From My Gabrielle Roy Collection

Was re-reading the delightful, charming Where Nests the Water Hen and chatting with a friend about it so put this together for him and now the blog.

(her 2nd, 1950 novel which is based on her teaching experiences in remote rural MB; postcard and bookmark and black woven fabric bag with water hen motif; this is the first novel of hers I read in 1969 in a CanLit course at U of Wpg.)

(a nice one of my dress short-sleeve shirts)

(her 1st book which won the Governor-General’s award in 1945; like all of her books, translated from the original French into English)

(dj of her 1954 novel, Alexandre  Chenevert in French)

(dj of 1961’s La Montagne secrete, a novel based on a real-life French-Canadian artist she knew)

(1979’s Cliptail which won Canada Council’s Prize for Children’s Literature; I am very fortunate to have a rare inscribed copy of the French original)

(upper left: the restored childhood home in St. Boniface across the Red River from Winnipeg; right: brochure from the home that is open for tours; bottom left: sculptured head of Roy in Assiniboine Park’s walk of historic Manitobans, Winnipeg)

(a neat documentary, also in English which contains the only available film footage of Roy)

I also have an old Canadian $20 bill with her quote on it: “Could we ever know each other in the slightest without the arts?”

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A Fun Couple of Days with Family on My 71st

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Stuart Stevens’ Excellent New Book on Trump and the GOPs

is the only one you need to read in order to understand how the Republican Party has operated the past 60 years and how its values changed, leading to the election of Donald Trump.

Stevens spares no punches and takes the reader from William F. Buckley, Jr. and Joe McCarthy to Roy Moore and the Trump era. And he does not spare himself some of the blame for the recent GOP misdirections; this is an honest book written by a long-time party-insider. He figures, though, that with changing demographics, that the GOPs are in decline and that the party will eventually be voted out by the new young generation of more enlightened caucasian and by the ever-increasing number of non-caucasian peoples.

This is a book that could easily be used by the Democrats to undermine Republicans and Trump in the current election. Stevens offers many suggestions and views of what makes the latter two tick.

(Note: He wrote the book last fall and recent events of 2020 are not included.)

Some examples of memorable quotations from the book:

“[Trump] is the logical conclusion of what the Republican Party became over the last fifty or so years, a natural product of the seeds of race, self-deception, and anger that became the essence of the Republican Party.”

“Since 1964 Republicans have learned that they will have little success in appealing to black voters.”

“The Republican Party as a national institution is dead.”

“Compare photographs of Jimmy Swaggart and Donald Trump, and they look like brothers from some strange union of Mardi Gras float: huge heads, strange colors, balloon bodies, mouths disconnected from brains.

(re. the William F. Buckley, Jr. vs. James Baldwin debate of 1965)
“The losing Buckley argument was one that would continue to be a touchstone of the Republican credo on race until today: that in America, race doesn’t matter; anyone can succeed. It is the essence of the ‘color blind’ assertion that is perversely racist but reassuring to white people.”

Roy Moore’s passionate claim that “blacks were better off during slavery. America was great, Moore claimed because families were united–even though we had slavery. They cared for one another.”

“Today the intellectual leaders of the Republican Party are the paranoids, kooks, know-nothings, and bigots who once could be heard only on late-night talk shows, the stations you listened to on long drives because it was hard to fall asleep while laughing.”

“One of the hallmarks of Trump era is the alacrity with which intelligent people embrace stupidity.”

“[Trump] claimed Obama wore a ring with an Arabic inscription. He said that global warming is a “‘hoax’, that windmills cause cancer.”

“Donald Trump’s mind is that tabloid you see at the checkout counter of the grocery store claiming that aliens impregnated Chelsea Clinton so the offspring could become president.”

“Trump has staged a national Scopes trial and placed himself in the William Jennings Bryan role. The question for the Republican Party is whether it is content to let the Democrat Party play Clarence Darrow. All indications are overwhelmingly yes.”

(re. Roy Moore)
“Despite multiple allegations of molesting an underage girl, sexual harassment of barely legal teenage girls, and being such a general creep that he was allegedly banned from his local mall, {Moore] became the Republican nominee…What sort of man goes to high school dance performances to check out the girls?”

“Republicans have built a political ecosphere that thrives on deceit and lies.”

“These days the branding of Fox News as ‘Fair and Balanced’ often seems primarily to serve the purpose of proving that irony is not dead.”

“When Donald Trump tweets ‘What you’re seeing and reading is not what’s happening,’ Orwell’s 1984 is the perfect framework to understand his motivation.”

“The most distinguishing characteristic of the current National Republican Party is cowardice.”

“Newt Gingrich is a dumb person’s idea of a smart person, and Donald Trump is a not-rich person’s idea of wealth.”

“National Rifle Association as gatekeeper to the power center of the Republican Party.”

(Trump in answer about nuclear priorities:)
“I think, I think, for me, nuclear is just the power, the devastation is very important to me.”

“The Republicans don’t hate America, but they are weak men and women who decided long ago their self-worth was determined by winning elections.”

