Author Topic: The Library  (Read 2078158 times)

BarbStAubrey

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24120 on: September 16, 2024, 05:52:38 PM »
looking forward to your impression frybabe reading Clear (2024) by Carys Davies. I read it the early part of the summer - had no idea this happened in Scotland and I found myself glued to the book - forgot his name but the guy who lives alone on this island sure had more skills than a one-man band. I've a question about the ending but I'll wait till you get there - what this prompted and I have not started is a by chance what I see as a follow up - not by the same author and published in 2016 about the story from the other side - the areas where all these people were shipped to and left - Martyrs: Glendale and the Revolution in Skye by Roger Hutchinson

"In the 1830s and 1840s the district of Glendale on the island of Skye was swamped by immigrants cleared from other north Skye estates. The resultant overcrowding and overuse of land caused simmering discontent – not against the incomers, but against the landowners, who regarded their tenants as no more than chattels. This book is a definitive account of what happened when the powder-keg erupted and a full-scale land-war ensued. Pitched battles with police, factors and bailiffs, military intervention, arrests, trials, imprisonment and the personal intervention of the Prime Minister were to have huge consequences for crofters all over the Highlands, who, ultimately, were the victors."

Again - good luck with your surgery - please keep us abreast...

Bellamarie I haven't started The Summer of the Great-Grandmother by Madeleine L'Engle but I'll get to it very soon - Monday, Monday by Elizabeth Crook has me by the tail - so glad I found this author - the story is not her Bio but her writing the story that I will be dismayed if it is only a novel - we shall see - she sure has the Austin of the 1960s down - she did grow up in San Marcos that then was where many a UT student attend Southwest Texas in San Marcos for their first year of college and from where my daughter graduated - There used to be a special student bus that left Austin for the 35 to 40 minute ride every morning - Then the college was far more protective of students rather than being a 17 year old thrown into a large University that for some was not only overwhelming but they felt isolated - for about 10 years now San Marcos is at the edge of Austin with subdivisions right up and into the town of San Marcos. The author, Elizabeth Crook attended Baylor, up the road from Austin by about 2 hours in Waco - it appears she has written a few other books about Central Texas and Texas lore.

Read somewhere that books like mountains will always be there to pickup another read/climb - and so I learned not to fret so much when my reading or other maintenance activities that are basic get away from me... plus let's face it for most of us our family is the center of our life. 

I know we should use another link on Senior Learn to talk about TV and Videos - but just a quicky - found a fabulous series that I get because I'm a prime member however it is from PBS Masterpiece - never saw it on my PBS channel - this series is in French with English subtitles but fabulous - storyline about current issues like the one I watched last night, international drug smuggling into this small mountain community, scenery is out of the world, the alps both southern and one episode was filmed at Mont Blanc, great actors that have no international fame - and the episodes are not only about current issues but are 90 minutes long - it is called The Mountain Detectivehttps://www.amazon.com/gp/video/detail/B097NQBDN7/ref=atv_hm_wat_c_0sLMfd_1_1

“A man should hear a little music, read a little poetry, and see a fine picture every day of his life, in order that worldly cares may not obliterate the sense of the beautiful which God has implanted in the human soul.” ~ Goethe

Tomereader1

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24121 on: September 16, 2024, 11:06:08 PM »
I am very concerned about Ginny, since the weather/flooding in No. Carolina.  Of course I don't know which part she's in.  Hope she will post and let us know.
The reading of a fine book is an uninterrupted dialogue in which the book speaks and our soul replies.


André Maurois

Tomereader1

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24122 on: September 16, 2024, 11:53:51 PM »
Just got my reserve copy of "The Situation Room" by George Stephanopoulos.  It is fascinating. And to think they've only had a Sit Room, per se, since 1961.  The front cover shows a sub-title of The Inside Story of Presidents in Crisis.
There are some funny moments, but if you can think of all the crisis moments we have had since 1961, you will know it to be deadly serious.  If your friendly, neighborhood library has it, it is available in Large Print, which proves to be a godsend to me.  I had the book on reserve, but it didn't take awfully long before my number came up!  There are some pictures and details of how the Room evolved into its present configuration.
Love to hear if any of you get it, and how you like it.
The reading of a fine book is an uninterrupted dialogue in which the book speaks and our soul replies.


André Maurois

Frybabe

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24123 on: September 17, 2024, 09:13:40 AM »
Barb, I was looking at some of Hutchinson's other books. He has quite a few out, including another book I might be interested  reading too is  about St. Kildas.

Hutchinson is a journalist living on Raasay (island just off the coast of Skye) and writing about local history. I like that. We have a few around here, but I rarely ran across bookstores that carried them. I have two such books, both signed. One is about the Juniata River which is a tributary of the Susquehanna River and joins with it maybe 10 miles upriver from me. The other is the story of a local WWII vet who was shot down during the raid on the Ploesti oil refineries in Romania.

I never heard of The Mountain Detective. I will have to look into it. Sounds interesting.

So far so good with the eye. I sat about four times as long in the waiting area as it took for the procedure. No eye fuzziness afterward, but I was still glad that my sister drove. Not much bruising, a little pain that one Tylenol took care of, but I had to use a lot more tissues than usual to catch my usual morning runny nose since I can't blow my nose for a while and a short round of itchiness. Now all I have left is the follow-up appointments for the tooth implant and the eye, then I will be up for tackling a few other things including getting my DEXA scan and the COVID shots, etc. On my agenda for October is buying and planting daffodils in my little dirt plot beside the patio.

I've been a little concerned about Ginny for a while now. She usually spends a little more time with us over the summer than  she did this year. Right about now she will be busy with the online and her Furman U. Latin classes.   

bellamarie

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24124 on: September 17, 2024, 01:48:23 PM »
Frybabe, I am so happy to hear the eye surgery is going well! 

