Author (#1)October 2004 Archives
Current: "Plain heathen mischief" by Martin Clark. Writer from Virginia.
"The No. 1 Ladies Dective Agency" by Alexander McCall Smith
"Southern Fried" by Cathy Pickens. Charlotte writer
"The Nature of Midnight" by Robert Rice. This was good story. I decided to read this after reading a quick review in the Wall Street Journal, including a bit about his publisher dropping him. I think the publisher made a mistake.
"The Known World" by Edward P. Jones, through page 100
"Making a Literary Life" by Carolyn See
"Visions in Death" by J.D. Robb, through page 98
"A Battle from the Start: The Life of Nathan Bedford Forrest" by Brian Steele Wills
"The Impending Crisis: 1848-1861" by David M Potter
"Out to Canaan" by Jon Karon
"'Co. Aytch': a side show of the big show" by Samuel R. Watkins
Audio Books
Current: "The last stand of the tin can sailors [the extraordinary World War II story of the U.S. Navy's finest hour]" by James D. Hornfischer
"An Hour befor Dawn" by Jimmy Carter. A much better story of growing up in the South than "All Over but the Shouting."
"Crazy Horse" by Larry McMurtry
"Hitler's Scientists: Science, War, and the Devil's Act" by John Cornwell
"A Beautiful Mind" by Sylvian Nasar
"Confederates in the Attic" by Tony Horwitz
"Ultimate Punishment" by Scott Turow
"All for the Union" by Elijah Hunt Rhodes.
"Ghost soldiers [the forgotten epic story of World War II's most dramatic mission]" by Hampton Sides
Wired News: Indian Mounds Mystify Excavators. All those years in St. Louis and now I wish I'd visited.
Op/Ed on Yahoo News by Gerald Boyd, former NY Times managing editor: " Most journalists are insecure. They are not born that way, but are made apprehensive by the reality that thousands and even millions of readers, viewers and listeners constantly scrutinize their work. For them, this creates a kind of torture, which they experience in performing their craft. Most believe what they present is accurate, but they live in fear of someone punching holes in it.
"Paradoxically, most journalists are arrogant. Again, they are not born that way. But arrogance takes hold because journalists have information, and information is power. They are allowed front-row seats to news events and important people, and thus they see more and know more than others. For even the most humble, this can become intoxicating."
Also: "Finally, most journalists are driven by a sense of righteousness that means different things to different people. Some define this practice as truth-telling. Others regard it as standing up to the powerful. Still others view it as looking out for the underdog, or afflicting the comfortable and comforting the afflicted.
"In a free society, journalists are a necessary burden."
Charlotte libraries allow absentee balloting, and they've become the poll of choice for many. It's easy to see why: several weeks of polls being open, convenient locations and Saturday and Sunday hours.
This afternoon I dropped by the one branch and it was awe-inspiring to see the long line in front of the library of those waiting to vote. There looked to be hundreds waiting for their chance to vote.
A librarian said staff have worked extra hours to let all those waiting in lines each day vote. It's great that voting is more convenient thanks to the libraries.
NY Times: Identity Theft Is Epidemic. Can It Be Stopped? Story focuses on insiders with access to sensitive personal data.
AP: Americans Getting Taller, Much Heavier via Yahoo. Also check enlarged graphic here.
Atlanta Business Chronicle: Georgia leading nation in mortgage crime
Baltimore Business Journal: Taking sides: Ask Sinclair -- partisanship can be bad for profits
Charlotte Business Journal: Small firms hiring less, paying more
East Bay Business Times: Cities pay for Wi-Fi
The Business Journal of Portland: Restate earnings, wait for the lawsuit
San Francisco Business Times: Operating in the vineyard: Docs, health execs toast new careers as winemakers
Puget Sound Business Journal (Seattle): Fighting for jobs: New battle stress: Entering work world
Wired News: RSS Feeds Hunger for More Ads. As more publishers offer RSS the ads will follow. It's one way to pay the costs.
Charlotte Business Journal: Salvation Army aims to offset Target ouster: Loss of revenue could force closing of Charlotte shelters
Dallas Business Journal: Target's no-solicitation policy hits Red Kettle drive
Cincinnati Business Courer: Logging the Bloggers: Intelliseek software captures online buzz about presidential race
The Business Journal of Kansas City: Natural selection: Trend may give conventional grocers something to chew on
Orlando Business Journal: Trade-ins: Are high gas prices turning buyers away from SUVs?
Silicon Valley/San Jose Business Journal: Fuel cell for cars on its way
ACBJ: Economic clout makes L.A. sports team choice
Business First of Buffalo: Buffalo pays price for half-century of unresponsive leaders, uninvolved citizens
Puget Sound Business Journal: Amazon's toy dispute could lead to overhaul
The Business Journal of Minneapolis * St. Paul: Best Buy to launch health store