#charles garnett
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R.i.p king gone too soon 😔
TOM EVERETT SCOTT as Charles Garnett in Z Nation, 1.06
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Typography Tuesday
STEPHENSON BLAKE
Today we're showing a new acquisition from one of the giants of British type founding, Specimens of Printing Types from Stephenson, Blake, the Caslon Letter Foundry, Sheffield, published in Sheffield, England by Stephenson Blake & Co. in 1959. Stephenson Blake claims a lineage directly back to William Caxton, the founder of English type and printing in 1476. We think they stand on firmer ground, however, in also claiming descent from William Caslon, the founder of the first truly British typefaces beginning in 1734.
Silversmith and mechanic William Garnett and toolmaker John Stephenson began foundry operations in 1818 with financial support from James Blake. A year later, they acquired the firm of William Caslon III and IV, an offshoot of the Caslon family business. Garnett left the firm in 1829 and the company was renamed Blake & Stephenson in 1830, but Blake died soon after. Stephenson himself died in 1864 and passed the business onto his son Henry. The company was purchased in 1905 Sir Charles Reed and Sons, but the Stephenson name was retained. In 1937, the company purchased H.W. Caslon & Sons, the other branch of the storied Caslon dynasty, securing its right to claim full Caslon heritage.
Stephenson Blake continued to make some type until 2001, but it finally closed its foundry in 2005, with much of its historical stock going to the Type Archive in London. Because of financial issues, the Type Archive also had to close its doors in 2022, and the Stephenson Blake collection was transferred to the Victoria & Albert Museum as the interim custodian.
Shown here are some shaded typefaces and ornaments from the 1959 catalog.
View more Typography Tuesday posts.
#Typography Tuesday#typetuesday#Stephenson Blake#Stephenson Blake & Co.#John Stephenson#James Blake#William Garnett#Sir Charles Reed and Sons#Type Archive#type specimen books#type display book#type specimens#typefaces#shaded type#type ornaments#20th century type
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Charles Folkard (1878-1963), ''Ottoman Wonder Tales'' by Lucy Mary Jane Garnett, 1915 Source
#charles folkard#english artists#ottoman wonder tales#lucy mary jane garnett#vintage illustration#birds#cats#orientalism
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COOL: NBA
#nba#nba basketball#sports#icons#magic johnson#michael jordan#larry bird#wilt chamberlain#jerry west#hakeem olajuwon#shaquille o'neal#kobe bryant#dr j#julius erving#dave cowens#kevin garnett#kevin durant#lebron james#david robinson#patrick ewing#steph curry#cool#james worthy#charles barkley#nba on tnt#ernie johnson#kenny smith#eligin baylor#allen iverson#dawn staley
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From author @Topazy comes one of the best Z nation fanfics I have ever read. Inside, outside is a 10k x OC book, here is the masterlist my friends.
Make sure to support her on her profile!
Inside, outside
Pairing: Addy Carver sister!reader, 10k x reader, Z nation rewrite.
Inside, outside: When camp Blue Sky is destroyed, an unusual group of survivors band together to survive. With dangerous things happening around her at all times, Astra Carver, the younger sister of Addison, must learn how to adapt to life with zombies, betrayal, and love.
All chapters with smut will have* Warnings: blood, violence, sex, swearing
Inside, outside edits
Inside, outside playlist
Different POV’s
Season one
1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 1.12
Season two
2.01 2.02 2.03 2.04 2.05 2.06 2.07 2.08 2.09 2.10 2.11 2.12 2.13 2.14 2.15
Season three
3.01 3.02 3.03 3.04 3.05 3.06 3.07 3.08
Season four
4.01 4.02 4.03 4.04 4.05 4.06 4.07 4.08 4.09 4.10 4.11 4.12
Season five
5.01 5.02 5.03
On the other side
#z nation#10k#z nation fanfiction#Z nation fandom#Addy Carver#Doc z nation#Steven Doc Beck#Alvin Murphy#Citizen Z#Roberta Warren#Mack Thompson#Cassandra z nation#zombie apocalypse#zombies#Z nation rewrite#Addison Carver sister#Charles Garnett#10k x oc
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Helen Twelvetrees-Charles Bickford "Panama Flo" 1932, de Ralph Murphy, Tay Garnett.