Tomereader, it's good to see you posting.  I too was getting a bit concerned about Ginny, so, I just checked her status, it shows:

Last Active:September 16, 2024, 05:25:35 PM  I hope the flooding is not in her area and she is not dealing with it.

Barb, I am also a Prime Amazon member so I may check out The Mountain Detective.  I am so bored with television lately and am always channel surfing at night for something interesting to watch. 

Must run I have my granddaughter's fiancé coming to quote me for a patio, driveway and garage cement floor.   I seriously hate the thought of putting so much money into cement, but it must be done.

Ciao~ Bellamarie
“What on earth could be more luxurious than a sofa, a book, and a cup of coffee?...Was ever anything so civil?”
__Anthony Trollope, The Warden

BarbStAubrey

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24125 on: September 17, 2024, 03:16:27 PM »
tra la so glad for you frybabe that the eye surgery went well and now that is over - nice you are near your sister for things like this - and I'm so glad you kept us in the loop - actually you have given me a shot in the arm to be a bit more courageous and trusting that all will be well - Paul has a list of questions that he sent by way of the doctor's portal - we have estimated costs that we had to ask where the surgery is done and even the anesthesiologists to give us a quote on top of her quote - nothing easy any longer and then she wants me to have a current EKG and an approval from my GP - don't see this happening for weeks if not a couple of months and based on her responses to the questions Paul sent over maybe not at all - losing eyesight in that eye bing bang thank you is a risk I'm anxious about.

Like both of you have not heard much from Ginny this summer - looked up the flooding on the national storm tracker and it appears to be the southern coastline of North Carolina on down along the coast of South Carolina which is far far from where Ginny lives - not sure exactly where her home is located but years back while visiting my daughter who lives in Saluda which is between Hendersonville and Tryon Ginny and I got together for lunch - her son did have a garden center in Tryon - not sure if he still does or not and so Ginny's home must be in the area which is located on the eastern edge of the Appalachian Mt chain. Any flooding in that area my daughter would know - since she is actually in the mountains probably she would not be affected but she would know and my sister lives on the outer banks and she is not affected - and so you can breath Tomereader - doubt seriously Ginny would have experienced flooding. Glad to see you poke your head in to visit us.

Bellamarie yes, TV is for the birds of late - only till the end of the month do I have the Astro games to look forward to watching and then unless they nab an after season spot that will bring a few more games it is over - I know in the north autumn weather is in full swing where as here it is simply an extension of summer mostly in the 90s rather than triple digit and so baseball season feels right - no longer much of a football fan except for local high school and some of the colleges and surprise the one high school team in the area is on TV Thursday night rather than the traditional Friday night - amazing but fun to watch. and so through the winter I'm forever looking for a movie or a series that is not some inane nonsense.
“A man should hear a little music, read a little poetry, and see a fine picture every day of his life, in order that worldly cares may not obliterate the sense of the beautiful which God has implanted in the human soul.” ~ Goethe

BarbStAubrey

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24126 on: September 18, 2024, 10:48:20 PM »
Hmm The Summer of the Great-Grandmother is nothing as I imagined... evidently it is a Journal - Book 2 and so there must be at least one other - I did not catch that when I downloaded it I was so caught by the name of the author, Madeleine L’Engle, who wrote A Wrinkle in Time and A Wind in the Door - This is a family drama of 4 generations, who every year spend their summer together in an old Farmhouse purchased as a falling down structure that over 20 years the story teller, Madeleine and husband Hugo restored - the Journal is about a summer coming to terms with Madeleine's mother, age 90 who has Alzheimer's and within the last year now has not only severe loss of awareness, but accompanied with constant fear and the typical symptoms of anger - Madeleine remembers her life as the child of this women she no longer recognizes, who played the piano with symphony orchestras and whose one homemaking skill was cooking of which she can do neither - Madeleine has hired several young women to be with her mother during the evening and night that ended up quickly becoming all day, who were children in the area when she and Hugo first moved into the house - she knows she and her mother are fortunate since they are not wealthy but can afford the help that allows the mother to be with them in this house during the summer and who spends her time during the remaining part of the year in Florida. Madeleine is becoming aware it may be their last summer since her mother has so deteriorated although against the advise of others she refuses to subject her mother to a home care center.

Reading is a challenge and I can only take it in small doses - essentially without saying it or even acknowledging it Madeleine is going through the 5 steps of loss -  denial, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance - and with each event the steps are what I see as her feelings written in this Journal.  One bit of information I did not know is that in the last few years Alzheimer Disease has sky rocketed.

All I can say is I'll be 92 this January and where my hip has arthritis that has me using a walker and I'm struggling with Glaucoma in one eye that is it... yes, I get tired and can't physically do what I would like and think I should be able but that is me being impatient with my aging body - I am so lucky and reading this I am over and over aware just how lucky - now if I could only stop scolding myself for not finishing each day what I think I ought to be able to accomplish and feeling disappointed because I cannot get down on my knees to garden and so I have to settle for less than I would like but reading this is like being hit on the side of the head with the reality I am really lucky.

