Monday, February 23, 2026

Old Drawings Reborn: These Dry Bones Live Again







Yeah, I did like drawing Dragons and Wizards. The last two are variations of the same picture; the first one is more accurate to the original conception. I also tried 'enhancing' one of my original maps; the AI seems to have a little trouble reading my old scratchy handwriting. That should read 'Forlan Before the Morg Migration.' And the other labels are none too accurate, either. But still fun for me to look at. Reproduces some of the blue lines from the notebook paper.


2021 Diary: Business as Usual


2/23/2021: Up at 6 AM, after many dreams. Prayers and Bible.  Cartoons and caught up diary. Now take medicine. Took with a moon pie.

A little before 8 AM went out to wait. Started to bring the recycle bin in, but just at that moment the trashmen drove up and Andy came down the driveway. He waited and took the trash bins up, then Kam came out. Waited with Kam for bus, then finally took the recycle bin in.

At 9 AM I went to FD and got a few things like paper towels, chicken soup, peach slices, and Vitamin C gummies. Cleaned up, swept, opened the house, then started listening to Corey Olsen on YT from the beginning of his analysis of LOTR. Made an order for HEB and Thursday.

At 1 PM I went out and collected Kam and had a turkey and cheese sandwich. About 3 PM I started on the cabbage fry. Finished at 4:30 PM. Kam helped me and talked much about his philological studies; the boy does have a flair for comparing words and figuring out their relationships. If only we could turn that into some career!

At 7 PM I went in to clean up and made Kam liverwurst and cream cheese sandwiches for his supper. S&A came home, and Susan cautioned me about the sparsity of bread we had. I should have bought a loaf at FD! Rosary at 8 PM.

Spent the evening writing a post for NOT and then a few pages for Autumn Festival, which I then sent to John. It’s now almost 10 PM and reading (Russian fairy tales) and bedtime approach.

 

2/24/2021: Where is the year going? Almost a sixth gone already. Up at 5 AM and knew I wasn’t sleeping anymore, so watched Dragnet, and wouldn’t you know it, it was one of the few I’d actually seen. “My Three Sons” on now, which I can only tolerate. Put on my shoes and began prayers, then Bible.

Cartoons, Campbell’s Chicken Noodle Soup with Ritz Crackers, medicine, then wrote a short bridge between Yad and the Harvest Feast section. It’s now 7:26 AM.

Writing and researching on McQueeney School, then posting. It’s now 9:05 AM. Posted it, then laid down for a while. Up about 11:45 AM, started listening to Corey Olsen Ep. 5 a little after 12.

Kam came home a little after 1 PM as usual. I was getting ready to make stuffed peppers when Andy called me and said they wanted lasagna and bread sticks tonight. Put those in the oven about 3 PM and they were ready at 4:50 PM. The plumber came over later and worked on the washer and the sink. I finally went in at about 8:30 PM (after he was finally done) and got my share of lasagna and washed up. I listened to more Olsen, then stopped at 9:30 PM or so. Time for rosary, then bed. Legs still giving me the pip, the right leg now more so.

 

2/25/2021: Up at 6:10 AM or so; that seems to be my default time for now. Prayers and Bible. Shower and cartoons. Went out with Kam at 8 AM, to a light misty precipitation. After Susan left, I headed out to FD; got masking tape, a belt of many holes, a 2-liter Diet Coke, some Spam, hot dog buns, some chips and dip, and a Tijuana Mama hot sausage. Got home, started listening to Corey Olsen, the “Tolkien Professor”, and ate Spam dogs and chips and dip while drinking soda. Energized, I began working on the window, taping it up, throwing away the shredded curtain, sweeping up a couple of cupfuls of caterpillars, and moving the medieval flag to cover the window.  It gives the house a new feel, airier, especially around the kitchen.

At 1 PM went out and let Kam in and started preparing the stuffed bell peppers. Went in about 2 PM, then went out at 3 PM to pop everything into the oven. The groceries arrived about 3:15 PM. Took them to my house, then waited until 4:15 PM, when I sauced the peppers and fed the pets. At 4:45 PM finished cooking and took my meal out. Gave S&A some Vitamin C gummies. 5:04 PM and time to eat.

Went in at 5:30 PM and told Susan about the groceries Kam had brought home. She said Andy would be a little late. More listening to TP (Tolkien Professor – Corey Olsen LOTRO) and dipping into METV until 8:20 PM when I went in to wash up. Bed about 9:30 PM.

 

2/26/2021: Woke up about 3 AM and knew I was awake. Prayers and Bible.  Caught up diary. Set alarm clock. Mean to do a few chores like straighten the kitchen drawer and maybe I’ll get sleepy again. With all the preliminaries done perhaps I’ll be able to dedicate myself to finishing AF today. Wrote and posted on NOT about my first day of school. Now 4:30 AM and ready to try to sleep.

