Writers and Readers of Distinctive Fiction
Romance, Life, Adventure...The Way You Dream It
The Soft Side of the Sixties
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BobbyRobert's Mutual Admiration Society
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The Long and Short of It Reviews will be celebrating their one year anniversary the whole month of August. I'm privileged and excited to participate. It's got to be fun when a gaggle (LOL) of authors convene to chat with readers and give away prizes. Friday, August 22, is my day to be spotlighted. Hope folks will come over to see what it's all about and to enjoy the scavenger hunt!
Everybody knows (unless your pulse rate has suddenly gone silent) that most of our paychecks these days go to feed our hungry vehicles with ever more costly liquid food. I suspected with so much moola being spent on gasoline, it'd be a pretty quiet Fourth. Hey, who can buy fireworks, right?
Well, wouldn't you know? Our out-of-work neighbors. Okay, maybe you like fireworks, and I agree they're beautiful to watch as a display at fairs. But when the Fourth came and went and it was silent next door, I was sure fireworks was a luxury no one in our neck of the woods could afford. Then comes Friday night. And Friday night ends the Fourth, right? Isn't the logical thought to welcome in the anniversary?
After the Fourth has ended, we hear these "squeeeeels" from across the fence. Yep, those pop-pop-pops ain't popcorn gone crazy. It's fireworks and bottle rockets.
After I'd gone to bed. After my dog has gone to bed. After we'd gone to sleep.
The "celebration" has started.
I thought for sure Friday night would be safe. I lay there, blinking my sleep-heavy lids and wonder if the folks next door got their timing all messed up. Well, they have my sleep all messed up, that's for sure.
The dog gets up, goes to the back door, watches all that weird light sparkling and crackling and hissing, tucks her tail between her legs and heads back to bed. Together, she and I lay there, waiting for the merriment of the Fifth of July party to wane.
Hmm. Maybe they're wanting to start their own tradition.
I just have to share this. My friend who wrote the hilarious "take" on my forthcoming book, "Said the Spider to the Fly" (scroll on down and read the conversation between Mr. Spider and Mr. Fly), has done it again!
This time it's targeted toward my first book, "See No Evil, My Pretty Lady". This deals with Jack the Ripper's cousin, Jack the Wrapper...You gotta read this, folks....
"...See, there I was, watching TV when I got this GREAT idea...How about writing a book about Jack the Wrapper!
Yea, see Jack the RIPPER, we all know about him but, bet you didn't know he had a cousin who worked in Sears and was a GREAT gift wrapper..His name was Jack, also, and, he was SO good he was titled Jack the wrapper.
Now, Jack the wrapper could wrap a gift in 11 seconds flat! He was SO good, Sears entered him in the Gift Wrapping Olympics and he won FIRST prize!
He had to be careful when he was wrapping stuff 'cause sometimes he ended up wrapping himself in the BIG packages...That's how fast he was!
Unfortunately, for Jack, the OTHER Jack was doing bad things and he, Jack the Wrapper, had to give up his profession as a Gift Wrapper, moved to the United States and he became Jack the Rapper....He wrote five thousand Rap "Songs" and retired to Miami, where he opened a Taco Stand.
Yep, there's a book there...Maybe even a movie!..."
My friend's name is Chayisun, and he's a classic. Oh, if anyone enjoys this as much as I do, ole Chay likes to be paid in the biggest, thickest, darkest piece of chocolate candy you can buy!!!

Britain's_got_talent_
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cmr
Be well,
William
I'm back! Now, it's odd you mention peat and Scotland as I lived in a little town in the north of Scotland for many years. Peat has a very distinctive smell. It is in fact a quite 'heady' clying aroma, almost like a kind of incense type of smell and is quite hypnotic and intoxicating in a stragne fashion. You wouldn't want to sit too close to a peat firee for too long, or you might find yourself drifitng off to sleep. Having said that, it burns slowly and produces a great deal of heat, and as long as the room is well ventilated your characters should be ok.
Hope this helps
Brian
I just have to go out with the dogs and iwll answer this question is some techincal detail in about 30 minutes if you're still around
Brian
Yes, that's correct, though when he was working he would in all probability be wearing boots, as did most of the working population, 'shoes' again being something for the upper classes, and he would perhaps just own a pair for 'best' as you say. There were of course a great variety of styles of 'boots' with someone like your reporter possibly owning a reasonable quality pair, whereas the lower classes would probably be in poor quality, thin, or even second or third hand footwear. He would thus wear 'socks' for work, and 'stockings for best, or perhaps if meeting a member of the upper classes in his pursuit of his occupation, when he woud presumable 'dress up' to fit the surroundings of his interviewee.
There you go, I've probably muddied the waters even more now...lol
Best regards
Brian
For the most part, 'socks' would be worn by the lower classes and perhaps the lower middle classes as they were unable to afford the more expensive 'stockings' or 'gaiters' as worn by the upper echelons of middle class and upper class sociey. Bear in mind that most of the lower class were often unable even to afford such luxuries as the poorest quality 'socks and would line their boots, (if they possessed such luxuries), with paper, or perhaps scraps of hemp sacking. 'Gaiters' or 'stockings' would be worn by the upper classes as 'dress' itmes and even they would resort to the use of 'socks, though of a high quality variety when wearing boots for 'leisyre' pursuits such as Hunting, fishing or shooting, as they were more practical and comfortable to wear under the high quality boots they would wear for such pasttimes. In everyday use, a solicitor, for example would wear what we today would call long socks, but he would refer to them as 'stockings' in order to differntiate them from the poor quality itmes worn by the poorer classes.
Though I agree that some of the above may prove confusing, it is an accurate enough overview of the use of that particular garment and i hope it proves of use to you.
Best regards
Brian
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