Remembering

At the History Table yesterday, we commemorated the crime writer Robert Parker who died this week. This Cambridge author was found at his desk where he wrote, six days a week, his widely admired detective fiction.

Talking about Parker stirred mention of other writers in this genre. No one of us could remember the name of a Bostonian who had a reputation for similar work. I could recall the title of one book, The Friends of Eddie Coyle, but not the author. However, I promised to come up with his name by later in the afternoon.

In fact, I did better than that. Within the next five or ten minutes the name George Higgins printed itself on my inner brain screen. We all agreed that was he was the writer who, just a short time before, had eluded the memory of us all.

This recovery of memory is what I like to call a true “senior moment.” Why not emphasize the astounding power of memory, even when it may have slowed down, rather than focusing on the negative inability to produce a name, or other answer, immediately?

Hopes for 2010

About this time last year, I wrote a column listing some hopes for the coming new year of 2009. 

Regrettably, precious few of my hopes for peace have come true. Certainly not my wishes for a settlement between the Palestinians and Israel, or for peace among and within African nations.

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Thinking About Your Own Death

Thinking about your own death does not make you morbid. It may even be one of the best ways of appreciating one’s life, of getting more value out of every day.

The novelist Chaim Potok recounts a father answering his six-year-old son Asher’s question about why every living thing must die: “Why? So life would be precious, Asher. Something that is yours forever is never precious.”

Wars Galore

I don’t know about you, but I’m feeling war weary.

It was bad enough before Barack Obama escalated the war in Afghanistan. We had already suffered so many years of battle in Iraq, in an unjustified war.

Already the administration is reneging on the president’s promise of pulling back by July 2011. Instead Secretary Gates and others are saying the push in Afghanistan will last at least another four years.

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Republicans Unglued

One weekend last March, Michael Steele, the chairman of the Republican National Committee, made the mistake of asserting that Rush Limbaugh was not the de facto head of the Republican party, and that he was, rather, an entertainer who could be incendiary and ugly.

On the following Monday, Mr Steele was obliged, evidence notwithstanding, to retract what he had said.

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Thanksgiving 2009

As each Thanksgiving Day arrives, I like to reflect on the blessings received during the previous year. From what I can gather, this is some of what the Pilgrims did in the autumn of 1621 when they celebrated the first such feast.

A framework for such reflection has helped me in the effort. Over the last two years, members of a local assisted-living community have allowed me to review current events for them.

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New Technology for Book Publishing

The new device weighs almost two tons. Even though it rests on wheels, getting it into the book store required a major pushing effort by members of the staff.

Called the Espresso Book Machine, it can turn out a book in less than five minutes. Almost four feet wide, three feet deep, and four and a half feet high, this new contraption prints, binds, and trims in remarkably short order.

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