Up at 6 AM and watched cartoons. At 7 AM I made ramen (with onions and bell pepper from yesterday), wrote notes for the end of AF, took medicine.

Went out a little before 8 AM and talked to Andy briefly about getting the stuff for a cake for Susan’s birthday (March 2). Waited with Kam for bus, then went in. Ordered cake making stuff, egg rolls, and Big Red from HEB. Listened to TP and ate deviled ham with ritz crackers. It’s now 9:40 AM and I think I may lay down a while. Still can’t get over how different the house looks with just a few changes of window arrangements. I’ve radically moved the furniture several times without this effect.

My HEB order arrived about 10 minutes before Kam was home at 1:15 PM. Started frying taters at 2 PM and was only finished about 7 PM. Andy called about 3 PM to make squash. Went in about 4 PM to start the fish and squash. Fish done by 4:45 PM. Took S&A’s taters in at 5:45 PM. Checked my Covid-19 card and seen my second shot is on March 5. Washed up a little after 7:20 PM. Rosary at 8 PM. Now 9 PM and I feel ready to hit the hay. I’ve put off writing (real writing) on AF.

 

2/27/2021: Woke up a little after 7 AM, in time to miss the Popeye cartoons and I didn’t care to watch MGM cartoons. Prayers and Bible. Ate peaches, then chicken noodle soup with Ritz crackers. Spent much time with the “First Grade Reading List” and was surprised to find I could find pictures of most of them, and especially delighted to find the one with “The Straw Ox”. Made some spring rolls. More listening to LOTRO, then Andy brought me a couple of tacos. Laid down for a nap about 11 AM.

Up sometime in the midafternoon, continued TP LOTRO. Able to write 3 paragraphs of AF. More spring rolls. Took some trash out. The day is overcast but warm, and rather windy. It’s now 4 PM.

It’s now 11:30 PM. I’ve been watching a show given by the Signum University on FB for children, about “The Hobbit”. It covers two chapters per hour. I’ve had no supper per se but I’ve been sipping Big Red Zero and eating prunes. Although the day has been warm, I have felt shivery, so at sunset I closed the windows and put the heater on, although it will be about 60 degrees all night. The internet connection just went off, so I am starting my rosary. My legs are hurting, and I am just out of my metformin, so I am pondering if I will go to church tomorrow or not. I’ve set my clock for 6 AM anyway, so we’ll see how I feel in the morning.

Well. It’s 2 AM now and I’ve finished the series. I don’t really feel sleepy and my right leg hurts like the billy-o.

 

2/28/2021: Awake again about 6:30 AM. Leg a little better, but not much. Prayers and read the readings for the day out of the missalette. For breakfast had liverwurst and cream cheese on Ritz crackers. Watched some Phineas and Ferb and Duck Tales. Listened to more LOTR TP. At 1 PM Andy brought out some leftovers. Made some spaghetti using chopped spinach and mushrooms. Wrote a few paragraphs on AF and then reread PWOGR [The Peculiar Wooing of General Roth], which I was more impressed with than I remembered. Laid down for a nap then up again about 4 PM. Took out some recycling. Day warm but looks like rain clouds gathering.

I settled down, put on my sweater because I was shivering and plugged in the heater. I started my rosary, then Andy brought me the ends of some burritos. Ate, finished rosary, then looked at some Sunday animations. Meh. Can I sleep?

 

3/1/2021: After a night of pain and intermittent sleep, I was up about 5:45 AM. Prayers, getting dressed, cartoons. At 7:30 AM took my wash out and started it, then at 8 AM stood with Kam waiting for the bus. The weather is windy and cold and overcast, but no rain as such. Listening to more of LOTRO TP and briefly slept. At 9:20 AM went in and boiled eggs and changed wash. Made a liverwurst and cream cheese sandwich and got a jug of water. Now almost 10:30 AM. Got clothes in and listened to GGACP.

Went in about 12:30 PM and made cucumber salad, then Kam came home. More LOTRO TP. Went in at 4 PM and made couscous and fish. More LOTRO. In about 7:45 PM and washed up and made Kam’s supper. Raccoon on porch. Now 8:25 PM. Rosary. Bed about 10 PM.

 

3/2/2012: Susan’s Birthday. Awake at 6 AM. Prayers. Cartoons. Ordered medicine from HEB. Had soup with leftover couscous. Over at 8 AM to wait with Kameron for the bus. Weather clear and sunny, but a bit windy/cool. Went at 9 AM to buy butter and a birthday card from FD and ended up also getting Easter candy. Home and baked the pineapple upside-down cake for Susan’s birthday and made out the card. Back in and listening to LOTRO TP and had 2 cans of ravioli. Ready at 1 PM to let Kam in.

