Sunday, September 29, 2024

Stoneway

Stoneway

Whispers of the Lake

Christopher Francis


Forgive me for thinking there's no acceptable level of bullying. Any bullying has gone too far. Personally I have no tolerance for even the slightest level of gentle ribbing.


On my Android Tablet Kindle refuses to recognize the .mobi file. Nook treats the .e-pub file as if it is a series of images. Only the .pdf file works in Kindle but appears best in a PDF reader. I don't use Adobe.


All files work better in a Windows OS environment. Though hyphenating words such as t-he seems odd.


Bentley, the narrator is a member of the "IN" crowd, but the bully is Brandon. Finally around Chapter 11 we get Bentley's surname, Longhorn. I am reminded that my father's middle name was Benton.


It strikes me that this campground temps fate by going Co-Ed. Most youth camps are either male or female.


One of the questions on a registration form for girls of this age is: has your daughter had her first menses; has she been prepared for it?


You have to believe in ghosts to see one, I don't.


I'm writing this on St. Michael and All Angels Sunday. I don't expect to see angels either. But in the Christian context it's Gods Work, Our Hands. We experience God's love through the caring of those around us. If you have done it unto the least of these my brethren you have done it unto me.


We learn here the importance of truly knowing that others care. The one person left out in the cold here is the Bully Brandon.


To quote Luther:

The Prince of Darkness Grim

We tremble not for him...

One little word shall fell him.


When others try to put you down it's important to trust in your own self-worth.






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Friday, September 27, 2024

Somewhere Beyond the Sea

Cerulean Chronicles #2

Somewhere Beyond the Sea

T.J. Klune, Daniel Henning (Narrator)


I'm so eager I've started a review of a book not yet published though I'll need to wait until my library acquires it.


Arthur and Linus have joined forces and are about to adopt an eleven-year-old YETI. In part this book will be about what his arrival does to the dynamic of this magical home. The basement is about to become a cold room to make the new occupant feel at home. Cleaning it up and making it cold will be the least of their challenges.


The book seems to begin with an account of how Arthur comes back to the island and the house there after a long absence finding it empty and dilapidated. It appears to be an account of how he began his orphanage after his own sojourn growing up there. With chapter one we resume the tale begun in book 1.


On the serious side the book documents Linus and Arthur's struggles with bureaucracy. But the overall theme is love, acceptance and joy and the gang have it in spades. We end with a most unusual marriage presided over by a Yeti minister.


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Wednesday, September 25, 2024

The Waterfront Trail Guidebook

The Waterfront Trail Guidebook: Explore Yesterday & Tomorrow Along the Shores of Lake Ontario

marlaine-cibc-koehler


The book is plagued by a great deal of very fine print. It has an editor and lists CIBC as the publisher, since they put up the money.


And it begins with some high flown words from David Crombie on behalf of his Royal Commission determined it not collect dust like so many others. Given the present-day kerfuffle over Ontario Place the words seem prescient though written almost 30 years ago.


One anachronism is the mention of payphones, good luck finding one in this age of cellphones.


In its attempt to be all things to all people the Trans Canada Trail has introduced incompatible uses to many trail systems that found themselves in the embarrassing position of being forced to compromise their ideals. The Bruce Trail is no longer restricted to hiking only.


The population of Burlington has grown by 60,000 since this book was published. The wildlife cited can be a mixed blessing as when the deer noshed on the Tulips in the RBG Rock Garden. If a coyote is playing with your pet know they are sizing up dinner.


I am struck by how little of the trail is actually on the shore of the lake. Many owners of lakeside property once had riparian rights to prevent anyone hunting off their shores. Most have no desire to endure the loss of privacy and litter that would attend having people traipse along the lakefront.


It's the same sentiment people who live adjacent former railway tracks feel about rails to trails conversions. Trains don't stage late night parties or toss litter.


The book supplies phone numbers for businesses and institutions not the websites which would be available 24/7. It was published after Canada went metric and supplies distances in Km and Miles.


