Small House of Everything

Small House of Everything

Wednesday, July 8, 2026

SHORT STORY WEDNESDAY: BLACK STUFF

 "Black Stuff" by Ken Bruen  (from Dublin Noir, edited  by Ken Bruen, 2006)

The world lost one of its greatest hardboiled and noir fiction writers last year with the passing of Ken Bruen at age74.

No.  That's not right.  Let me try again,

The world lost one of its great writers -- hands down, period --last year with the passing of Ken Bruen at the age of 74.

There.  That's much better.

Bruen has a rather unique background for a crime fiction writer.  He had a PhD in Metaphysics and had spent twenty-five years as an English teacher in Africa, Asia, and South America.  He had a poet's ear, punk-rock sensibilities, and a love for literature, especially mystery fiction.  His first published work was Funerals:  Tales of Irish Morbidity (1991).  His first four books were not a financial success; they began to get the recognition they deserved after the success of his Tom Brandt series and his Jack Tsylor series, when they were reprinted as A Fifth of Bruen (2006); it was then that people began to realize that the fabulous author of those series had been hiding in the bushes for years before with works equally brilliant.

Bruen set most of his books in his beloved Galway, carefully dissecting the decline of the Catholic church and Ireland's waning economic power, "which has left Ireland as a materialistic and spiritually drained society which still harbors deep social inequality."  His characters are flawed human beings, often alcoholic or drug addicted, capable of rage, violence, self-reflection, and compassion.  He had an elliptical style, often meandering, yet always honing in the essence of his characters.  To read Bruen is unlike reading any other writer.  The poetry sings from the page.

"Black Stuff" is a very short tale featuring a black Irisher who uses the name of Phil Lynott, the black co-founder of the hard rock band Thin Lizzy.  Phil is bitter, antisocial, and a heavy drinker; he never really realized he was black until he was fourteen, and even then he was not goaded by his classmates because of his race, but because he "was shit at hurling."  Phil has two crushed fingers on his right hand given to him because a getaway car he had been driving stalled, angering the crooks who had drafted him.  One evening Phil is at a bar when a white man named Charlie Bowman enters and strikes up a conversation, seemingly amazed that Phil is both black and an Irishman.   Bowman says that he is an American and actually seems to embody all the negative stereotypes given to Americans.  

James Whistler's famous portrait of his mother, Arrangement in Black and Gray, is currently on loan to the city of Dublin and Bowman wants to steal it, and elicits Phil's help.  The way Bowman had it figured it would be an easy job,  but a soldier appeared out of nowhere and Bowman shot him in the gut.  A month later, Phil and Bowman meet up, supposedly to split the profits, and Bowman pulls a gun on Phil.  But Bowman had been too cocky all along; his I-am-an-American act was good but not perfect and Phil knew all along not to trust him.  And Bowman was also too cocky to realize that Phil had something up his sleeve.  Actually, in his damaged hand...

A minor story, perhaps, but one with those lovely Bruen touches.  Well worthy of the few minutes it takes to read this tale.

Tuesday, July 7, 2026

I WANT TO BE A COWGIRL

Posted for no special reason except that I like the song.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hQMH3KgYsTY

Monday, July 6, 2026

THE GOAT (1921)

Buster Keaton could always put a smile on my face.  His timing and comic control truly made him a candidate for the GOAT (Greatest of All Time), as well as the hapless "goat" on this silent two-reeler.  Here, through a series of mistaken identities, Keaton is mistaken for a murderer who is pursued by a posse, lead by the father of the woman he loves.

Also starring Virginia Fox, who was the leading lady in many of Keaton's early films, and went on to marry producer Darryl F. Zanuck; she died at age 83 or maybe age 76 or perhaps somewhere in between -- her given birthdates had an eight-year discrepancy.  Joe Roberts played the police chief; Roberts had become a friend of Keaton's father and the Keaton family and was asked by Keaton to appear in 16 of Keaton's 19 silent short films of the 1920s. Playing the actual murderer was Malcolm St. Clair, a producer, director, writer and actor who also co-wrote and co-directed The Goat with Keaton; Keaton's influence on St. Clair has been described as "transformative" and his directing work is distinctly divided between pre- and post-Keaton.

Enjoy this comic gem from more than a century ago.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_6kE2JfkJ1c


Sunday, July 5, 2026

HAPPY BIRTHDAY, SMILEY LEWIS! (AND A HAT TIP TO THE TWO-PIECE)

 Overton Amos Lemons (1913-1966), a.k.a. Smiley Lewis, was "the unluckiest many in New Orleans.  He hit on a formula for slow-rocking small-band numbers like 'The Bells Are Ringing' and 'I Hear You Knocking' only to have Fats Domino come up behind him with similar music and a more ingratiating delivery.  Lewis was practically drowned in Domino's backwash."  Other songs Lewis recorded were "The Bells Are Ringing," "Blue Monday," "One Night," and "Shame, Shame, Shame"  -- most of these became hits for other artists.