Went in about 3 PM to peel carrots and potatoes and cut onions and lettuce (no mushrooms this week). Put sausages in the oven. About 4 PM the exterminator turns up, then Andy, and they do that, penning the dogs up. I go in about 4:30 PM, eating my supper. A little before 7 PM Andy comes in to get me, and I go in and we sing Happy Birthday and we have cake. A pleasant little interlude altogether. S tells me KT&R are coming tomorrow. I clean up early, then spend much of the evening with LOTRO TP (we have finally got to Bree) and waiting for Kam to call for his supper, which he never does. Rosary, then fall asleep.

Notes

Susan's birthday, coming as it does at the beginning of the month, always kind of surprises me. And February, short as it is, seems to make for short entries.


 

Sunday, February 22, 2026

The Robert Graves Shelf

















Getting that Apuleius translation yesterday has inspired me to gather together the Robert Graves bookshelf, which is in its present state rather more scattered throughout the Archive than some other author's stuff is. Fiction, short stories, biographies (including his own autobiography), translations, collaborations, and historical studies, including sometimes works of - anthropology? - literary criticism? - both potted and potty. Tolkien described Robert Graves in 1964: “A remarkable creature, entertaining, likeable, odd, bonnet full of wild bees, half-German, half-Irish, very tall, must have looked like Siegfried/Sigurd in his youth, but an Ass.”

Into the Archive: $2/lb


The Allegory of Love - A Study in Medieval Tradition Paperback – January 1, 1963

by C. S. Lewis (Author)

Love is the commonest theme of serious imaginative literature and is still generally regarded as noble and ennobling passion. Love has not always taken such precedence, however, and it was in fact not until the eleventh century that French poets first began to express the romantic species of passion which English poets were still writing about in the nineteenth century. This book is intended for students of medieval literature from A-level upwards. Anyone interested in the "Courtly Love" tradition. Fans of C.S. Lewis's writings. – Amazon

I’ve had a copy of this for donkey’s years: badly marked up and with a cracked spine. The copy I got yesterday was just as old, and except for some fading on the cover is almost pristine. The vagaries of time, eh? I guess I can retire the ‘old’ one.

 

The Golden Ass: The Transformations of Lucius (FSG Classics) Paperback – March 31, 2009

by Apuleius (Author), Robert Graves (Translator)

The story of The Golden Ass is that of Lucius Apuleius, a young man of good birth who encountered many strange adventures while disporting himself along the roads to Thessaly. Not the least of these occurred when Apuleius offended a priestess of the White Goddess, who turned him into an ass. The tale of how Apuleius dealt with this misfortune and eventually resumed human form is conveyed by Robert Graves in modern English that is infused with a bawdy wit and sense of adventure that is "itself a small masterpiece of twentieth-century prose" (Kenneth Rexroth, Saturday Review). - Amazon

I have an unwieldy copy of this. The fact that this was a Robert Graves translation really drove the sale.

 

The Crystal Cave by Mary Stewart (Author)  

Born the bastard son of a Welsh princess, Myridden Emrys -- or as he would later be known, Merlin -- leads a perilous childhood, haunted by portents and visions. But destiny has great plans for this no-man's-son, taking him from prophesying before the High King Vortigern to the crowning of Uther Pendragon . . . and the conception of Arthur -- king for once and always. – Amazon

Getting a hardback copy that looks exactly like the copy I read back in middle school is great. Should be easier (certainly more nostalgic) to read than in my aging paperback.

 

The Dilbert Future: Thriving on Business Stupidity in the 21st Century 

by Scott Adams (Author)

Step aside, Bill Gates! Here comes today′s real technology guru and his totally original, laugh-out-loud New York Times bestseller that looks at the approaching new millennium and boldly predicts: more stupidity ahead.

In The Dilbert Principle and Dogbert′s Top Secret Management Handbook, Scott Adams skewered the absurdities of the corporate world. Now he takes the next logical step, turning his keen analytical focus on how human greed, stupidity and horniness will shape the future. Featuring the same irresistible amalgam of essays and cartoons that made Adams previous works so singularly entertaining, this uproariously funny, dead-on-target tome offers half-truthful, half-farcical predictions that push all of today′s hot buttons - from business and technology to society and government.

Children - they are our future, so we′re pretty much hosed. Tip: Grab what you can while they′re still too little to stop us.

Human Potential - we′ll finally learn to use the 90 percent of the brain we don′t use today, and find out that there wasn′t anything in that part.