As to recommending the book - ah - not sure - if you need to read about how Alzheimer's affects a family, especially how it affects grown children then without having read other books on the subject this appears to tell the story without pulling any punches - L'Engle is a gifted writer and knows how to bring a reader along and so each chapter seems to beckon to the next - without batting and eye I'm already at chapter 8 but it is not providing me a good feeling and so I don't plan on going further at this time... enough with angry people for whatever reason... just now I need a laugh or two or following an adventure or stories about ways people make their surroundings satisfying for themselves and others. 
“A man should hear a little music, read a little poetry, and see a fine picture every day of his life, in order that worldly cares may not obliterate the sense of the beautiful which God has implanted in the human soul.” ~ Goethe

bellamarie

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24127 on: September 19, 2024, 02:28:27 PM »
Barb, I can only hope and pray to be 92 yrs. old one day and still be as sharp in the mind and capable of getting around even if it is with a walker to help my balance as you are.  I'm sure you will figure the eye surgery out as to whether to have it or not.  I'm glad you have Paul to help with the questions needed to help make your decision.  If it makes you feel any better, I too have gotten to the point of feeling disappointed and beating myself up for not accomplishing things on my "to do list" each day.  Every night as I go up to bed, I think about what I thought I would get done and feel droopy for not.  We need to stop the "stinkin thinkin" as my Bible study teacher reminds our group. I am clearing out some of my flowers that have gotten overgrown, and I don't intend to plant any more since I can't get down on my knees as much as I used to.  I do love the cushion gardener's pad my kids gave me for Mother's Day which helps greatly on my knees.

The weather here in Toledo, Ohio this week was in the mids 80s which is too hot for me as we enter Fall in a few days.  Next week looks more like Fall temps in the low to mid 70s.  I am hoping to get away with hubby in a couple of weeks to go up north into Michigan to see the colorful leaves.  We love to go to Frankenmuth and stop at the large Christmas shop called Bronner's.   

Thank you for the update flood situation, it's good to know Ginny's area was not affected.

Yes, the rise in cases of Alzheimer is what I have also been hearing and the medical journals are now saying Diabetes seems to be considered a major risk factor.  If I am not mistaken, I do believe I heard a doctor say they are going as far as naming Diabetes a form of Alzheimer.  Other than knowing the medical aspects, I am not likely to read a book such as The Summer of the Great Grandmother because I've experienced so much loss of loved ones this past year, I need to avoid these types of books for now.  I have to say my hubby is loving Confronting the Presidents book and shares daily some tidbits he finds interesting or comical about things he's never read about the presidents.  He is a history buff, so this is right in his wheelhouse.  He amazes me how he retains history facts, names, dates etc.

Frybabe, I do hope you are still doing well with the recovery of the eye surgery. 

Ciao~  Bellamarie
“What on earth could be more luxurious than a sofa, a book, and a cup of coffee?...Was ever anything so civil?”
__Anthony Trollope, The Warden

BarbStAubrey

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24128 on: September 21, 2024, 06:29:35 AM »
Middle of the night and waiting for my pj's that are all in the dryer - forgot and put my last in the hamper and so all were washed - while waiting I finished the book I started earlier today - whew I still have Monday Monday to finish and this one was intent in a different way - Amazon shows it as a book for children and they couldn't be more wrong - Don't know if it would even be suitable for teens but then I've lost track of what teens read these days - Our Endless Numbered Days: A Novel by Claire Fuller

An eight years old spends a few weeks with her father, a survivalist, living off the land, sleeping in a tent in their large backyard in England while the mother, a concert pianist is playing with the German symphony and is gone for two months. Before the mother returns the father, takes her from their home in London to a remote hut in the Bavarian woods and tells her that the rest of the world has been destroyed. Deep in the wilderness they make a life for themselves. They repair the hut, bathe in water from the river, hunt and gather food in the summers and almost starve in the harsh winters. Their time is by the sun and the seasons. After 9 years things get strange and a stranger pops up in time to help her escape as her father is planning their double suicide. Not remembering her name what she does remember is pieced together however, her sense of reality is skewed and it is blamed on Korsakoff disease (caused by a lack of vitamin B) - my guess is when things became so out of her ability to cope she invented things as her protection - she does walk for 3 days out of the forest not sure if there are any other humans alive and is astonished to realize how much her father lied. Her mother comes for her after the news from a small hospital in southern Bavaria has photo and story in the German news and in England since the girls only speaks English - when her mother enters the story another set of unexplained happenings that make reading this book like going through a fun house. According to what mirror you look in the story has many twists and turns along with trying to dope out what is real and what is fantasy.

Well written and a fairly quick read but left me with a strange feeling - the Amazon excerpt suggests it is similar to the Snow Child which I did read however, to me this is more uncomfortable as well as more difficult to dope out reality till the story itself makes you aware of what is and what is not...

“A man should hear a little music, read a little poetry, and see a fine picture every day of his life, in order that worldly cares may not obliterate the sense of the beautiful which God has implanted in the human soul.” ~ Goethe

Frybabe

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24129 on: September 21, 2024, 07:15:54 AM »
I've just put two new books on my to buy list:

The Extinction of Experience: Being Human in a Disembodied World by Christine Rosen This is a subject which I have been becoming more concerned about lately.

Paris in Ruins: Love, War, and the Birth of Impressionism by Sebastian Smee.

It appears that The Mountain Detective is only available to those who join PBS Masterpiece. I also noticed that PBS Documentaries is also a pay-to-watch channel. I guess PBS programs are not so public anymore. I am not sure that they do a streaming service for their regular programing. Guess it is time to check my local PBS website to see what is going on these days.

BarbStAubrey

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24130 on: September 21, 2024, 06:48:35 PM »
hmm maybe I do have a masterpiece subscription - if so it would be through Amazon or maybe it was separate because I know I did not join up through PBS - I do notice that tuning into PBS on my TV has changed and there is a menu along the side that you have to click down till the blue mark is next to online or something like that - the second one down because when you open the site there are only shows that require a subscription - I should test my subscription that I did not know I had on the PBS site and see if I get anything.