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TOP 10 NBA ALL-TIME POWER FORWARDS OF NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION
Tim Duncan - 26,496 (19.0 ppg), 15,091 (10.8 rpg), 4,225 (3.0 apg)
Karl Malone - 36,928 (25.0 ppg), 14,968 (10.1 rpg), 5,238 (3.6 apg)
Dirk Nowitzki - 31,560 (20.7 ppg), 11,489 (7.5 rpg), 3,651 (2.4 apg)
Charles Barkley - 23,757 (22.1 ppg), 12,546 (11.7 rpg), 4,215 (3.9 apg)
Kevin Garnett - 26,071 (17.8 ppg), 14,662 (10.0 rpg), 5,445 (3.7 apg)
Kevin McHale - 17,335 (17.9 ppg), 7,122 (7.3 rpg), 1,690 (1.7 bpg)
Bob Pettit - 20,880 (26.4 ppg), 12,849 (16.2 rpg), 2,369 (3.0 apg)
Elvin Hayes - 27,313 (21.0 ppg), 16,279 (12.5 rpg), 1,171 (2.0 bpg)
Pau Gasol - 20,894 (17.0 ppg), 11,305 (9.2 rpg), 3,925 (3.2 apg)
Dennis Rodman - 6,683 (7.3 ppg), 11,954 (13.1 rpg), 1,600 (1.8 apg)
#tim duncan#karl malone#dirk nowitzki#charles barkley#kevin garnett#kevin mchale#bob pettit#elvin hayes#pau gasol#dennis rodman#usa#nba#basketball#usa basketball#nba basketball#nba players#basketball players#nba history#basketball history#nba legends#basketball legends#legends#champions#50s 60s 70s 80s 90s#90s 00s 10s 20s#power forward#national basketball association#top 10 nba all-time power forwards#nba all-time power forwards#nba power forwards
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Überlebender und Zeuge
James Baldwin wäre in diesem Jahr 100 Jahre alt geworden. Der Kulturjournalist René Aguigah erschließt sein Werk so greifbar und lebendig wie niemand zuvor. Sein Porträt ist neben der wachsenden Gesamtausgabe die perfekte Einladung, sich in ein Werk zu vertiefen, dass einem immer wieder den Atem nimmt. Continue reading Überlebender und Zeuge
#Ann Petry#Audre Lorde#Barry Jenkins#Beyonce#Charles Dickens#Daniel Schreiber#Dick Fontaine#Dominique Haensell#Elmar Kraushaar#featured#Fran Ross#Franz Kafka#Garnette Cadogan#Gayl Jones#Henry James#Honoré de Balzac#James Baldwin#Jana Pareigis#Janelle Monáe#Jay Z#Jesmyn Ward#Langston Hughes#Louise Meriwether#Madonna#Malcolm X#Martin Luther King jr.#Medgar Evers#Miriam Mandelkow#Mithu Sanyal#Morrissey
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Charles W. Morgan off Cape Horn, December 11, 1841, by Paul Garnett (1951-2021)
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My favourite couples in horror
• Scream Gale Weathers & Dewey Riley
• Final destination Clear Rivers & Alex Browning
• The walking dead Rick & Michonne Grimes
• A quiet place Evelyn & Lee Abbott
• The conjuring Ed and Lorraine Warren
• Insidious Josh & Renai Lambert
• Z nation Robert Warren & Charles Garnett
• The walking dead Glenn & Maggie Rhee
• Jennifer’s body Anita “Needy” Lesnicki & Chip Dove
• Resident evil Ethan & Mia Winters
• The walking dead Rosita Espinosa & Gabriel Stokes
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Barbara Stanwyck, Walter Huston, and Judith Anderson in The Furies (Anthony Mann, 1950)
Cast: Barbara Stanwyck, Walter Huston, Wendell Corey, Judith Anderson, Gilbert Roland, Thomas Gomez, Beulah Bondi, Albert Dekker, John Bromfield, Wallace Ford, Blanche Yurka. Screenplay: Charles Schnee, based on a book by Niven Busch. Cinematography: Victor Milner. Art direction: Henry Bumstead, Hans Dreier. Film editing: Archie Marshek. Music: Franz Waxman.