I am a life member of the Royal Botanical Gardens. Another book reviewed here documents Conservative Government's lack of support for cultural programs. Lack of governmental support for the gardens and rising labour costs have forced the RBG to nickel and dime visitors for what was once free to support the garden's ongoing maintenance. As a long-term member I suffer nostalgia for the many sections of the gardens that have disappeared over the years. It's still a great place but it was formerly even greater.


Driving East from the RBG one passes by the graves of soldiers of successive world wars. North Shore Blvd is millionaires row where they've cornered the market on 3-way stop signs in hopes of discouraging through traffic. The one window on the lake has a lovely view of Dafasco and Stelco. In spring one swamp affords a delightful view of Marsh Marigolds. I would not want to be biking where the road meets the QE Niagara Bound. Just in case Josie Brant Hospital is just past if you make it that far.


Since the nearby Centre for Inland Water Studies got their seismograph we now hear about local earthquakes.


About the time I'm writing this in recent years the algal bloom tends to peak and being anywhere near the lake in our area, Burlington/Oakville is an assault on the nose.


Shell Park in Oakville is closed for 4 months while work goes on in an attempt to stop shoreline erosion.


What was Lakeshore Road in the 1800's is a mile out in Lake Ontario Today. During my half century in Oakville the site of the original bandshell in Coronation Park is under water. Shoreline erosion is inevitable and global warming is driving storms that speed it.


The $30 entry fee for Bronte Creek Provincial Park seems exorbitant. That the owners of East Oakville's mansions don't want people traipsing by their front yards is apparent in the fact that the trail follows the highway some distance from the lake front. One former estate took a highschool jock an entire week to mow it on a riding mower. The Estate at Nine Line/Maplegrove has green houses and a polo pitch.


The property just across Winston Churchill was bought to be a nuclear power station and the research facility on the north side makes the entire property out of bounds. The lack of human interference makes it a naturalist's dream, I have toured it.


Bronte Outer Harbour was still a construction project when this book was written. Getting to events and concerts taking place there is plagued by lack of parking and the long bus ride which would be the alternative.


The nouveau-riche young ladies of the present age are entitled and not as civic-minded as their predecessors. The loss of this cadre of volunteers has led to the demise of many organizations run by unpaid workers. The Waterfront Festival in Oakville is one victim of this trend. Service Organizations in general are feeling a drop off in membership.


Recognizing this trend students are now required to perform 40 volunteer hours before they can graduate high school. This is not court imposed servitude.


Coronation Park is being eaten by Lake Ontario. The Arts Society Building is gone. Lack of parking and noise complaints from residents to the North have led to events being moved to Bronte Waterfront.


Most views of the lake in East Oakville are had from small parkettes after you walk past the mansions that line the roadways. Since I've delivered their mail I've seen more than most though I didn't get to sit and watch the lake.


Bel Aire Dr. is relatively recent having been built on the Samuels Estate one of the last great heaps a property so large a high school jock spent an entire week mowing it on a ride-on lawn mower in summer when he wasn't pumping iron. Owner of Samson Farms which occupied over half of the Back Stretch at Woodbine.


Here's the dirt on red bricks. National Sewer Pipe was wholly owned by Kelly New of Oakville. When his employees went on strike he fired the lot, a measure emulated by Reagan, and levelled the plant brick by brick.


People buying homes from developers North of Lakeshore in MIssissauga were assured that refinery is closing. That was 50 years ago. Originally British Patrolium and latterly Gulf, At Gulf we Hurry--HOME.


The plant in West Oakville whose flare lit up the sky and occasioned a semi-permanent pollution sniffing station was acquired by Petro Canada from Shell. Decommissioned in 1983 the place became a shipment and storage centre increasing heavy truck traffic exponentially .


Herridges was a third generation Fruit and Vegetable Stand on Southdown Road that formerly grew their corn on site. It closed permanently December 24, 2022.


The Fruit Market beside Coronation Park at 1510 LSW is also gone. Cudmores West of the Bronte Creek formerly operated a fruit stand and grew much of the produce they sold and maintained cottages for their itinerant workers. They've been reduced to a gardening centre.