Paris in Ruins: Love, War, and the Birth of Impressionism by Sebastian Smee looks like something I would enjoy - I had no idea that at this time in French History there was all this upheaval and war - I knew but never put it together -

As to The Extinction of Experience: just reading the Sample pages I saw an immediate schism - all this technology that yes, I agree distances from social interaction but it sure does not fit the experience of kids growing up on farms and ranches who yes, use technology almost like a walkie talkie but the interaction between everyone is more dependent on physical labor and face to face team work - in fact much of labor, from house building to auto repair and even factory work is physical work - it is office workers and city kids and even suburban moms and kids who are behind screens and cannot live without their screen - those behind screens are also living in a busier less safe and less protected community and so they are inclined to be more home centered where as country kids learn how to take care of themselves without calling on the sheriff and also, there is too much to do than be centered in the tech culture or part of a group causing mayhem - not saying that at this time there is no drug culture that has permeated this entire nation and brings those delivering and selling which are usually bad actors in the realm of all kids regardless rural or city  - at this point most of us are taking our life in our hands just driving - however, to brows the internet or keep up minute by minute with tic tok does not mix with feeding cattle or planting and harvesting or building washing machines and so the problems the book addresses may be for cities and the suburbs further culturally dividing this nation

I've started The Sixteen Trees of the Somme - we shall see... I'm thinking I'm chasing an impossible dream novel - A novel must have a problem to solve and most of the problems seem to be intense - when I think on it except for some benign romantic comedy the problem to solve mostly are intense - Wanting a story that brings a smile maybe I need to turn to children's books but then the old nursery rhyme stories are also pretty intense when you think about it full of witches and bad wolves or at best silly kings where as I'm remembering being captivated by The Bobbsie Twins and Five Little Peppers or even Nancy Drew wasn't all that intense.
“A man should hear a little music, read a little poetry, and see a fine picture every day of his life, in order that worldly cares may not obliterate the sense of the beautiful which God has implanted in the human soul.” ~ Goethe

BarbStAubrey

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24131 on: September 25, 2024, 01:20:02 PM »
Well once again I've decided Kindle has a mind of its own - by chance found a book that was not available on my list but that I owned for years - then I fouhnd others - 7 in all - HOWEVER 5 I could and did successfully upload and 2 no matter what I do they will not upload - now I can read them by going to the kindle site from the Amazon link called 'contents' but it is a song and dance to get there plus there is no way to click on a word for definition or explanation and then further - looks like maybe I see part of the problem - over the years I changed the names of certain collections and when I downloaded some of the books went into these I thought none existent folders and not into the current folder that was renamed - and to make matters worse when I upload my folders along the side not all the old, I thought abandoned folders are showing however, If a book is in one of these abandoned folders then by going to 'content' on the Amazon site they do show - not sure I'm making any sense but this is a mess... I started to empty these old folders making sure the books were in a current folder and then get rid of the old folder and now I'm worried maybe I should not have gotten rid of these old folders - could it be that some books I download are still making their way into the old folders
Shoot this is when I know technology is far beyond my ability to understand and even take care of my kindle library

I must say I did find a few books I had started back years ago and they look like winners - just the kind of story I've been looking for -

Veins of Gold a family in Utah that the story starts with the Dad leaving the oldest daughter, age 20 in charge of a 14 year old brother and a 10 year old sister to make his fortune in the California Gold Rush - the mother had died several years earlier an their way from Virginia - They ran into trouble in Utah where the father used all the money that was going to get the family to California to build a brick house with a couple of glass windows rather than the wooden house similar to other farmers and ranchers in the area - now the daughter has to figure out how to live before the father could get any money back to them which my guess never comes.  However, it appears they make it without the father, who as the story is unfolding was going after a pipe dream... 

Dream No Little Dream takes place in Lubbock a few years back with all the issues of Lubbock and the immediate surrounding area as it relates to those barely hanging on and living off the land including a Mexican family that lives in an old beat up trailer down the road a piece from the story teller who is the father of a daughter who fell for a guy she could help - married him - disaster - his upbringing and mental health is beyond help - small 2 year old involved - the storyteller and one of the Mexican boys, age 8 become fast friends and navigate the family issues that both families experience - this friendship ends up being the life raft for each of them - essentially it is the young boy's coming of age and making it on the High South Plains of Texas. 

Between these two and still reading Monday Monday I've found stories that are not sappy or as I think silly romantic comedies and as reading a mystery every thing ends up giving hope and satisfaction with everything in its rightful place along with some adventure, bits of learned wisdom and I guess grit along the way.
“A man should hear a little music, read a little poetry, and see a fine picture every day of his life, in order that worldly cares may not obliterate the sense of the beautiful which God has implanted in the human soul.” ~ Goethe

bellamarie

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24132 on: September 28, 2024, 12:06:12 PM »
Barb, I've always prided myself in my technology skills from teaching computers and even doing some minor repairs on hardware, but I too am beginning to find it more and more challenging these days.  Instead of downloading my Prime monthly book pics on my iPad I just do it on my laptop now, so no Nook, Kindle or tablet is needed.  Sadly, I have two iPads collecting dust since I use my iPhone much more for what I used to use my iPads for.  My dilemma is the new photo app that was installed on the latest update on my laptop.  I spent the entire day going around looking for folders to find where the pics are going.  And don't even get me started with the video editor app they changed to. Like you, I was concerned after deleting folders and wondering if I did so and having other pics attached to them.  I am a photo fanatic, the only one in the family who captures pictures so needless to say I have tons and tons of pics for when the daughter in laws ask for certain ones to make special boards for the grandkids. 

Life got a little busy for us again and so I haven't had a chance to settle down and read in the past few weeks.  I'm lucky to do my morning Bible study with the guys coming early to tear out our patio, sidewalk, driveway and front steps to replace.  My yard is an absolute mess, but I am told by Ben (granddaughter's fiancé') that when he is done it will be the showcase for the neighborhood.  He owns his own concrete company and is a jack of all trades so I have full confidence in him, just let the weather cooperate so he can pour all the cement.  I will be patient and not even consider complaining after seeing videos of Florida, Georgia and North Carolina getting hit by hurricane Helene.  Thank God my daughter's area was spared. I pray for all those who have gotten hit by this devastating hurricane.  I'll take the heavy snowfalls over living in the south any day. 

