1. Today I suddenly wondered how many other people who had been posting daily (or near daily) Three Beautiful Things were still at it. I started posting Three Beautiful Things on November 11, 2006, following the lead of Clare Law whose blog, called Three Beautiful Things, I had found one day while space truckin' in the once thriving blogosphere.
Clare went on a hiatus in 2014, but she didn't take down her blog and her blog included a long list of links to other blogs that featured Three Beautiful Things, including kellogg bloggin'.
Today, I visited Clare Law's blog (it's here) and discovered, to my delight, that back in 2020, Clare Law resumed writing Three Beautiful Things again.
She also remade the look of her blog and she no longer posts the list of other writers posting Three Beautiful Things.
But, thank goodness, her blog is archived. I can go back and read, from time to time, posts I've missed over the last several years.
Clare Law writes her three beautiful things in brief sentences or sentence fragments in what I regard as being in the spirit of the haiku. She brings flashes of her day alive, moments, and I love her approach.
As my writing of Three Beautiful Things evolved, I took on an approach closer to a short essay, sometimes very short stories and, for any number of reasons, I enjoy having this almost twenty-year-old record of family life, observations, thoughts, photographs, events, and other aspects of my life.
Rediscovering Clare Law's blog moved me.
I am immeasurably grateful to her.
She introduced me to a source of happiness and fulfillment that has invigorated me and buoyed my spirits for two decades.
2. It's been fifty years since I completed Prof. Homer Cunningham's course, The Civil War. I double majored at Whitworth in history and English and thoroughly enjoyed both emphases of my undergraduate studies. Fifty years after completing this course, I wish I had a clearer memory of what Prof. Cunningham focused on over the semester. I know that he required that we each read a book beyond the course syllabus and make an appointment with him to discuss it. I read selected letters of Abraham Lincoln. Those letters gave me insight into Lincoln's internal struggles, intellectual brilliance, and complex Christian faith.
I'd like to find that volume of letters again and see if Lincoln wrote about the crippling effects of mosquito transmitted disease on the Union troops and the folly of military leaders who led troops into swampy lands and fetid marshes swarming with mosquitoes.
I'd also like to see if in any of these letters Lincoln wrestles with emancipating slaves, opening the way for freed slaves to fight for the Union army, providing the Union army with soldiers who had developed generational immunity to malaria, immunity passed on to them in their family life lines in their home countries, making them very valuable soldiers (in the same way they were very valuable laborers).
I don't remember reading about this question in the fall of 1975, but I certainly read about it today in Timothy C. Winegard's book, The Mosquito.
3. The joy of this day kicked into a higher gear when Debbie and I traveled to the Garland Theater in Spokane for another Northwest Passages event.
Tonight, Craig Johnson, the author of the (so far) twenty-two Longmire western crime drama books, which were also the basis for the A & E television series Longmire, was the featured author.
I haven't watched a single moment of the television series Longmire nor have I read a single word in any of Craig Johnson's novels.
Debbie watched the television series, but has not read any of the books.
So.
Why would I want to go to this event? And why would Debbie? Why would we want to sit in a good-sized audience of enthusiastic and knowledgeable readers of Craig Johnson when we hadn't read his books at all?
I've attended four Northwest Passages events, two featuring writers I had familiarity with (Jess Walter and Leah Sottile) and two whose work I didn't know at all (David Guterson and Willy Vlauen).
All four events invigorated me and expanded my view of and understanding of writing, reading, and of the world I live in.
Northwest Passages is an ongoing series of evenings, put on by The Spokesman Review that focuses on one writer's release of a new book and that writer sits for an interview conducted by a person connected with the Spokesman Review.
I trust this series. So does Debbie. We've decided that we will go to every one of the Northwest Passages evenings whether we have heard of the writer or not and we will trust that it will be both fascinating and stimulating.
Craig Johnson was both.
And he was entertaining, warm, generous, engaging, funny, well-read, and multi-talented.
His new Longmire novel is The Brothers McKay and get this: it's inspired by and patterned after Fyodor Doestoevsky's novel The Brothers Karamozov which Craig Johnson read over the course of about a week when he was fourteen years old and then, as was the custom in his family when he finished a book, had a long talk with his father about what he thought of it.
Craig Johnson was quick to make sure we knew that The Brothers McKay would not be the philosophical novel that The Brothers Karamozov is. But his book develops a similar storyline.
Sixty-five year old Craig Johnson runs a ranch in Wyoming. He built his own house there. He is very much a working rancher who shovels manure out of stables, tells his horses about what he wrote the day before, and recently completed a job requiring him to shove two and half tons of rock out of a truck to fill in some kind of an opening in the ground. (He was still sore tonight.)
He has a keen sense of his fiction writing process, of how he keeps his title character Walter Longmire fresh, how he endows Longmire with intelligence, courage, and deep flaws.
I left the Garland Theater (where years ago I saw All the President's Men, Rocky, The Goodbye Girl, and An Officer and a Gentleman among others forty to fifty years ago) shaking my head.
What am I going to do?
Sunday night, Paul inspired me to want to read Crime and Punishment.
The chapters of The Mosquito dealing with Napoleon made me want to read War and Peace.
Craig Johnson has me jonesin' to read The Brothers Karamozov
And I continue to work on finishing Lonesome Dove.
Can I read them?
Will I?
Well, I've got a pretty good stretch of days coming up when I'll be home alone and it's possible that I'll just hunker down with massive novels.
And read them!
Stay tuned.