The P. G. Wodehouse I’m reading, The Mating Game, has the most complicated plot of all the
harebrained complicated Wodehouse plots I’ve encountered. I think there should
be an insert at the front like you get in War
and Peace—not detailing the various Kuryagins and Bolkonskis but giving a
brief explanation why Bertie Wooster shows up at Deverill Hall pretending to be
Gussie Fink-Nottle, why Gussie appears pretending to be Bertie and attended by
Jeeves while Bertie has as his man his friend from the Drones Club, Claude
Cattermole “Catsmeat” Pirbright, and so on. I’m also reading my second William
Maxwell, The Folded Leaf, which is
good, but not as good as They Came Like
Swallows—probably the best book I’ve read so far this year, although Ann
Patchett’s Bel Canto is also in the
running.
Friday, April 10, 2015
Wednesday, April 8, 2015
Desert April
The desert is stunningly beautiful right now. I was struck by it on the
way back from Ryan Airfield, on the other side of Gates Pass in the Tucson Mountains a few days ago. All the Ocotillo have huge orange blooms, and the Staghorn Cholla is blooming in every
hue at the red end of the spectrum: yellow, pink, orange, bright red.
There are still Mexican Poppies, Globe Mallow and Brittlebush blooming.
And I came upon stands of Foothill Palo Verde, microphyllum, that are
completely yellow with blooms. Sometimes a whole wash will be full of
bright yellow.
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