I think I am going to hunt for a good psychological thriller and begin reading it, that genre seems to keep my attention the most this past year. 

Ciao~  Bellamarie 
“What on earth could be more luxurious than a sofa, a book, and a cup of coffee?...Was ever anything so civil?”
__Anthony Trollope, The Warden

Frybabe

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24133 on: September 28, 2024, 06:45:34 PM »
Hi gals,

Furthering my interest in foreign writers, I just started reading this engrossing narrative by Tahir Hamut Izgit and translated by Joshua L. Freeman titled Waiting to be Arrested at Night: A Ugyhur Poet's Memoir of China's Genocide. It is a telling of how he and his family escaped from China and an account of the persecution of the Uyghurs we occasionally hear about here. His application for asylum here has been pending for years. Here is a review of his book and that of his friend Perhat Tursun. https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/fear-and-writing-in-xinjiang-on-tahir-hamut-izgils-waiting-to-be-arrested-at-night-and-perhat-tursuns-the-backstreets/

I found a site with some of Izgit's poems. 
https://www.asymptotejournal.com/poetry/tahir-hamut-izgil-five-poems/

He has a web presence so I hope to take a look at some of them, although most or all are in Uyghur.

BarbStAubrey

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24134 on: September 28, 2024, 10:19:31 PM »
At this time I sure would like to know how Ginny is doing - Jane if you read this and are in touch please let us know... I am going to try and email her and see if there is a return - heard from my daughter yesterday and sent an email today but have not heard back - not panic time since they probably have their hands full - last I heard one of the long driveways to her home was washed out.

Yes, frybabe I had heard of Tahir Hamut Izgit and his book of poetry but was not following his personal story.

Bellamarie sure hope the driveway and patio are everything you dreamed they would be - sounds like a new member of the family has your best interest at heart.

I've set Vein of Gold aside - so disappointed - a good start to what sounded like a story of survival after their father abandons them and their mother had died 6 months earlier - however, the eldest age 20 with her sister are on their way to a nearby town that was populated with Mormons and the story turns into a fantasy of earth cracking and waving like the sea, goblins, snakes, ghosts, all sorts of wriggles and a golden man who essentially saves them - at first I thought a way the author was describing their perilous journey but no, after arriving in the town to stay with someone who befriended them before the mother died and the father left this older sibling goes out to take care of the horse and it happens again and this time it is a longer episode of craziness again with this golden young man who is strong and is now zipping her to various spots to see what was happening - that was enough for me... not my cup of tea...

However finished the beautifully written book that takes place in Lubbock and surrounding area, Dream No Little Dream - a gentler kinder and shorter version of a Cormac McCarthy or a Larry McMurtry, who both write of west Texas, northern Mexico, New Mexico where people and stories include good and evil as one in various degrees of either and with the wide treeless spaces providing no place to hide of which the sun beaten, rock hard earth is characteristic of people and their stories in this area of the world.   
“A man should hear a little music, read a little poetry, and see a fine picture every day of his life, in order that worldly cares may not obliterate the sense of the beautiful which God has implanted in the human soul.” ~ Goethe

Frybabe

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24135 on: September 29, 2024, 06:14:03 AM »
I image, no, I expect that Ginny has her hands full with the extensive damage Helene has caused. From Furman University's web page, I learned that it will be closed until at least October 2 due to the extensive flooding and power outages in the area. I forget how close she lives to the campus.

BTW, anyone who has friends and family in the affected areas may be able to get a message out to them via Ham Radio operators. They don't often get any mention or credit for the volunteer work they do during emergencies such as this to get messages through and helping emergency services with backup communications. Ham Radio is not just a hobby. Part of the reason the government set aside air frequencies for them is to provide just such backup. 

PatH

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24136 on: September 30, 2024, 09:57:49 AM »
Nice trick to look up Furman, Frybabe.  The fact they're closed, and that Ginny is online for an hour or two most days suggests she's either continuing classes or preparing them.  She said recently she was revising some of her lessons because of some newly discovered stuff.  Let's hope she isn't also digging out or pumping out.

Nothing remarkable is occurring in Portland's weather just now.  The threatened wildfire weather didn't materialize, and we're having the standard fall cooling down.  This can get very pretty, with frost turning all the deciduous trees into brilliant colors, with dark green splashes of evergreens on the hill- and mountain-sides.

Until recently, ice and snow were rare in Portland, once every few years, but now, in a month or so we will start getting snow, freezing rain, icy astreets, etc., and lots of people don't know how to drive under these conditions, so things will be a mess.

jane

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24137 on: September 30, 2024, 11:13:37 AM »


Barb, BellaMarie, Frybabe, Pat....Ginny's area was hit hard with winds, tornadoes, etc.  She's had a lot of damage to the trees in her home area and vineyard.  No damage to her house itself, but a lot of trees down.  Her sons got one driveway cleared and brought a generator so they have some minimum power.  Her husband had a lengthy drive to find gasoline for the generator.  She has NO power, so NO internet/email, and only one cell phone that sometimes works.  She called me on that about her online Latin classes.  She's cancelled the ones at Furman as she can't drive there.  Her health issues continue and she'll be undergoing treatment and surgery sometime later. 

jane

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24138 on: September 30, 2024, 04:49:10 PM »
thank you Jane - news from the area is dour  - received news from my daughter by way of my sister who was able to get through with a text - new Generator did not work and yes, they too are without gas for their vehicles however a neighbor got through and is bringing some - once they have gas for a vehicle the message to my sister said they are planning to find a hotel for a few days. Tried calling and I simply get a leave a message answer.