Computers - Technology and homeliness will combine to form a powerful type of birth control. – Amazon

With the recent passing of Scott Adams, I’ve become more keenly aware of the need to sip deeply from the coffee cup of knowledge, and since we have no longer the living fount, we at least have in his books "the precious life-blood of a master spirit, embalmed and treasured up on purpose to a life beyond life", as it were. There is an AI version of the man online which John tells me is good, but I’m still a little suspicious that extraneous content might start leaking in. I’m stodgy enough to trust books more for now.

 

Walt Kelly's Pogo Revisited: Instant Pogo / The Jack Acid Society Black Book / The Pogo Poop Book Paperback – June 25, 1974

by Walt Kelly (Author)

The cartoon antics of Pogo the Possum and his friends in Okefenokee provide a witty and satirical view of American politics, morality, social values, and behavior. -Amazon

Now this, this is probably the jewel in the crown of our day’s harvesting. Pogo books were hard to come by in the days of our youth, and only got scarcer and harder to obtain as the years went by. To actually get an old volume (and in very good shape, too) for so little seems nothing short of a miracle. Jack Acid and Poop? You sly old dog, Mr. Kelly!



 The Works of Josephus Hardcover – Unabridged

by Flavius Josephus (Author), William Whiston (Translator)

Josephus’s writings on ancient Jewish thought, background, and history are now more accessible than ever!
This renowned reference book has served scholars, pastors, students, and those interested in the background of the New Testament for years. The insight given into the Essene community, the destruction of Jerusalem, and the interpretations and traditions of the Old Testament in first century Judaism is invaluable. The outlook of Josephus, a late-first-century Pharisee and historian, on Jesus and the New Testament documents is enlightening and provocative. As an original reference, The Works of Josephus is essential to a full understanding of the first century, the time of Christ, and the New Testament. - Amazon

I’ve been wanting to get a volume of Josephus for a long time but have never found one for the right price (practically nil). To have all his work, in hardback, in one book – amazing. Sure, it’s in teeny-tiny eye-strain-o-vision, but nobody’s perfect. It’s a handy and intriguing doorstopper from the Ancient World.

 

Dilbert Gives You the Business (Paperback – January 1, 1999)

by Scott Adams (Author)

Dilbert in ... business!!?? – Amazon’s succinct review. A collection of business and office-themed comic strips, arranged by category, from Bosses to Teamwork.

 

Riddle of Stars (The Quest of the Riddle-Master Trilogy) Hardcover – October 1, 1979

Issued by the Science Fiction Book Club in October 1979. Collects the three books in the trilogy for the first time; The Riddle-Master of Hed (1976), Heir of Sea and Fire (1977) and Harpist in the Wind (1979). With an essay, "People and Places" by the author. - Amazon

I sold my old copy a few years back, but to find one in library binding, to have all three books in one cover (I have them in separate paperbacks), well I found that suddenly irresistible. I passed it by the last time we went; if it had been gone that would have been that. But to be presented with a second bite at the apple! I also have the lame excuse that it would make a good loner copy.

 

So we went to the Second Chance Bookstore near Geronimo before we had Movie Night (it was Network (1975), a film I had never seen, but one of John’s favorites) yesterday, and this time Kameron was with us. So I found these books, and I bought Kameron 4, and since John only found 1 we added it to the pile for ease of ringing up. To remind you of the deal, books here are sold by weight, $2 for every pound.  The total was a tad over $32, so about 16 pounds of books. You can hardly order one new book for under $32. A steal of a deal! As I explained to Kameron, you can’t go in hoping to find one expected book; the joys of the place are the unexpected windfalls and the thrill of the hunt.

Dragon in Disguise





Another ancient middle school effort reborn. After I drew this picture of a dragon trying to infiltrate human society, John and I collaborated on a two-page comic strip telling how the dragon first steals the clothes and then goes to an inn. I drew the dragon bits and John did all the other characters in his own cartoon style. I've said it before and I'll probably say it again, about how we'd have been blown away by this technology. I mean, we are now, but back then!

Saturday, February 21, 2026

Illustrations from Ancient Tales Untold









More AI enhanced pictures, many I 'designed' back in middle school. That is the Corn Ghost (mentioned in one of my stories published here on the NOT) and that is not some sort of half-a***d Nazgul, it a storm spirit. Argola is a large alien beetle, part of a strange little series of sci-fi illustrations I was doing. What looks like a second butt is his captain's chair. The wizard with the skull is one of my oldest drawings of all; I remember working on it in Mrs. Rector's class.

 

Friday, February 20, 2026

The Old Boy!


See elsewhere on the Niche for the original drawing and the short story. Friday Fiction revisited?