In which I fail to keep the customer satisfied

There was a fascinating new episode in my continuing dispute with the fellow who took offense at my e-mail reply to him, because it appeared in blue letters. Today I got another email from him, in which he demanded that I apologize for sending him a blue email.

The customer is always right, of course, so I immediately responded with an apology.

However, due to the way our email operates, the apology was in blue letters.

I expect he was not placated.

If this were a thriller novel, this would be the point at which I start to notice strangers following me, and to receive cryptic, threatening phone calls.

I realized long ago that I would never survive a thriller novel. I’d be one of the hapless bystanders mown down in a spray of blood by the psycho, on his way to the big showdown with Somebody Who Knows How to Handle Himself. My friend Ragnar, perhaps, or my friend Michael Z. Williamson.

Had an interesting phone call this evening. A fellow in California had seen my name and address in the Sons of Norway magazine (I’m Vice President of my lodge now), and called me to find out if I possibly knew a fellow he knew long, long ago, when he lived around here. He had a family memento he wanted to give the fellow, if he was still alive.

Alas, I didn’t. Nor did the better-acquainted district officer I checked with immediately afterward.

Too bad.

Aside from not being Somebody Who Knows How to Handle Himself, I’m also not much of a private investigator.

For the record.

Of e-books and Vikings

C. J. Box, on the Hugh Hewitt Show, just mentioned that “You can’t autograph a Kindle.”

I’m kind of embarrassed to admit that that was an angle on electronic publishing that I hadn’t considered. I kind of like signing autographs. Makes me feel like a big shot. I suppose authors will have to come up with some kind of cards that they can sign, so fans can collect them like baseball cards.

Another complication that had occurred to me is that you can’t lend an electronic book. The great era of loaning books you love to your friends is going away, or at least enjoying increased mobility.

On the other hand, as poets have oft lamented, even the best of friends tend sometimes to not return beloved books.

And no, I’m not thinking of anyone specifically. Offhand, I can’t think of anyone who’s got a book of mine. (It helps to have very few friends.)

OK, there’s one, but that’s a relative, and no one expects much from relatives.

I made a radical decision today (by my personal, low, standards). I decided to attend a Viking reenactment event down in Missouri, in late April. A fellow I know (he’s commented on this blog once or twice) owns a farm down there where he’s building a Viking fort. There’s a hall and another building, and it’s an ongoing project. He holds a spring and a fall open event, where the authenticity standards are low enough for me to squeak in, and he’s asked me to come for a couple years. I even get to sell books.

I’ve never gone before, probably because I have a fixed idea in my head that Missouri is a long, long way away. I lived in Missouri (though somewhat further south) for a year long ago, and got kind of tired of the length of the drive back to Minnesota. But since I drove to Chicago last fall, and go to Minot every year, I really don’t have a good excuse for avoiding northeastern Missouri. All you’ve got to do is cross Iowa, and you’re pretty much there, if the boredom doesn’t kill you.

What I found interesting was the decision-making process. I hemmed and hawed, argued pros and cons, and generally dithered. Then it occurred to me to pray about it.

The moment I prayed, I felt the answer in my spirit—“Yes, you must go.”

Now as you know, I’m no great advocate of feelings-based decision-making. But this seemed (and I emphasized seemed) to be a genuine answer from God.

I shall watch how things work out now, to test whether my sensitivity to the Spirit is better or worse than I think.

Poverty of Education

This video is featured on the Nordskog Publishing site, which has healthy education as its topic this week. Some of the claims here seem overstated, but I sympathize with their decisions, particularly Voddie Baucham Jr.’s comments. Christians and God-fearing people need to reject the self-indulgent messages coming from many places and take up the call to teach our children ourselves in healthy, godly communities.

O Tempora! O Moron!

A Wednesday loom (hat tip to Roy Jacobsen)A Wednesday Loom (hat tip to Roy Jacobsen)

That snow we expected yesterday turned out, on closer acquaintance, to be rather more than expected. I had to use the snow blower after all, but the job I ended up doing was pretty marginal. Relatively high temperatures meant wet, heavy snow, and in some places it did more than just jam in the chute—it obstinately refused to be augured into the works at all. I expect it will be mostly gone in a week, but it was one of the harder snow removal jobs I’ve had this winter.

I’m having temporal trouble, it appears.

That dinner I told you I was invited to tonight? Turns out it was last night. The host called me about twenty minutes after the stated time, wondering where I was. I had stood facing his wife, as she made the invitation, and dutifully noted it down IN THE WRONG SPACE ON MY POCKET CALENDAR! My shame is unbounded, ubiquitous and ineffable.

Also. At work I have one of those “atomic” clocks that readjusts itself based on a radio signal from an observatory somewhere out west. This one is an analog clock, the old fashioned kind with a face and hands. It didn’t change the hour when Daylight Savings Time overtook us, so I moved the little hands myself.

Then, sometime Monday night, the clock decided to make the time change on its own. I thought yesterday morning was going unusually fast, but in fact my clock was an hour ahead. I ate lunch at 11:00. Eventually I figured it out.

The obvious conclusion is that time is not on my side.