Did not know Ginny had health issues - Jane has Ginny shared information as to the issue that is requiring surgery?

Pat did not know you are back in Portland - are you permanently gone from the east coast? I believe you shared at one time your daughter lives in Portland - are you nearby?
“A man should hear a little music, read a little poetry, and see a fine picture every day of his life, in order that worldly cares may not obliterate the sense of the beautiful which God has implanted in the human soul.” ~ Goethe

Frybabe

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24139 on: September 30, 2024, 06:07:51 PM »
Thanks so much for the update, Jane. I was looking at YouTube videos of the damage done in SC and NC. Both states as well as Georgia and Tennessee got hit very hard along their western sides. As well as looking at videos, I had brought up a road map of SC to look for place names mentioned in the videos.

Reading more into Waiting to be Arrested at Night I feel like I am reading a real-life version of 1984, especially regarding the use of re-education camps and prisons,  along with the banning of certain traditional Muslim words, phrases and names, yes names.  Newspeak lives. It gives me shivers.

bellamarie

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24140 on: September 30, 2024, 06:36:15 PM »
Jane, thank you so much for the update on Ginny, so glad her sons were there to clear her driveway, and her husband was able to get some gasoline.  I will keep her and her family in my prayers. 

Barb, glad you were able to get some news about your daughter in law, it's so difficult when you are not able to get in touch with your loved ones.  Good idea to go to a hotel for a couple of days until the power can be restored.

Frybabe, I too have been watching a lot of the reels people are posting on Facebook seeing the devastation in Florida, Georgia, NC, and Tennessee.  My daughter in laws sister lives in NC and she has been posting as well.  Your book sounds very interesting. 

I still have not chosen a book to read but I hope for things to settle down in a week or so and then will decide on one. 

Ciao~ Bellamarie   
“What on earth could be more luxurious than a sofa, a book, and a cup of coffee?...Was ever anything so civil?”
__Anthony Trollope, The Warden

jane

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24141 on: October 01, 2024, 02:58:28 PM »


Barb…Ginny hasn’t said what the specific issue is, but doing 6 months of chemotherapy indicates to me, who has been through that once and is doing it again, that it’s a serious issue she’s having treatments for.


Jane



PatH

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24142 on: October 01, 2024, 10:06:04 PM »
Jane, thanks for the update, though I'm sorry the news isn't better. I'll add my prayers and wishes to the others. Her family is sure doing a good job of crisis management to keep everyone as safe as possible.

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24143 on: October 02, 2024, 04:43:33 AM »
oh my had no idea - thank you Jane for filling us in on Ginny's health issue - specific or not - yes, agree - chemo says more than an average health issue - and now the aftermath of this storm to handle - yes prayers and am I reading it correctly that you also are having another round of chemo - yes, prayers - difficult to take in - it is too easy to assume this all happens to those we do not know and yet, here among this small group - I'm stunned and hope you Jane as Ginny also will have better days ahead.
“A man should hear a little music, read a little poetry, and see a fine picture every day of his life, in order that worldly cares may not obliterate the sense of the beautiful which God has implanted in the human soul.” ~ Goethe

jane

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24144 on: October 02, 2024, 10:03:37 AM »
Thank you.  When it’s your health, you do what is necessary.


Stay safe and healthy,

Jane

bellamarie

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24145 on: October 03, 2024, 11:30:29 AM »
Jane, thank you so much for the health update with Ginny. I will keep her in my prayers and hope the clean-up in her area and all those states who were horribly devastated by this hurricane will be met with urgent aide.  Jane, I will keep you as well in my thoughts and prayers as you proceed with your chemo treatments.

My cement work for a new patio, driveway, steps and walkway have begun and I can say it is a much bigger project and mess than I could have ever imagined.  I will not complain knowing there are those living without homes, and I am only inconvenienced for another week to complete this job.  I can tell just by looking out my backdoor seeing the new patio poured how nice it will all turn out. 

I finally downloaded an Amazon monthly psychological thriller yesterday, so I hope to get to be able to find the time to begin reading it this weekend. 

Ciao~ Bellamarie
“What on earth could be more luxurious than a sofa, a book, and a cup of coffee?...Was ever anything so civil?”
__Anthony Trollope, The Warden

jane

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24146 on: October 04, 2024, 12:43:16 PM »

Thank you, BellaMarie.  Your new patio area sounds delightful.  ENJOY!

Nothing exciting here in Iowa.  The harvest is underway...esp. on the soybeans...and then corn.  Farmers like these windy warm days for drying down the crops in the field and not having to pay for drying it.  I'm told that anything over 12% moisture in beans is a reduction in the price at the place they take the beans.


Stay safe and healthy,
jane

Frybabe

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24147 on: October 06, 2024, 07:04:09 PM »
Pat, hope you are doing well. Thought you would be interested to know that this newest Laiden Universe book, Ribbon Dance, is definitely not to my taste. Half way through the book, and it is getting hard to continue. I do not believe I will be spending money on any future volumes.

There are a few chapters left to read in Waiting to be Arrested at Night. Things are getting desperate in their home region, the family has had several scares, yet they still waffle between staying and hoping things will get better, and leaving. Well, I do know that they finally left China for the US, but they waited too late and now (as of the book publication) are in visa status limbo here since Immigration tightened on giving refugees permanent residence. These refugees, many wishing for political asylum against persecution in their homeland, still very badly miss their country and their friends and relatives that remain behind.

So---time to find another library read.