The Furies takes place in a West that never was: Would any real cattleman name his ranch "The Furies"? But that's because the film aims at the mythic, and darn near succeeds. The Furies of myth were goddesses of vengeance, also known as the Eumenides, which means "the gracious ones" -- they were so terrible that humans tried to placate them by calling them by a nice name. In the film, all of the women are to some degree vengeful: Barbara Stanwyck's Vance Jeffords chafes against the notion that because she's a woman, she can't run a ranch; Judith Anderson's Flo Burnett tries to get her hooks into Vance's father and bypass Vance's claim to his estate; Beulah Bondi's Mrs. Anaheim is the real power behind her banker husband; and the most vengeful of them all, Blanche Yurka's Mother Herrera, seeks justice for the hanging of her son. For a Western, it's also awfully talky, with some lines that sound like film noir: "I don't think I like love," says Vance. "It puts a bit in my mouth." Others are obvious attempts to sidestep cliché: Vance's father, T.C. (Walter Huston), tells her she has a "dowry if you pick a man I can favor, one I can sit down at the table with and not dislodge my chow." I suspect that a lot of the dialogue, as well as a lot of the slightly overcomplicated plot, comes from its source, a novel by Niven Busch, adapted by Charles Schnee: Busch knew his way around tough dialogue, having written the screenplay for one of film noir's classics, The Postman Always Rings Twice (Tay Garnett, 1946). Anthony Mann keeps the action from overwhelming the talk and the mythologizing, greatly helped by Stanwyck and Huston (in his final film) as the sparring but inextricably bonded Jeffordses. The movie could have used a stronger love interest than Wendell Corey as Rip Darrow, the man who wants to get the better of T.C., and woos Vance as part of the plot. Corey and Stanwyck don't strike sparks; she's more in tune with Gilbert Roland as Juan Herrera, the squatter on The Furies who has been her friend since childhood -- a subplot that's in some ways more interesting than the financial struggles to get hold of the ranch. Initially a box office failure, the film has grown in stature over the years as a showcase for some of the best work of Stanwyck, Huston, and Mann.
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Carlos Garnett – Journey To Enlightenment
Journey to Enlightenment is an album by saxophonist Carlos Garnett which was recorded in 1974 and released on the Muse label.
Carlos Garnett – reeds, ukulele, vocals Reggie Lucas – guitar Hubert Eaves – keyboards Anthony Jackson – bass Howard King – drums Charles Pulliam – congas Ayodele Jenkins – vocals
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Mathilde Blind by Lucy Madox Brown, 1872
Mathilde Blind (born Mathilda Cohen; 21 March 1841 – 26 November 1896), was a German-born English poet, fiction writer, biographer, essayist and critic. In the early 1870s she emerged as a pioneering female aesthete in a mostly male community of artists and writers. By the late 1880s she had become prominent among New Woman writers such as Vernon Lee (Violet Paget), Amy Levy, Mona Caird, Olive Schreiner, Rosamund Marriott Watson, and Katharine Tynan. She was praised by Algernon Charles Swinburne, William Michael Rossetti, Amy Levy, Edith Nesbit, Arthur Symons and Arnold Bennett. Her much-discussed poem The Ascent of Man presents a distinctly feminist response to the Darwinian theory of evolution.
