Category Archives: Aging

Reading With Friends

My current book group has achieved impressive longevity.  It began in 1985 and shows no signs of faltering.

Before that date I had taken part in two other groups.  Though I did not retain notes on either of them, I believe they both began in the nineteen seventies and ended in that same decade. Our current group reconfigured itself many years ago, after some tension over religion and politics.

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Another Twain

Sometime in the late 1970s I first heard a public radio show called “Prairie Home Companion.”  It seemed to me odd and indefinable, with a variety of musical shapes and weird ads.

In time, I became familiar with the format and especially the prime performer, Garrison Keillor.  I looked forward to his many allusions to Lake Wobegon “where all the women are strong, all the men are good looking, and all the children are above average.”

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WWII in Later Life

In 1940 the Russians and the British produced thirty-six thousand warplanes while the Germans made only ten thousand.

And in 1942, the British controlled ten million tons of oil as contrasted with Germany’s one million.

These numbers and others like them, demonstrating allied superiority in resources, made some German generals recognize early on that they could not win the war.

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Hooray Sox

As of this writing, I would bet the Red Sox will win the World Series. In beating the Saint Louis Cardinals, they will be recognized as the most accomplished team in baseball.

That’s the kind of team they have proved to be this season. To my mind, their success is owing, in large part, to one non-player. That’s John Farrell, their manager, who brought the team from the depths to American League champions.

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