Petrocan Refinery


The East End of the property held housing for refinery employees when there wasn't enough in Toronto Township. It is maintained in semi-natural state as a buffer with the elite estates East of the plant. Nothing but concrete doorsteps remain of the former dense community. I requested and got a tour of the property that is planted with species that specialize in absorbing noxious chemicals and odours, alas, most of the wetlands and uplands are planted with non-native species.


Rattray Marsh


The importance of leaving behind an ironclad will comes to the forefront here. The Rattray Estate was seen by developers as prime lakefront property worth millions and they surrounded the remnant Marsh that was preserved with estate housing. Ever the developer's friend Attila the Hen fought naturalists ever step of the way in their attempt to prevent the entire marsh from being drained and built over. She then had the effrontery to brag about preserving the crown jewel in Mississauga's green space. Parks and Wreckcreation have since covered it in boardwalks and bike trails.


Land within cities is too valuable to be wasted on wood ducks, geese and vegetable gardens, just ask Doug Ford.


Jack Darling Park.


Last time I drove down to walk West into Rattray Marsh there was an obstacle course of 5, count 'em, jaw jolting, bone crushing speed bumps to be navigated on the way. The Eastern Towhee I saw along the way was a delight.


Adamson Estate


Much is made of a folly but it is never explained that it is a gatehouse nor is there a photo.


Lakeview Coal Fired Hydro Plant is history, the four sisters were toppled.


In the section on birding calling a Long-Tailed Duck an Old Squaw is now considered politically incorrect.


As a letter carrier one knew areas peopled by people of Jewish and Portuguese origin because of the compelling need they have to define what is theirs by fencing it in meaning the mailman had no choice but to walk in and out every walkway and brave the pets inside those fences.


At the Mimico Creek one enters Toronto, when this book was written amalgamation had yet to occur.


Sir Casimir Gzowski was an ancestor of Peter Gzowski of Toronto Radio Fame.


High Park


Denizens of the park's zoo have been known to go on the lam for extended periods. Most recently hot debate over further bans on traffic in the park and loss of parking.


Ontario Place was Bill Davis' baby and it went down hill after his successors failed to continue his investment.


Of a summer afternoon one caught the GO Train to Exhibition Place and walked down to the Entrance. Climbed to the roof of the "Pods" to admire the view and then joined the line-up for the latest movie showing at the I-Max Cinesphere. A walk on the sunken lake freighter promenade would be followed by a beer and schnitzel at Zum Rhein to ompahpah music or Chinese. A browse of one of the exhibits or Ontario North and then settle in with a good book at the Forum to watch the Toronto Symphony perform on the revolving stage. With the aid of the guns on the Haida or Fort York Sir Andrew Davis shot the Geese out of the park. I was there to see $5 million in fireworks shot off to music though being herded like cattle by the OPP among 10,000 other attendees was less than romantic. I sat in the centre of the Cinesphere one winter to see Top Gun.


When the Forum was replaced by a venue that required a mosh pit I lost interest. What Fat Ford would do to the place is shameful. Some have the Midas touch, Ford the ghetto touch.


The Haida was moved to Hamilton Harbour.


I remember when kids used to do chores and save all summer to blow it at the EX. For those old enough to ride it the ultimate thrill was the Flyer. The Grandstand home of sports and shows closed the year this book was published. Before the Skydome it was THE Place. The Coliseum or horse palace is home to the Royal Winter Fair, the Sportsmans Show and Metro Toronto Police Mounted Unit. The Labour Day Parade used to end at the Grandstand. On the Waterfront is the Boat Show and the Air Show otherwise known as the air traffic controller's headache. It was as this book was being written a British Nimrod took a fatal dive into Lake Ontario.


In describing Toronto's Entertainment District Sky Dome gets mention though the name changes over time. No mention is made of Roy Thomson Hall home of the Toronto Symphony nor of the CBC Broadcasting Centre. The CN Tower's status regarding its height is now under dispute.


Toronto Islands


With all the lakefront Condos and Apartment Building the Island Airport is a point of contention and residents resist the idea of big jets landing there.


Actions have consequences and the building of the Leslie St Spit denied the islands the supply of eroded sand from Scarborough Bluffs that built and sustained them and measures had to be taken to ensure their survival.


The community that exists on public land on the islands is a kettle of fish this guide avoided.