Blind's early political affiliations were shaped by the foreign refugees who frequented her stepfather's house, including Giuseppe Mazzini, for whom she entertained a passionate admiration and about whom she would publish reminiscences in the Fortnightly Review in 1891. Other revolutionaries who frequent her mother and stepfather's house in St. John's Wood included Karl Marx and Louis Blanc. Her early commitment to women's suffrage was influenced by her mother's friend Caroline Ashurst Stansfeld, who was active in the British feminist movement from its origins in the 1840s. These radical affiliations are manifested in Blind's politically charged poetry, and in her own unbending commitment to reform. As Richard Garnett observed, in the society of political refugees and radicals Blind was raised in, "admiration must necessarily be reserved for audacity in enterprise, fortitude in adversity... anything breathing unconquerable defiance of the powers that were."
#pre raphaelite#the pre-raphaelite sisterhood#on two fronts really#read the wikipedia if you have a minute those are just small excerpts of much interesting material#victorian women#women authors#women painters#victorian era#lucy madox brown#mathilde blind#women's rights#women's suffrage#pre-raphaelite sisterhood
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Deaths In 2023
January
1: Fred White (67, American drummer, Earth Wind & Fire)
3: Alan Rankine (64, Scottish musician/producer, The Associates)
6: Gianluca Vialli (58, Italian football player/manager)
10: Jeff Beck (78, English guitarist, The Yardbirds/The Jeff Beck Group/Beck Bogart & Appice)
11: Yukihiro Takahashi (70, Japanese singer/drummer, Yellow Magic Orchestra)
12: Robbie Bachman (69, Canadian drummer, Bachman Turner Overdrive)
Lisa-Marie Presley (54, American singer/songwriter, daughter of Elvis, mother of Riley Keough)
16: Gina Lollobrigida (95, Italian actress)
18: David Crosby (81, American singer/songwriter, The Byrds, Crosby Stills Nash & Young)
27: Sylvia Sims (89, English actress, ‘Ice Cold In Alex’)
28: Barrett Strong (81, American singer/songwriter, co-wrote ‘I Heard It Through The Grapevine’/‘Papa Was A Rollin’ Stone’
Tom Verlaine (73, American musician/songwriter/producer, Television)
Lisa Loring (64, American actress, ‘The Addams Family’)
February
2: Calton Coffie (68, Jamaican singer, Inner Circle)
3: Paco Rabanne (88, Spanish fashion designer)
8: Burt Bacharach (94, American songwriter, co-wrote ‘Walk On By’/‘Anyone Who Had A Heart’/‘A House Is Not A Home’/‘Raindrops Keep Falling On My Head’)
10: Hugh Hudson (86, film director, ‘Chariots Of Fire’)
12: David Jolicoeur a.k.a. Trugoy The Dove (54, American rapper, De La Soul)
15: Raquel Welch (82, American actress)
16: Chuck Jackson (85, American soul singer, ‘Any Day Now’/‘I Keep Forgettin’’)
18: Barbara Bosson (83, American actress, ‘Hill Street Blues’)
19: Richard Belzer (78, American actor, ‘Homicide: Life On The Street’/’Law And Order: Special Victims Unit’)
Dickie Davies (94, British television personality, ‘World Of Sport’)
23: John Motson (77, English football commentator, ‘Match Of The Day’)
March
2: Steve Mackey (56, English bassist/producer, Pulp)
Wayne Shorter (89, American jazz saxophonist, Weather Report)
3: Carlos Garnett (84, Panamanian jazz saxophonist)
Tom Sizemore (61, American actor, ‘Saving Private Ryan’)