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24148 on: October 07, 2024, 04:27:55 AM »
Unexpected - daughter on the road to stay here for awhile - with no water and no electricity and staying at some with some kind friends she thought 'Why?' - Gary has his time full to the brim as those who lost power are coming back on and their computers are not cooperating - it is cool enough no AC is needed, he showers at the gym each morning and drives down to Greenville in SC where most have had power back and so rather than sitting around twiddling her thumbs feeling like a bump on a log she is coming here -

So many things we want to do and there never is enough time so this unplanned visit will be just that - unplanned - we're looking forward to hours of going through old photos and making sure names and dates are on each which means I will be sharing what was happening that will prompt other stories - we may even take time to visit a local site or art museum that up till now there was no time to spare with unpacking the major activity around here - I'm excited and so my reading will be at a stand still for a bit - best of all Katha is driving and so she can take back with her things that I would not send in the mail
“A man should hear a little music, read a little poetry, and see a fine picture every day of his life, in order that worldly cares may not obliterate the sense of the beautiful which God has implanted in the human soul.” ~ Goethe

Frybabe

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24149 on: October 07, 2024, 07:00:02 AM »
Some sad news reported over on Seniors and Friends. For anyone left here that remembers Beverly from SeniorNet, she vert recently passed away.

A good bit of the Southeastern US is a mess. And now here comes another one to hit Florida. I've seen many clips from people who got caught in these storms that FEMA isn't being very helpful. My sister doesn't believe it. Oddly, I haven't seen any mention of the Red Cross and other such organizations on the ground helping, but I am sure they are. I know that ham radio operators have been setting up portable emergency communications to help get messages passed since many communities are not only without power, but have no cell phone service. They not only help emergency services, they can pass on messages to and from those in the affected areas. This is part of why the Amateur Radio Service exists, but they rarely get a mention.

I hope Ginny is doing okay. 

Frybabe

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24150 on: October 07, 2024, 07:36:44 AM »
Just now found an historical novel just released called The Colony Club, by Shelley Noble. The Colony Club  was the first women's club in Manhattan. Founded in 1903, it was a private social club modeled after the gentleman's clubs. It still exists today. Not sure I am interested enough to read it, but some of you might.  I don't see a lot of reviews on it yet.

BarbStAubrey

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24151 on: October 07, 2024, 01:38:21 PM »
frybabe my daughter is in Saluda just east of Hendersonville and south of Asheville from where the young women she mentors was evacuated - Nothing from any official group and no sign of electricity pole workers - in Greenville South Carolina where Gary has his Computer business there are linemen working bringing back electricty - They were not hit as bad as NC - This weekend friends and church groups from Atlanta Ga. got through to Asheville and the outskirts of Hendersonville with water, diapers, baby formula, underwear and a few chainsaws along with the most precious gas to run the chainsaws. Only enough assistance for pockets of groups - other than that it is neighbors helping neighbors - those with gas stoves and ovens had cooked up nonstop as much out of refrigerators that could be brought including restaurants who all shared the hot meals. Having retired only 2 years ago as a teacher in Henderson High, my daughter is pretty well connected all over the area - many of her ex students own their own business that she calls on along with friends of her sons including a couple in local government and so she is within the loop of communication.
“A man should hear a little music, read a little poetry, and see a fine picture every day of his life, in order that worldly cares may not obliterate the sense of the beautiful which God has implanted in the human soul.” ~ Goethe

PatH

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24152 on: October 07, 2024, 02:50:04 PM »
Frybabe, by coincidence, when I read your post about the Liaden universe I was about to tell you that I had learned that Steve Miller passed away on February 20, and Sharon Lee would finish the series, following what he had planned. I think he had taken over most of the writing , so that bodes ill. I had stopped reading the books, occasionally half-heartedly checking Powells to see if they had a cheap used copy of Traders Leap.  I already didn't like where they were going, so we'll see. I half feel I should follow it to the end. after all these years, but I probably won't

PatH

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24153 on: October 07, 2024, 06:46:39 PM »
Frybabe asked if I was doing OK, and Barb asked if I was in Portland again, so here goes:

I moved to Portland for good about 3 years ago. Fairly early in the Covid epidemic there was a brief gap when air travel seemed a lot safer than normal. My daughter pointed out I might not get another chance for a long time, so I flew out, leaving the packing for a service.  I'm renting a condo unit from the owner, in downtown Portland, on the 15th floor of a 25 story building. Looking out of my windows, I can see the Willamette river and Mount Hood too, when it's not too cloudy.   Sometimes I'm not sure whither it's   Mount Hood pretending to be a cloud, or a cloud pretending to be Mount Hood.
My daughters  and their husbands and children live close enough to make it easy to see them, and when Covid clears up more, I'll be able to go a lot of places by a good public transporttion system.

Barb, we're kind of tracking each other without realizing it.  You'll turn 92 in January. I'll turn 92 in August.  You use a walker to ease your arthritis.  So do I.  You have glaucoma.  So do I, though they haven't suggested surgery yet, just treating it with eyedrops.  You're a much better gardener than I.  I can barely keep a pot of basil alive.  In Bethesda, the. previous owner of my home planted native species that didn't need much care,like azaleas, rhododendrons, may apples, jock-in-the-pulpit, snowdrops, native ferns.  There's a nice garden here, but it's cared for by a mixture of gardeners and volunteers. There are flowers planted to attract hummingbirds, which are fun to watch, and  also a big herb garden, which we can raid when we  want to. I still keep a pot of basil, though, and sometimes one will even last several weeks.  I have more artificial parts than you do--metal knee and hip, plastic eye lenses from cataract surgery, some teeth.  So far they're all working.

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24154 on: October 08, 2024, 04:22:29 PM »
daughter off to Home Depot for of all things batteries - not far, only a few streets away - Pat wow yes, tracking each other - I've decided against the eye surgery - it was a stint that meant I would no longer have to use eye drops however the success level is only 50% and where it slows down the glaucoma it does nothing for the damage already experienced and it does not rid me of future damage - since it is dependent on an anit-biotic and she does not use or see the value in colloidal silver and I have a serious lung and other reactions including the possibility of immediate loss of eyesight to all but Erythromycin it is not worth it - I'm going to loose more and more eyesight no matter only it would be slower - it is only one eye and at my age, yes I am depending more and more on eyesight however, the gradual loss of peripheral vision in one eye is not to me the problem compared to the risk if bing bang boom the immediate loss of vision or even the lung issue that gets scary.