"I Hear You Knockin' "

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DIeY7J9kjg0


"Shame, Shame, Shame"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ctLKz-ZLbMU


"Blue Monday"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iHxdRFTa0sg


"The Bells Are Ringing"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AKsnw0ZH7gY


"Tee-Nah-Nah"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gIu6fnUNP0U


"Can't Stop Loving You"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KnAckkJ-ncI


"One Night"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1yks0vvhF9c


"I Love You for Sentimental Reasons"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5tN8UY2P_sw


"She's Got Me Hook, Line, and Sinker"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zg2VtGYyXHE


"Bumpity Bump"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5-vwQMi6lsY


"Someday You'll Want Me"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NIEmHdQmnSE


"Go On Fool"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZlPTzS38c_E



BONUS:  Did you really think I would let the 80th anniversary of the two-piece swim suit -- the bikini -- got unnoticed?  When runway models refused to model the revealing swim suit, designer Louis Reard hired Micheline Bernardini, an 18-year-old nude dancer from the Casino de Paris, to model the 30 square inches of cloth at a press conference at a public pool in Paris on July 5, 1946.  Thus was history made.  Bernardini, bless her, is still alive at age 98.

In tribute, here's Bryan Hyland with "Itsy Bitsy Teenie Weenie Yellow Polka Dot Bikini":

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ge9Ou3-YyqU&t=3s

HYMN TIME

 The Golden Gate Quartet.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZvngnjAcrAw

Saturday, July 4, 2026

100 YEARS AGO: THE FOURTH OF JULY AX MURDER IN PENSACOLA

This was less than a decade after the notorious "Axman" murders in New Orleans during 1918 and 1919.  As with the New Orleans Axman, the Pensacola murderer remains unknown.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/crime/a-century-later-pensacola-s-july-4-1926-ax-murder-still-unsolved/ar-AA27c5S4?ocid=hpmsn&cvid=464632e1990540b5e3865445fe448cbb&ei=86

Friday, July 3, 2026

HAPPY INDEPENDENCE DAY! SEEING WASHINGTON (1957)

I freely admit that I have a love affair with Washington, D.C.  There is a sense of grandeur that I got sitting on the steps of the Lincoln Monument overlooking the Reflecting Pool, a feeling of reverence as I viewed the Vietnam Wall, and a sense of being near greatness as I entered the Jefferson Memorial.  I've been on a special tour of the White House and drank cups of sickly sweet lemonade.  I walked the steps of the Capital Building during the Vietnam War and saw students there quietly protesting the war.  I stood in the Rotunda as people were singing Phil Ochs' "The Power and the Glory" to the tune of "Deep in the Heart of Texas" -- people who were supporting Nixon and had no idea what the song was really about, and though I did not agree with them I was glad they could voice their opinion.  I spent hours admiring the magnificence of the animals at the National Zoo, braving the yellow jackets that swarmed through its luncheon areas, especially admiring a newly-born baby hippo, and I stayed at a home that was once part of Washington's Mount Vernon estate.  I walked with awe through the sacred and hallow Arlington Cemetery.  I found myself weeping at the National Medical Museum in Silver Spring when I saw that they had a portion of Abraham Lincoln's shattered skull on display.  I have sailed the Potomac on Thanksgiving Day.  I have been to book signings where I met Dick Francis and Elizabeth Peters and many others.  I have picnicked along with many happy families.  My girls went to school in the area so I spent a lot of time at George Washington University and Marymount College.  My eldest grandchild was born at Georgetown University Hospital, but all remember nothing of that place, only the tightly swaddled, beautiful and calm infant that was placed in my arms that day.  The statues, the monuments, the National Cathedral, the parks, the museums, the historical sights, the many venues for culture and the arts, the restaurants, the theaters...all of them are etched in my memory.  I spent too many hours at the Washington Children's Hospital where so much was being done to help young people.  So, too, are the poorer sections of the city and the people of all stripes, colors, creeds, and ethnic origins, and the many rats that seemed to appear at night.  All of this -- the good, the bad, the beautiful, and the tacky -- combined to form a city that I love, a city that represents some of the best of America, and a city that has helped us move toward that more perfect nation we all strive for.

Things have changed now.  Efforts are being made to turn Washington, D.C., into another Trump Mar-a-Lago.  I compare the Hillwood Estate in Washington of Marjorie Merriweather Post to her other mansion, Mar-a-Lago in Peach Beach, which has been (in my considered opinion) demeaned and cheapened by its latest owner.  We once took a clipping of ivy from Hillwood that had originally been planted at Buckingham Palace and planted at our then house in Maryland; I fear that if we took anything from Mar-a-Lago today, it would rot and decay.

This promotional, educational comic book points out some of the magnificent and historic sights of Washington in the late 1950s, back when the White House had an East Wing that was not rubble and when tacky gold leaf was not the dominant aesthetic.

"Seeing Washington is designed to highlight but a few of the countless points of interest which annually attract millions of visitors to Our Nation's Capital.  The magazine is published by Commercial Comics, Inc., a firm specializing in the production of custom-made educational comic booklets for government, business and industry.

"It is our wish that this magazine will bring to everyone who reads it a better understanding of what Washington, D.C. means to our nation and to the world, and that it will arouse a greater appreciation for the privilege to say 'America, My Home.' "

The Washington, D.C. of my memory, the Washington, D.C. I knew, is part of my America.  With courage and determination, we can once again return this magnificent city to that shining beacon of freedom and liberty.

Enjoy this brief trip through my -- our -- city.  And Happy Fourth!


https://comicbookplus.com/?dlid=102130&comicpage=&b=i