5: Gary Rossington (71, American guitarist, Lynyrd Skynyrd)
8: Topol (87, Israeli actor, ‘Fiddler On The Roof’/’Flash Gordon’)
10: Junior English (71, Jamaican reggae singer)
12: Dick Fosbury (76, American high jumper)
13: Jim Gordon (77, American drummer, Traffic/Derek & The Dominoes)
14: Bobby Caldwell (71, American singer/songwriter)
15: Greg Perry (singer/songwriter/producer)
16: Fuzzy Haskins (81, American singer, Parliament/Funkadelic)
17: Lance Reddick (60, American actor, ‘The Wire’/’Oz’/’John Wick’ films)
23: Keith Reid (76, English songwriter, Procol Harum)
Peter Shelley (80, English singer/songwriter/producer, ‘Gee Baby’/’Love Me Love My Dog’)
28: Paul O’Grady a.k.a. Lily Savage (67, English comedian)
Ryuichi Sakamoto (71, Japanese musician/composer, Yellow Magic Orchestra, composed theme to ‘Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence’)
29: Charles Sherrell a.k.a. Sweet Charles (80, American bass player/singer, The JBs, ‘Yes, It’s You’)
April
5: Booker T. Newberry III (67, American singer, Sweet Thunder, ‘Love Town’)
6: Paul Cattermole (46, English singer, S Club 7)
8: Michael Lerner (81, American actor, ‘Barton Fink’)
12: Jah Shaka (75, Jamaican sound system operator)
13: Dame Mary Quant (93, English fashion designer)
14: Mark Sheehan (46, Irish guitarist, The Script)
16: Ahmad Jamal (92, jazz pianist)
17: Ivan Conti (76, jazz drummer, Azymuth)
22: Barry Humphries a.k.a. Dame Edna Everage (89, Australian comedian/actor)
Len Goodman (78, English TV personality)
25: Harry Belafonte (95, American musician/actor/civil rights leader)
27: Wee Willie Harris (90, English rock & roll singer)
Jerry Springer (79, English-born, American TV host)
28: Tim Bachman (71, Canadian guitarist, Bachman-Turner Overdrive)
May
1: Gordon Lightfoot (84, Canadian singer/songwriter, ‘If You Could Read My Mind’)
3: Linda Lewis (72, English singer/songwriter, ‘Rock-A-Doodle-Doo’)
18: Jim Brown (87, American football player/actor, ‘The Dirty Dozen’)
19: Pete Brown (82, poet/singer/lyricist, ‘Sunshine Of Your Love’/’White Room’/’I Feel Free’)
Andy Rourke (59, English bass player, The Smiths)
24: Bill Lee (94, American jazz musician/composer, Spike’s dad, scored ‘She’s Gotta Have It’/‘School Daze’/’Do The Right Thing’
Tina Turner (84, American-born, Swiss singer/actress, ‘River Deep Mountain High’/’Nutbush City Limits’/’What’s Love Got To Do With It?’)
26: Reuben Wilson (88, American jazz organist, ‘Got To Get Your Own’)
June
1: Cynthia Weil (82, songwriter, ‘You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feelin’’/’Here You Come Again’)
6: Tony McPhee (79, English guitarist, The Groundhogs)
12: Treat Williams (71, American actor, ‘Hair’/’Prince Of The City’)
14: John Hollins (76, English football player, Chelsea/Arsenal/England)
15: Glenda Jackson (87, English MP/actress, ‘Women In Love’/’Sunday Bloody Sunday’)
27: Julian Sands (65, English actor, ‘A Room With A View’)
29: Alan Arkin (89, American actor, ‘Catch 22’/’Little Miss Sunshine’)
30: Lord Creator (87, Trinidad-born, Jamaican singer/songwriter, ‘Kingston Town’)
July
3: Vicki Anderson a.k.a. Myra Barnes (83, American soul singer, Carleen’s mum)
Mo Foster (78, English songwriter/musician/producer)
5: George Tickner (76, American guitarist, Journey)
16: Jane Birkin (76, French/English actress/singer, ‘Je t’aime … moi non plus’, banned by the BBC in 1969)
