Happy Birthday

As we took a walk around the neighborhood today, Prairie and I noticed a couple of “Happy Birthday” balloons stuck in a tree. Since that’s not a good thing, after we finished our walk, we grabbed the extension pole we use to replace ceiling lightbulbs and went back to see if we could get the balloons down.

The pole was just a few inches short of what it needed to be, but with a little somewhat goofy jumping around and a lot of tries, I was eventually able to snag the balloons and bring them down without letting them escape.

We planned on tying them outside our place and leaving a note in the neighborhood Facebook group so that if they belonged to anyone local, they could have them back, and if they were still around in a day or so, we’d trash them.

But as we were walking home, I noticed that the balloons were tied to a baggie with a folded up piece of paper inside. Wondering if it was a note, we opened it up.

“Happy birthday baby,” it began. “I still can’t believe you are gone. You would have been 72 years old.” And it continued on, a very sweet love letter from a woman to her husband on his birthday.

Once we realized what it was, we decided we needed to do something. We didn’t want to just re-release the balloons, since that’s not very environmentally friendly. So instead, we made a donation to the World Wildlife Fund (based on something in the letter indicating that environmental causes were important to this couple) and burned the letter in our fireplace, so her words could continue their journey onward.

It was a really unexpected and sweet little thing to have happen to us today. I hope the author and her husband had a good life, and that she continues to enjoy her life until she sees him again.

📚 Bug by Giacomo Sartori, translated by Frederika Randall

7/2022 – ⭐️⭐️ Philip K. Dick Award Nominee

Unfortunately, this one just did not work for me. The main character is a 10-year-old deaf (and, I believe, possibly autistic) child, and it’s narrated in a first-person, nearly stream-of-consciousness style, which (in-universe) is the child dictating in sign language to a caretaker who translates what he says. In actuality, the book was originally written in Italian, and has been translated to English. So there are multiple levels of abstraction and translation, and I’m at a loss as to how much of the final writing style and choices were the character’s, an artifact of the in-universe translation from sign language, the author’s, an artifact of the real-world translation from Italian, or some combination of all of those. The end result was that I just didn’t enjoy it.

PKD Award 📚 Nominees

This year’s stack of Philip K. Dick Award nominees have arrived! (Actually, nominees plus one — Finna is the precursor to Defekt, and I don’t like starting in the middle of a series.) As usual, this looks like a strong selection of books; of note for me is Far From the Light of Heaven, as this is Tade Thompson’s second time as a nominee, and I enjoyed all of his Wormwood trilogy, the third book of which was the earlier nominated work.

Time to get reading! (And if you’re interested, I’ve created a PKD reading challenge on StoryGraph that you’re welcome to join!)

📚 The Case of the Colonist’s Corpse: A Sam Cogley Mystery by Bob Ingersoll and Tony Isabella

3/2022 – ⭐️⭐️

A somewhat amusing murder mystery and courtroom drama; basically Law & Order: TOS starring Samuel Cogley. Unfortunately, the poor treatment of the two primary female characters (one an overly stereotypical shallow, bitter wife; the other bitter at past events who fares badly) marred my enjoyment.

📚 A Darker Shade of Magic by V.E. Schwab

2/2022 – ⭐️⭐️⭐️

A recommendation from my 10-year-old niece (V.E. Schwab is her favorite author), this was a fun fantasy adventure through multiple magical Londons. Neat worldbuilding and magic rules and styles; perhaps a bit more violent than I would have expected from a pre-teen’s recommendation (apparently Schwab also writes YA books, which is how my niece came across her, but this is one of her adult novels), but her parents also read and enjoyed it, she’s none the worse for reading it, and I’ve certainly read far worse.