“Conspiracies are a key element of the Trump Republican effort to build an alternative universe in which their lies will be truth.”

“Trump’s Deep State is just a variation of Joe McCarthy’s mythical Communists infecting the State Department, the ‘enemies within’…. In the 1950s, America has a president Dwight Eisenhower who saw the danger of Joe McCarthy. In the second decade of the twenty-first century, Joe McCarthy is president.”

“Watching the Republican Party is like watching a friend drink himself to death.”

“Like the Raj, unless the party changes, its future is determined, with only the question of how long until the decline becomes a rout and it collapses inward like a dying star.”

“Like a heavy truck driven over a bridge on the edge of collapse, Trump has made it impossible to ignore the long-developing fault lines and failures of the Republican Party.”

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Rev. Al’s Historic Speech at Washington Monument

was Fri., Aug. 28, 2020. Well-worth looking up online. As powerful and memorable a speech as MKL’s in 1963. “Call their names”. “No justice. No peace.” It’s all there–the call for the freedom and reforms so long denied to U.S. blacks.

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1988: Halifax, Nova Scotia English Teachers’ Convention

A windy Saturday, Peggy’s Cove, with first writing-partner Glen Kirkland. One of many good- times-provincial trips we made on the publishers’ dimes. We also visited and presented in Newfoundland, Quebec, Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, and British Columbia from 1980 to 2010. We easily in-serviced several thousand teachers in that period along with having authorized textbooks in every province during the same time period.

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Circa 1989: Teaching at Scona

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1988: ‘Duke’ Marching in the Fringe Parade

For the first Fringe show I co-wrote: 60 Minutes Live from Loon River!

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Orwell Was Right

The main battle for the present and future has to do with the survival of truth, facts, empirical evidence, and history. In the U.S. right now, Trump, at over 20,000 lies, continues to wage war on truth, pressuring the CDC today, breaking the Hatch act, having his family and buds stand up for him and lying about him, and lying about how he’s not trying to destroy the U.S. postal service.

Much like Big Brother, Putin, and Kim he is waging war on his own people and the rest of the world.

No way in hell is he “the bodyguard of Western civilization”; rather he has been destroying it ever since he got elected.

No way, likewise, does he love and care for people as the disgraced Falwell stated.

Last night Melania lied and undid whatever positives she stated when she said he was very honest?!! Her hypocrisy was underscored by her “I don’t care” message on her coat when she went to visit the kids in cages. There’s the real Melania, not someone who read off a teleprompter what someone in the White House had written for her. None of the Trumps have an authentic bone in their bodies.

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“Forrest Gump” 26 Years Later

This 1994 movie cleaned up at the AAs that year winning Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor (Tom Hanks) and three other awards.

The idea of merging filmed actors with documentary footage had actually been first done a decade before in Woody Allen’s more intelligent, more successful satire Zelig. Director Zemickis and his visual effects team, though, do a pretty seamless job with both audio and video in adapting the original historical footage to incorporate scenes with Forrest.

The scenes tend to be brief and are rely heavily on visuals rather than dialogue. There is also more a sense of cobbling together scenes with numerous allusive musical sound bytes rather than any developed dramatic scenes dependent on strong acting or dialogue. All which lends a shallowness to the overall movie, making it more a ‘outlined cliched spectacle’ rather than a conventional, truly dramatic movie.

The film is mostly a romantic satire which diminishes each these genres given the number of corny cliches and stereotypes that pile up as well as the amount of physical farce used for cheap laughs. In short, it is impossible to take the movie seriously which it asks its viewers to do on many stereotypical occasions.

Tom Hanks’ performance, like other handicapped AA actor-winners (My Left Foot, Rain Man, Scent of a Woman), is one noteish throughout with his sustained voice tone belieing any belief in any depth to his character.

True, there are many jokes, but many of them would be considered politically incorrect today. And there is the over-the-top stereotyping of Bubba and Capt. Dan (a deranged Capt. Ahab who miraculously reforms) which becomes tired and hard to identify with or laugh at.

Much too often, Forrest simply responds to problems by running or clobbering someone which make it hard to identify with his limited range and abilities. Often, the humor becomes crude (Forrest getting shot in the buttocks) and the exaggerated film violence uncomfortable (Jenny being viciously beaten by her radical boyfriend).

Finally, it is the repetitiveness, the cornyness, the cobbled-together atmosphere, and the limitations of simpleness that does this film in. Forrest Gump would not win 6 AAs in 2020 and would, instead, garner many protests. It has some dazzling special effects (Lt. Dan’s legs, the Washington march scene), but it is sabotaged by trying to do too many things sans much meaningfulness beyond cliche.

At the risk of being a ‘party pooper’ (“Everyone loves Forrest Gump”), in retrospect, I still think the film was way over-contrived and way overwrought. Though a satire, Forrest Gump‘s awkward mixed-messaging muddies and muddles the engaging film’s purpose.

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Margaritaville, Sunday Morning

@ my daughter’s. She and her companion make the best margaritas! Good to the last frozen drop.

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