21: Tony Bennett (96, American singer, ‘I Left My Heart In San Francisco’)
22: Vince Hill (89, English singer, ‘Edelweiss’)
24: Trevor Francis (69, English football player, Birmingham City/England)
26: Randy Meisner (77, musician/songwriter, Poco/The Eagles, ‘Take It To The Limit’)
Sinead O’Connor (56, Irish singer, ‘Nothing Compares 2 U’/songwriter, ‘Mandinka’)
30: Paul Reubens a.k.a. Pee-Wee Herman (70, American actor/comedian)
31: Angus Cloud (25, American actor, ‘Euphoria’)
August
4: John Gosling (75, English keyboard player, The Kinks)
7: DJ Casper (58, DJ/artist/songwriter, ‘Cha Cha Slide’)
William Friedkin (87, American film director, ‘The French Connection’/’The Exorcist’)
9: Robbie Robertson (80, Canadian musician/songwriter/singer, The Band)
Sixto Rodriguez (81, American singer/songwriter, subject of 2012 documentary ‘Searching For Sugar Man’
13: Clarence Avant (92, owner of Sussex Records/Tabu Records, film producer, ‘Jason’s Lyric’)
Magoo (50, American rapper, Timbaland & Magoo)
16: Jerry Moss (88, music executive, the ‘M’ in A&M Records)
17: Bobby Eli (77, guitarist, MFSB/songwriter, ‘Love Won’t Let Me Wait’)
Gary Young (70, American drummer, Pavement)
19: Ron Cephas Jones (66, American actor, ‘This Is Us’)
24: Bernie Marsden (72, English guitarist, Whitesnake/songwriter, ‘Here I Go Again’/’Fool For Your Loving’)
29: Jamie Crick (57, English radio broadcaster, Jazz FM)
31: Gayle Hunnicutt (80, American actress, ‘Dallas’)
September
1: Jimmy Buffett (76, American singer/songwriter, ‘Margaritaville’)
4: Gary Wright (80, American singer/songwriter, ‘Dream Weaver’/’Love Is Alive’)
Steve Harwell (56, American singer/rapper, Smash Mouth)
8: Mike Yarwood (82, English comedian/impressionist)
13: Roger Whittaker (87, Kenyan-born English singer/songwriter, ‘Durham Town’)
16: Sir Horace Ove (86, Trinidadian-born, English film director, ‘Pressure’)
Irish Grinstead (43, American R&B singer, 702)
25: David McCallum (90, Scottish actor, ‘The Man From U.N.C.L.E.’/’N.C.I.S.’/musician)
28: Michael Gambon (82, English actor, ‘Harry Potter’ movies)
30: Russell Batiste Jr. (57, American drummer, The Meters)
October
2: Francis Lee (79, English football player, Manchester City/England)
8: Burt Young (83, American actor, ‘Rocky’)
11: Rudolph Isley (84, American singer, The Isley Brothers/songwriter, ‘That Lady’)
12: Michael Cooper (71, Jamaican musician, Inner Circle/Third World)
14: Piper Laurie (91, American actress, ‘Carrie’/’The Hustler’)
19: DJ Mark The 45 King (62, DJ/musician/producer, ‘The 900 Number’)
20: Haydn Gwynne (66, English actress, ‘Drop The Dead Donkey’)
21: Sir Bobby Charlton (86, English footballer, Manchester United/England)
24: Richard Roundtree (81, American actor, ‘Shaft’)
28: Matthew Perry (54, American-Canadian actor, ‘Friends’)
November
12: Anna Scher (78, founder of the Anna Scher Children’s Theatre)
19: Joss Ackland CBE (95, English actor, ‘White Mischief’)
22: Jean Knight (80, American soul singer, ‘Mr. Big Stuff’)
25: Terry Venables (80, English footballer, Chelsea/Tottenham Hotspur/England manager)
26: Geordie Walker (64, English guitarist, Killing Joke)
29: Sticky Vicky (80, Spanish dancer and illusionist)
30: Shane MacGowan (65, English-born Irish singer, The Pogues/songwriter, ‘Fairytale Of New York’)
December
1: Brigit Forsyth (83, Scottish actress, ‘Whatever Happened To The Likely Lads?’)