Wednesday looms

It’s been spring-like for the past week or so, and most of the snow has melted away, headed downriver to various places that don’t want it. It hasn’t been happy spring, though—it’s been April Showers spring weather. We haven’t seen the sun much. I went out the other night to look at the MegaMoon, but she had hid her face modestly behind a burqa of clouds.

Tomorrow the rain is supposed to turn to snow, and they’re promising as much as three inches of the stuff. Sloppy snow, I expect, and it probably won’t be worth blowing out. It shouldn’t last long on the ground. Public opinion is against it.

Tomorrow has turned out to be a strangely packed day in my personal calendar. You have to understand, I lead—by choice—a notably hapless life, if you define “hapless” as nothing happening (which is wrong, but the thought amuses me). My pocket calendar doesn’t usually include more than two or three notations a week.

And yet all kinds of stuff has landed on my Wednesday, March 23 space, as if some temporal sharpshooter placed his bulls-eye on it. First my semi-annual furnace inspection got penciled in, months ago. Then I heard from a former college roommate, who told me his son would be appearing in the role of a schizophrenic drug addict in an episode of Criminal Minds that evening (I stopped watching CM a while back, when they took an unprovoked narrative shot at homeschoolers, but I’m willing to make an exception for a friend’s kid). Then, just yesterday, someone at work invited me to dinner at their house (why I can’t imagine. I guess I’ll videotape the TV show).

But why all this at once?

I expect I’ll still be able to do a blog post, as I’ll spend the afternoon at home, waiting for the furnace guy.

I’ve been selling unwanted books from our bookstore on Amazon for a while now. Last Friday I got an order, accompanied by e-mail requests from the customer, in which he asked for some special services we aren’t able to offer (I’ll stipulate that I didn’t handle that exchange as well as I might have). But I finally promised to get him a Confirmation number from the Post Office, and e-mail it to him on Monday, when I’d be back in the office.

Coming in on Monday, I found that he’d canceled the order (which was a couple days in the mail by then). He told me that my email response to his message showed up in blue lettering (our system always makes the replies blue, to help the readers tell one mailer’s messages from the other’s). He said he considered those blue letters a threat to himself and his home, and so had canceled the order.

Are any of you aware of any scenario in which blue print is a threat to anybody?

Coffee Prices on the Rise

Something has been missing from our blog lately, and I’ve just remembered what it is. We need some coffee news. World coffee supplies are beginning to suffer. In Columbia, farmers are having a harder time producing quality coffee. Weather patterns have not cooperated.

The Gray and Guilty Sea, by Jack Nolte

The Gray and Guilty Sea

It was a shrewd marketing move for author Jack Nolte to entitle his first mystery novel The Gray and Guilty Sea. It makes it nearly irresistible for an old John D. MacDonald fan like me, still suffering the Aching Purple Bereavement of going a quarter century without another color-coded Travis McGee novel.

On the other hand, he set a high bar for himself through the implied comparison. Many fictional detectives have been touted as “the new Travis McGee” since MacDonald’s death, but (in my opinion) none of them has quite lived up to that standard.

Nolte’s detective, Garrison Gage, doesn’t, either.

But he’s still pretty good. Continue reading The Gray and Guilty Sea, by Jack Nolte

How Has Technology Changed You?

Tim Challies asks, “Do you own technology, or does it own you?”

I heard an interview on the Mars Hill Audio Journal a few weeks ago during which Nicholas Carr observed how many books exist on Christianity and politics or culture but very few on Christianity and technology or how technology has or could shape the way we think of ourselves and the world. Tim Challies’ book on the subject should be worthy reading.

100 Things

Author Alexander Chee has 100 observations on writing a novel.

“8. It is like having imaginary friends that are the length of city blocks. The pages you write are like fingerprinting them, done to prove to strangers they exist.

9. Reading a novel successfully is then the miracle of being shown such a fingerprint and being able to guess the face, the way she walks, the times she fell in love incorrectly or to bad result, etc.”

There are 100 such things. (via Jane Friedman)

The first Rose of springtime

It feels like spring. It looks like spring.

Which makes me confident we’ve got at least one more big snowstorm coming.

I’ll let you know.

One more Irish song, you say? Well, if you insist.

This isn’t the greatest video, and it’s got a big slug of dead air at the end, but I couldn’t find one I really liked. Beautiful song. There’s a romantic back story, complete with class differences, Protestant-Catholic enmity, and parental opposition…

One night beneath the pale, silvery moon William asked Mary to marry him. However, William’s family disapproved of him seeing Mary, the broguemaker’s daughter who lived in a small peasant house in the middle of town. Whilst Mary loved William, she knew that their union could never be, as it would force him to turn his back on his family and he would begin to regret the day he’d ever met her. She declined his offer of marriage.

…but it seems to me just about three inches too romantic to be true. Wikipedia attributes the words to C. (or E.) Mordaunt Spencer and the music to Charles William Glover.

Anyway, it’s an Irish love song, and (as Phil could have told us) it’s sad as all the world’s tears.

Have a good weekend.

Book Reviews, Creative Culture