Wouldn't you know they have electricity in Saluda but Katha is staying the week and according to how successful it will be to get through Atlanta which there is no other way with all the traffic that is now coming and later will be returning through Atlanta to Florida Katha may end up being here longer... Gary was going to fly over and after a short visit they would together drive home but magically over night the air fare to Houston usually $300 tops and most often $139 is now minimum $800 with most charging $1,000 so that plan is out...

As to gardening my plan now is to gather all my large flowerpots onto the gravel area near the house and plant herbs, some veggies and daffodil bulbs to be replaced late spring with some annuals. I've been able to winter the hanging baskets in the garage with a light and water but then winter is only a few weeks plus this year it is supposed to be mild so maybe 3 weeks of cold - one around New Years and 2 in February.

OK I can hear Katha - oh yes, a quicky we are watching from the beginning the Mountain Detective that I spoke of here and we are enjoying it...
“A man should hear a little music, read a little poetry, and see a fine picture every day of his life, in order that worldly cares may not obliterate the sense of the beautiful which God has implanted in the human soul.” ~ Goethe

bellamarie

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24155 on: October 09, 2024, 06:56:14 PM »
Jane, harvest time in Iowa, it sounds so exciting. 

Barb, how wonderful to have Katha with you for however long she can stay.  Enjoy every second and get out and have fun together.  I think not choosing to have the eye surgery with all the considerations is a good decision.  Yes, set the books on the shelf and just enjoy your daughter.

PatH.,it sounds like the move back to Portland has brought you closer to your family and that is wonderful.  Nothing like having family nearby.  Your view out your window sounds enjoyable, and a community herb garden how nice!  I love watching Hummingbirds, I have many flowers planted in my backyard that attracts them.  They are such interesting tiny creatures. 

Frybabe, The Colony Cub sounds interesting, I may have to check it out.

Well, our cement work is almost completed, and I couldn't be any happier.  My yard does look like a bulldozer came through, but then I guess in a sense it did.  Never imagined how much damage these large trucks would destroy the yard, but then I had such an uneven yard with weeds galore so beginning again with fresh dirt is okay with me.

My daughter and son in law live in Port Richey, Florida which could get a major storm surge by Milton, so I am one anxious Mama right now.  They were not able to evacuate, but the trajectory turned a little south so that could be a blessing for them. I will keep all in the path of this hurricane in my prayers.  I have been watching a lot of reels and videos NC residents are posting on Facebook and it appears FEMA, and American Red Cross have not been visible as of yet.  Neighbors and people from neighboring counties have been helping each other.  It always amazes me how people come together in a crisis and do it with such joy.  This is such an example of human nature at its best. 

I hope to get back to reading soon.

Ciao~ Bellamarie





“What on earth could be more luxurious than a sofa, a book, and a cup of coffee?...Was ever anything so civil?”
__Anthony Trollope, The Warden

Frybabe

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24156 on: October 15, 2024, 03:57:10 PM »
Well, Pat, it looks like Sharon Lee will have at least several years worth of unpublished material she and Steve Miller have produced before the Liaden Universe is done. The newest book in the Liaden Universe, Diviner's Bow, is complete and is scheduled to drop on April 1, 2025 (yes, April Fool's Day). It will continue on with the trade mission theme in Ribbon Dance, which I just finished reading. Speaking of, it did get more dramatic in the last few chapters, a worthy ending to the start of a new segment of the Tree and Dragon adventures.

Now, on to finishing two books I have set aside temporarily and to plan my next library book read.

Anyone pick up any new reading lately?

PatH

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24157 on: October 17, 2024, 02:40:54 PM »
I just got a Christmas present from my Son-in-law Matt. (We're kind of casual about exact timing)  It's Starter Villian by John Scalzi. I've only had a starter look at it, but the narrator has just inherited a supervillain business from his long lost uncle.  The business appears to be very shady indeed, and is currently being run by a sentient cat. I have no idea where this is going to go, but since it's John Scalzi, it will have complicated machinations by many characters whose loyalties are unclear, unexpected twists and turns, loyalty shifts, and a scene near the end where the narrator, with great satisfaction, will explain to some of the others how he got the better of them.
It will be clever and funny, and I will have trouble keeping the characters straight, which will affect my ability to outguess things, but it will most probably be a good read.

Frybabe

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24158 on: October 18, 2024, 06:35:33 AM »
Oh gosh, PatH. Have fun reading it. I have Starter Villain in my audio book library, but haven't listened to it yet. What I did start it his Human Division in its podcast form. While I read the book years ago, I found it a bit disjointed and a little hard to follow the main story line. Well, maybe there wasn't a main plot. It may have been meant to be a series of vignettes? I thought listening to each podcast separately might help. So far, I've only listened to the first one. I am not a big podcast listener.

BTW, Scalzi has a new book coming out, called When the Moon Hits Your Eye , next March. The story line is that the moon all of a sudden changes into (or is replaced) by a big wheel of cheese and how everyone, from kids to politicians, react. It doesn't sound interesting to me, but the youngsters might like it.

What I am reading now is a series of short stories, what I might call light mysteries. Two of them, so far, have left me wanting to know more about the characters or "what happens next".

   

PatH

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Re: The Library
« Reply #24159 on: October 18, 2024, 10:41:53 AM »
Frybabe, it seems like forever ago that I read Human Division, but my memory is that yes, it is a series of vignettes with an overall point.