5: Denny Laine (79, English musician, The Moody Blues/Wings, songwriter, ‘Mull Of Kintyre’)
7: Benjamin Zephaniah (65, English poet/writer/actor, ‘Peaky Blinders’)
8: Ryan O’Neal (82, American actor, ‘Love Story’/’Barry Lyndon’/’Paper Moon’)
Nidra Beard (71, American singer, Dynasty)
11: Andre Braugher (61, American actor, ‘Homicide: Life On The Street’/’Brooklyn Nine-Nine’/’Glory’)
Richard Kerr (78, English singer/songwriter, ‘Mandy’)
15: Bob Johnson (79, singer/songwriter/musician, Steeleye Span)
16: Colin Burgess (77, Australian drummer, AC/DC)
17: Amp Fiddler (65, singer/songwriter/producer)
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MIKE YARWOOD (1941-Died September 8th 2023,at 82).English impressionist, comedian and actor. He was one of Britain's top-rated entertainers, regularly appearing on television from the 1960s to the 1980s,in his shows such as Look: Mike Yarwood,The Mike Yarwood Show,and,Mike Yarwood: In Persons, His shows were a mixture of sketchs,a few songs,and primarily what he was known for,his impressions of celebrities and politicians at the time,including Labour Prime Minister Harold Wilson,Broadcaster Sir Robin Day,sitcom characters,Frank Spencer and Alf Garnett,and King Charles III,at that time,still Prince of Wales. .Mike Yarwood - Wikipedia
#Mike Yarwood#British Comedians#Comedians#Comedy Legends#British Impressionists#Impressionists#Notable Deaths in September 2023#Notable Deaths in 2023
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With A Martyr Complex: Reading List 2022
Adapted from the annual list from @balioc, a list of books (primarily audiobooks) consumed this year. This list excludes several podcasts, but includes dramatizations and college lecture series from The Great Courses, which I consume like a disgusting fiend.
Introduction to the Qur'an by Martyn Oliver with Tahera Ahmad (for Quranic recitation)
Conquistadors by Michael Wood
ROAR: How to Match Your Food and Fitness to Your Unique Female Physiology for Optimum Performance, Great Health, and a Strong, Lean Body for Life by Stacy Sims and Selene Yeager
The Guns of August by Barbara W. Tuchman
War, Peace, and Power: Diplomatic History of Europe 1500-2000 by Vegas Gabriel Liulevicius
This Is How You Lose The Time War by Amal El-Mohtar and Max Gladstone
Coup de Grâce: A Novel by Marguerite Yourcenar (Translated by Grace Fick)
Sun and Steel by Yukio Mishima (Stanford Press Translation)
Classical Mythology by Elizabeth Vandiver
Metamorphoses by Ovid (Translated by Frank Justus Miller)
Existential Kink: Unmask Your Shadow and Embrace Your Power (A method for getting what you want by getting off on what you don't) by Carolyn Elliott
Fascism: A Warning by Madeline Albright
The Enlightenment Invention of the Modern Self by Leo Damrosch
Greek Tragedy by Elizabeth Vandiver
Leviathan or The Matter, Forme and Power of a Commonwealth Ecclesiaticall and Civil by Thomas Hobbes
War Is a Force That Gives Us Meaning by Chris Hedges
Natural Law and Human Nature by Father Joseph Koterski
Odysseus in America: Combat Trauma and the Trials of Homecoming by Jonathan Shay (Foreward by John McCain and Max Cleland)
We by Yevgeny Zamyatin (Translated by Clarence Brown)
Treason by Orson Scott Card (Originally published as A Planet Called Treason)
The Modern Political Tradition: Hobbes to Habermas by Lawrence Cahoon
Gideon The Ninth by Tamsyn Muir
Discipline and Punish by Michel Foucault (Translated by Alan Sheridan)
Harrow The Ninth by Tamsyn Muir
History of Sexuality: Volume I by Michel Foucault (Unidentified Translator)
Madness and Civilization by Michel Foucault (Translated by Richard Howard)
Lent: A Novel of Many Returns by Jo Walton
Living the French Revolution and the Age of Napoleon by Suzanne M. Desan
The Stranger by Albert Camus (Translated by Matthew Ward)
10 Women Who Ruled The Renaissance by Joyce Salisbury
A Brief History of the Samurai by Jonathan Clements
