Hopper south-of-the-border (well, south of the Mason-Dixon line, if said line
stretched to the midpoint of the United States). Some blog-worthy stuff, some
stuff that’s too personal for the semi-anonymity being thrown around here, and
some stuff I don’t even want to commit to the electronic page.
One thing’s
for sure: we’ve been on the go somewhat constantly. Little One, elementary
school teacher-in-training, has been working full time at a pre-school / summer
camp, going crazy each day with different themes (movie day, wacky water fun
day, bake bread day, etc.) managing a class of around 25 five- to nine-year-olds.
To get to her job, though, she needs my car, which leaves me with no wheels. So
I have to be dropped off and picked up from my place of business three days a
week, and to this soul who loves regularity, that’s often stressfully
unpredictable. I normally clock out at 4, and being picked up at as early as 3:15
or as late as 6:30 is not an uncommon occurrence.
Patch had
a week of Yearbook Camp, but that only meant we dropped her off at the high
school and picked her up in the early evening. They bussed all the high school yearbook
students (we have something like eleven high schools in our own monster-sized
town) to one of the local community colleges where they all learned the
creative and marketing aspects of yearbooking, brainstorming, playing games and
winning prizes, and socializing.
The Mrs.
has been fairly solitary, only leaving on one short business trip down to
Austin for three days. But she’s been busy and stressed as ever. Me, I’ve taken
to working on the exterior of my home. Each weekend I’m mowing, cutting shrubbery,
mulching, keeping the encroaching weeds at bay with Roundup, filling cracks in
the ground and bunny holes with dirt, etc. I have a huge gardening hat (given
to me by Patch on my last birthday) which keeps the anvil of the sun off my
face and neck, but the mosquitos have been feasting on me, which can be quite
unpleasant. Everything down in Texas is bigger, even the mosquito bites.
Speaking
of gifts given to me, I had a great Father’s Day two weeks ago. The ladies
treated me to a juicy steak, with sides of asparagus and home-made macaroni and
cheese. Little One bought me a book Constantine and the Conversion of Europe
(which I read the following week) and Patch got me L’Enfance du Christ,
a double-album oratorio by the composer Hector Berlioz (my record collection is
now up to 49). And to top it all off, we four watched Titan: The OceanGate Submersible
Disaster, something I’ve been into off-and-on since following it closely in
real-time Father’s Day weekend in 2023.
More
importantly, my daily background radiation of existential dread has been shouting
and gesticulating and doing angry cartwheels louder and louder, until I could
no longer shut it out. While Little One and the Mrs. and, to a lesser extent,
Patch, are all thriving down here, I have yet to hit my stride. The job is
meaningless to me, a dead-end that merely pays the mortgage and some groceries.
I have not connected with anything or anyone (not that I’m a connector by
nature), but the girls are becoming adults and making strides to move out and
start their own lives, and I’m a little frightened by the aspect of not having
them around on an everyday basis, as they’ve been for the last 15, 20 years.
Even the dog is getting older, having just surpassed the Mrs. in the dog/human
year ratio and rapidly catching up to, and soon to pass, me.
So I
decided to devote some time to finding meaning. Sounds suspiciously hippy, and
I’m naturally suspicious of anything hippy. But as a first step I got some
books and promised myself to do the exercises in ’em, which ultimately revealed
nothing new to me. Though, to be fair, I haven’t finished everything I got. I suffer
from a lot of psychological hangups, some innate and some from environmental causes,
and even if I were to move past them, there’s always the financial vise of debt
and obligation, as well as familial and social expectations, and all these and
more conspire to keep me locked in unfulfilling routine. Not sure how to break
out, but I have been giving it my strongest effort since moving down here to Texas
four years ago.
What does
the immediate future hold?
Well, I
took today off from work to take care of a few things, and I have a three-day
remote week ahead. Then another three-day weekend as we celebrate the Fourth.
The wife and girls are flying up to Pennsylvania for 10 days two weeks into
July, as part of a vacation / college scouting trip for my youngest. The Mrs.
will be doing a lot of driving, the farthest being a trip to a college in
Buffalo that Patch is interested in. They’ve never seen Niagara Falls, so at
least something positive will come of that if the school fails to check all the
boxes. Me, I’m staying home with Charlie. The $750 round-trip airline ticket
for me plus the $600 dogsitting charge will offset the cost of a rental car. I’ll
be working and walking the dog, but at least I can watch a few science fiction
flicks and feast on some Hawaiian pizza while dueling with that cartwheeling existential
angst.