Leslie St Spit is proof that nature will find a way. It is home to rare and endangered species whose seeds bird droppings have spread there. The 150,000 nesting pairs of gulls were quite another matter.


Again, the Beaches is an area unknown to me as is most of Scarberia. Buffers Park is in the news every time someone falls off the cliffs or needs rescuing. There was a kerfuffle over people living in houseboats on the marina. The taxman wants his due.


Metro Zoo is built on Rouge River lands. I led a tour of areas of the park near Two Rivers before the Urban Park was proclaimed. I would fear the place is loved and littered to death. Fat Ford would cover the farmland in the area with housing.


Areas of the trail East of Toronto are best known to me from traffic reports involving the roads that lead from the 401 to the Waterfront. Until I took the virtual tour last night I'd never heard of Pickering Museum Village. I did have the opportunity to take a naturalist led tour of Thickson Woods and supported the fight to save Whitby's Second Marsh unseen.


Alas Cullen Gardens closed ten years after this book was published. Guess I won't get to tour it.


Oshawa is synonymous with General Motors and Ed Broadbent who died just this past January. It doesn't immediately raise thoughts of the natural environment.


At time of writing there was very little access to the Lakefront East of Oshawa/Whitby so other features occupy the pages.


The need for an updated version of this Guide is highlighted. The project seems to have lost way to others and the lack of volunteers and sponsors is evident.


This doggerel is included:


Let the old world, where rank's yet vital,

Part those who have and have not tittle.

Toronto has no social classes --

Only the Masseys and the masses.


Massey Ferguson failed because poor design meant that farmers had to endure significant down time to perform simple maintenance and repairs. Prairie farmers went south of the border to buy their equipment.


I associate Port Hope with


Float your Fanny

Down the Ganny


An event that allows water pistols.


The 401 is as close as I've ever been.


Alas the Trail here as described is a tour of stately homes, not the lakefront. And as the tour goes on it reminds me of Ashenburg's Going to Town.


Good luck finding a Westport Biway anywhere along with Bargoon Harolds for that matter. The current bargain store chain is Dollarama. Or look for Goodwill and Sally Ann Thrift Stores for used goods.


I've driven by the Big Apple on the 401 numerous times without realizing it marks the centre of an apple growing farm area. The MacIntosh Apple has a history not unlike the Gravenstein in my native Nova Scotia.


I've camped at Presqu'ile. The history that marks the sinking of the Speedy saved a park.


I've spent time touring Prince Edward County but otherwise the rest of the trip to Trenton marks exits from the 401.



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Tuesday, September 24, 2024

The Falcon and The Stag: A Tale of Alamore

William of Alamore #2.5

The Falcon and The Stag: A Tale of Alamore

C.J.R. Isely


My first contact with this author whom I learn is female. This is a teaser short story to prompt interest in a 6 volume fantasy series.


A haunted castle with hidden passages. Two brothers whose father the king has just died.


Temrod is a warrior like his father but he is second borne, the spare so to speak.


Paradon is the heir who has enjoyed his life of privilege especially the fine horse his father has given him. He haw relished his freedom too much to think seriously about the duties that will devolve to him when he becomes king. His young knight and best friend Cavian is more serious minded and scholarly.


Paradon refuses to believe that his brother, though aloof, would betray him even when Cavian warns him.


There are eerie parallels in the British Royal Family today. Though Charles has been king in waiting for 70 year and his sons now in their 40ies. These boys are in their twenties.


It is important to have a life guard who is a skilled swordsman. A blood match is not a normal competition. Paradon may live to regret an act of mercy as this tale continues.





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Sunday, September 22, 2024

A Reaper at the Gates

An Ember in the Ashes #3

A Reaper at the Gates

Sabaa Tahir, Aysha Kala (Narrator), Jack Farrar (Narrator), Samantha Sunderland (Narrator), Fred Gaminara (Narrator) 


Book 3 of 4. The text version was a non-starter so I'm trying audio. At least it will be a cure for insomnia. Another of those books where the point of view keeps changing, at least here the reader changes.