Because Internet: Understanding The New Rules of Language by Gretchen McCulloch
The Sailor Who Fell From Grace With The Sea by Yukio Mishima
The Republic by Plato (Translated by Benjamin Jowett)
Nona The Ninth by Tamsyn Muir
Davos Man: How The Billionaires Devoured The World by Peter S. Goodman
The Birth of The Modern Mind: The Intellectual History of the 17th and 18th Centuries by Alan Charles Kors
(Spooky) Litigation: The Practice of Supernatural Law (Volume 1) by Jeffrey A. Rapkin
Emperors of Rome by Garrett G. Fagan
The Exorcist by William Peter Blatty
Francis of Assisi by Ronald B. Herzman and William R. Cook
Impact Winter by Travis Beacham
Popes and The Papacy: A History by Thomas X. Noble
Misery by Stephen King
The Benedict Option by Rod Dreher
The Aeneid by Virgil (Translated by John Dryden)
The Aeneid of Virgil by Elizabeth Vandiver
The Industrial Revolution by Patrick N. Allitt
[Redacted] by [Redacted]
The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas (Translated by Duke Classics)
America and the World: A Diplomatic History by Mark A. Stoler
The Stars My Destination by Alfred Bester
Hagakure by Yamamoto Tsunetomo (Translated by William Scott Wilson)
A Memory Called Empire by Arkady Martine
Voltaire and The Triumph of The Enlightenment by Alan Charles Kors
Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoevsky (Translated by Constance Garnett)
Incomplete books: Jacques the Fatalist, The Just City, On Killing
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Great Courses consumed: 17
Non-Great Courses Nonfiction consumed: 16
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Works consumed by women: 17
Works consumed by men: 37
Works consumed by men and women: 2
Works that can plausibly be considered of real relevance to foreign policy (including appropriate histories): 10
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With A Martyr Complex’s Choice Award, fiction division: It’s a tie between Lent and Coup de Grace, I just couldn’t decide between the two. Feel free to mock me for my indecision.
>>>> Honorable mention: The Stars My Destination, Misery
With A Martyr Complex’s Choice Award, nonfiction division: The Guns of August
>>>> Honorable mention: Living the French Revolution and The Age of Napoleon, Greek Tragedy, Conquistadors, The Aeneid of Virgil
>>>> Great Courses Division: The Birth of the Modern Mind: The Intellectual History of the 17th and 18th Centuries
The Annual “An Essential Work of Surpassing Beauty that Isn’t Fair to Compare To Everything Else” Award: We
>>>> Honorable mention: Crime and Punishment (This may have suffered from me reading while quarantining, I could easily have swapped it with We under other circumstances)
>>>> Nonfiction Division: Leviathan
>>>>>>>>Honorable Mention: Discipline and Punish
The “Reading This Book Will Give You Great Insight Into The Way I See The World” Award: War is a Force That Gives Us Meaning
>>>> Honorable mention: The Sailor Who Fell From Grace With The Sea, Leviathan
The “This is Kooky Made Up Nonsense But Still Worth Checking Out” Award: Existential Kink
The “Reading This has Allowed Me To Stop Caring About Its Author Too Much” Award: The Benedict Option
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This marks the first year where I’ve reached my goal of at least 1 book per week for the year, and I’m reasonably proud of that. I’m especially proud that I didn’t overload the list with short works to reach that goal and was able to tackle some difficult or long works while maintaining a solid pace. I did find myself reading fewer literary works than I tend to prefer, and my nonfiction that wasn’t lectures was lower than I’d generally like (however much I do love lectures).
Goals for next year: more foreign policy reading, more literary fiction, write something of my own.
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