That’s the
tip of the iceberg here. June, on the whole you were okay. Had better months,
but had worse too. Now get outta here, and let’s get on with summer.
Sunday, June 1, 2025
June is Devoted to the Sacred Heart of Christ
The Litany of the Sacred Heart
Lord, have mercy on us.
Christ, have mercy on us.
Lord, have mercy on us.
Christ, hear us.
Christ, graciously hear us.
God the Father of Heaven,
Have mercy on us.
God the Son, Redeemer of the world,
Have mercy on us.
God the Holy Spirit,
Have mercy on us.
Holy Trinity, one God,
Have mercy on us.
Heart of Jesus, Son of the Eternal Father,
Have mercy on us.
Heart of Jesus, Formed by the Holy Ghost in the womb of the Virgin Mother,
Have mercy on us.
Heart of Jesus, Substantially united to the Word of God,
Have mercy on us.
Heart of Jesus, Of Infinite Majesty,
Have mercy on us.
Heart of Jesus, Holy Temple of God,
Have mercy on us.
Heart of Jesus, Tabernacle of the Most High,
Have mercy on us.
Heart of Jesus, House of God and Gate of Heaven,
Have mercy on us.
Heart of Jesus, Burning Furnace of charity,
Have mercy on us.
Heart of Jesus, Vessel of Justice and love,
Have mercy on us.
Heart of Jesus, Full of goodness and love,
Have mercy on us.
Heart of Jesus, Abyss of all virtues,
Have mercy on us.
Heart of Jesus, Most worthy of all praises,
Have mercy on us.
Heart of Jesus, King and center of all hearts,
Have mercy on us.
Heart of Jesus, In Whom are all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge,
Have mercy on us.
Heart of Jesus, In Whom dwelleth all the fulness of the Divinity,
Have mercy on us.
Heart of Jesus, in Whom the Father is well pleased,
Have mercy on us.
Heart of Jesus, Of Whose fullness we have all received,
Have mercy on us.
Heart of Jesus, Desire of the everlasting hills,
Have mercy on us.
Heart of Jesus, Patient and abounding in mercy,
Have mercy on us.
Heart of Jesus, Rich unto all who call upon Thee,
Have mercy on us.
Heart of Jesus, Fountain of life and holiness,
Have mercy on us.
Heart of Jesus, Atonement for our sins,
Have mercy on us.
Heart of Jesus, Filled with reproaches,
Have mercy on us.
Heart of Jesus, Bruised for our offenses,
Have mercy on us.
Heart of Jesus, Made obedient unto death,
Have mercy on us.
Heart of Jesus, Pierced with a lance,
Have mercy on us.
Heart of Jesus, Source of all consolation,
Have mercy on us.
Heart of Jesus, Our Life and Resurrection,
Have mercy on us.
Heart of Jesus, Our Peace and Reconciliation,
Have mercy on us.
Heart of Jesus, Victim for our sins,
Have mercy on us.
Heart of Jesus, Salvation of those who hope in Thee,
Have mercy on us.
Heart of Jesus, Hope of those who die in Thee,
Have mercy on us.
Heart of Jesus, Delight of all the Saints,
Have mercy on us.
Lamb of God Who takest away the sins of the world,
Spare us, O Lord.
Lamb of God Who takest away the sins of the world,
Graciously hear us, O Lord.
Lamb of God Who takest away the sins of the world,
Have mercy on us.
Jesus, meek and humble of heart,
Make our hearts like unto Thine.
Let us pray.
Almighty and eternal God, look upon the Heart of Thine most-beloved Son, and upon the praises and satisfaction He offers Thee in the name of sinners; and appeased by worthy homage, pardon those who implore Thy mercy, in Thy Great Goodness in the name of the same Jesus Christ Thy Son, Who liveth and reigneth with Thee, in the unity of the Holy Ghost, world without end. Amen.