It's been too long since I read books 1&2 for me to remember if there were good guys here. Both sides seem malevolent. As the narrators shift the points of view appear to be revealed impartially. I could do with a cast of characters.


Somehow I lost interest among all the machinations.


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Monday, September 16, 2024

Wolfsong

Green Creek #1

Wolfsong

T.J. Klune


So many books, so little time. An author I'd learned of only today, (at time of first writing).


Ox(nard) had a father who destroyed his sense of self-worth and made him shy and reluctant to talk to strangers before departing the scene. Gordo of the epomynously named garage has taken him under his wing, so to speak, and given him a job and a renewed sense of self worth. Mom is surprised when Ox immediately befriends the Bennetts who have just moved in at the dead end of the street.


Joe, the youngest member of the pack, of werewolves, inexplicably bonds with Ox cementing a friendship with the rest of the pack. Gordo reveals more about himself and his sense of unease with the pack. Life is complicated.


This the first in a series where werewolves are very real and an Alpha rules the pack.


The human members of the pack remark that beautiful people strip naked before turning to save their clothes. Make-up sex, it seems, is the best.


As the book ends two of the pack's main enemies have been eliminated and Ox has been turned so that the healing powers possessed by wolves can save his life. So he'll be around for book 2 of 4 so far.


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Thursday, September 05, 2024

The Sheep Queen

The Sheep Queen

Thomas Savage


This is the story of a matriarch in a time when women had very few rights who, by force of will, forged a family empire. It tells how she inspired a multi-generational group of talented individuals to forge their own path.


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Tuesday, September 03, 2024

The House in the Cerulean Sea

Cerulean Chronicles #1

The House in the Cerulean Sea

T.J. Klune, Daniel Henning (Narrator)


The first clue that this book is fantasy is the cast on a child's tail and then learning the child lives at an orphanage for magical children Linus has been sent to investigate. I'm immediately drawn to Linus.


Orphanages are run by people who cannot afford to become emotionally involved with their clients. Linus cannot maintain such objectivity.


The office manager here reminds one of why so many prefer to continue working from home.


The tone of the book is tongue in cheek, the name--Extremely Upper Management seems intended to be farcical. Can't wait until Calliope the cat meets the AntiChrist. Calliope reminds me of Thump's Freeway.


Linus takes a long train ride to his month-long assignment that proves to be at the end of the line. There he is met by a water sprite who drives him at breakneck speed to the ferry and there abandons him. After driving the only road in sight he arrives at his destination and Calliope disappears into a magical garden. There he is met by a garden sprite who introduces him to a garden gnome, a wood sprite, a wyvern, and the magical creatures keep coming.


What is not immediately made clear is Linus' magical status. Seems he has none.


Arthur manages five of the most unusual and potentially dangerous magical children one could imagine. The Wyvern has a nest in the attic. Another bears resemblance to a Jellyfish; yet another shape shifts into a Pomeranian. Lucy sleeps in Arthur's closet. And then there's the garden gnome. All five are children who are still trying to adjust to and manage their unusual powers and abilities. There's a cook and the sprite who owns the island this all sits on.


If the cover photo is any indication it is magic that prevents the orphanage from collapsing into the sea.


The gang goes for a stroll in the woods and given who they are this is no teddy bear's picnic. That the wood sprite has flowers growing out her walls and grass for her livingroom floor should not surprise.


Speak softly and carry a big stick. A burning phoenix with a 20 ft wingspan does not require the stick.


Some things are greater than the sum of their parts and it is love that cements this story. I discovered this writer only a week ago but this book has been the most enjoyable read I've had in years. The author has a way of hinting at things and keeping you waiting for the reveal but it's no secret that book two in the series is due in a weeks time on September 10.


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Sunday, September 01, 2024

The Theory of Anything: A Short Intellectual Crime Novel

The Friar's Lantern #0.5

The Theory of Anything: A Short Intellectual Crime Novel

Greg Hickey


We met chaos theory in Jurassic Park. Along with Calculus and Quantum Mechanics Chaos Theory or Random Theory is beyond the average comprehension as is superfluid helium that flows through glass.


Dr. Solon, David, has several shocking events disturb his academic life. The Novel ends without anything resolved.


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