Possibly I read too much crime fiction....
Because when I read this, I had Further Questions.
London pub thief sold £2.2m Fabergé egg and watch set to buy drugs
I am going, hello?
Enzo Conticello, 29, took the Givenchy bag belonging to Rosie Dawson as she stood in the smoking area of the Dog and Duck pub in Soho, London, on 7 November 2024.
Inside the £1,600 bag was an emerald-encrusted Fabergé egg and watch set belonging to Dawson’s employers, the Craft Irish Whiskey Company.
So, she had these items in her HANDBAG (going full Flora Robson as Lady Bracknell) and
went to the Dog and Duck pub in Soho. She was outside the premises in the designated smoking area, she put her handbag on the ground in between her legs, and a few minutes later she noticed her handbag was no longer there.
We observe that this was a £1,600 Givenchy bag, and while I do not think London is quite the crime-ridden hellhole some social media depicts, I might hang on to this a bit more carefully in Soho even did it not contain my employer's Fabergé.
Dawson had the Fabergé items because she had taken them for display at a work event earlier that evening.
Surely there ought to have been some kind of security procedure involved, like, 'take a taxi and put them back in the safe'?
(Am trying to think of any circumstances in which, in former days, would have been taking precious unique archival and manuscript items out of the building in the first place. When we had them out on display for visiting groups, they got put away pronto.)
I probably read too much crime fiction, but this reads like 'set-up for heist/insurance scam that went pearshaped'.
2026.04.10
Prices were up 3.3% over the year, adding to the unpredictability that first came with Trump tariffs
Lauren Aratani in New York
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2026/apr/10/march-inflation-soars-iran-war-economy
Trump administration temporarily blocks Minnesota’s historic wage floor for nursing home workers
Federal health officials have reset to day one a three-month window to approve the state’s request for Medicaid dollars.
by Matthew Blake
https://www.minnpost.com/state-government/2026/04/trump-blocks-minnesota-nursing-home-workers-wage/ ( Read more... )
We have our water heater replacement first thing tomorrow
On the other hand, if the USA decides drop nukes during the installation, probably the company won't trouble themselves too much about payment. We'll be home free! Well, assuming nobody retaliates on NYC specifically....
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thoughts while reading
1. Here's some info: The scientist who invented the term "alpha male," who was studying chimpanzees, used it to mean "not necessarily the strongest or most intimidating but, rather, the ones who excelled at coalition-building," keeping the peace and consoling. He was very annoyed at it being applied to humans who were, in his word, bullies.
2. Why are people finding it so difficult to grasp that one can support Israel while opposing the policies of its current government? That's my position regarding the United States as well.
Hedjog versus THE MACHINE
So dr rdrz will be aware of my recent problems with printer, so I finally bit the bullet and after consulting Which Best Buys and so forth, went for an Epson Eco-Tank from John Lewis.
Which arrived at lunchtime today.
And I had anticipated spending hours if not days whining and stressing and beating my head on the ground and wrestling like until Jacob with the Angel to get the thing talking to my system and actually printing/scanning/copying.
Behold me sat sitting here having achieved getting it connected to the Wifi (the Wizard, though, is crap because it assumes that your password is a word rather than numeric, fortunately there was an alternative route), appearing under printers/scanners in my desktop computer settings, and copying, scanning, and printing.
There was a little hassle with printing which turned out to be due to Advanced Printer Settings turning out to have weird Paper Size as default rather than A4, which given that A4 is supposed to be their standard size, was bizarre.
This is positively uncanny, do admit.
2026.04.09
https://www.fox9.com/news/minnesota-restaurants-being-pushed-breaking-point-new-report-shows
In dining news of a different kind, Michelin, the international restaurant rating guide, announced it will be coming to six cities in the “American Great Lakes” region, including Minneapolis (sorry St. Paul). Ratings will likely begin in 2027, according to the Minnesota Star Tribune. Via MinnPost
https://www.startribune.com/after-years-of-speculation-michelin-is-finally-coming-to-minneapolis/601663256 ( Read more... )
- ai,
- blockchain,
- children,
- drone,
- funny,
- impressive,
- interview,
- iran,
- links,
- parenting,
- shipping,
- technology,
- trade,
- video,
- wtf
Interesting Links for 09-04-2026
- 1. Parent concerned at time children spend playing computer games, also quietly grateful for it
- (tags:parenting children funny technology )
- 2. AI-Generated Interview With One Piece Actor Published By Esquire
- (tags:ai interview wtf )
- 3. Tankers passing through Strait of Hormuz will have to pay cryptocurrency toll
- (tags:Iran blockchain trade shipping )
- 4. Record-Breaking Drone Light Show (22,000 of them)
- (tags:drone video impressive )
Welp, one of the water heaters just went
St Teresa of Avila: Collected minor works (2026-27)
Poems
There are XXXVIII of these, but a copule of them are different versions of the same poem. It runs straight into the eternal problem of translated poetry: translate the literal meaning, or preserve the poetic form? The translator here appears (and I say "appears" because, of course, I don't read fifteenth-century Spanish, and don't have a copy of the original if I did) to take the dangerous route of trying for a middle road of doing some of each. The poetic form, therefore, tends to be badly flawed, while the meaning feels forced into it.
Still some of them are successful, notably the rousing "Nuns of Carmel," a sequence of carols from the point of view of the shepherds summoned by the Angels (poems 23-28), and "Before the Crucifix."
Exclamations, Or Meditation Of The Soul On Its God
These are, apparently, literally exclamations made by the Saint while in ecstatic fervor after Mass. I feel quite unqualified to say anything useful about them.
Conception Of The Love Of God On Some Verses Of The Canticle
At some point, Teresa appears to have written an interpretive work on the Song of Songs (which is Solomon's), known back in the day as the Canticle of Canticles. When she showed it to her confessor, he told her to cast it into the fire; he was taken aback when he learned that she had immediately done so, for he had intended it as a sort of test. Fortunately for posterity, some nuns had made copies of it, or of parts of it, and that is what we have here.
It is, quite literally, on "some verses": she gets seven chapters, some reasonably long, out of three or four verses of the Song of Songs; and is not boring. It is clearly addressed to her nuns, but layfolk like myself can learn from it also.
Maxims of St Teresa
A collection of proverbs, good advice, and little commandments regarding how her nuns are to behave.
Miscellaneous Almost none of this is actually by St Teresa, and so has no business in a collection of her minor works, but here we are:
1. Papers found in St Teresa's Breviary, which I find kind of embarrasingly personal.
2. The last days of Saint Teresa, a narrative of the last month or so of her life and a slightly soppy account of her death.
3. Saint Teresa's manifestation after death, some of which are quite impressive; some of which might be the imagination of slightly-hysterical nuns in the moment of her dying.
4. Additional maxims. Why the editor did not choose to include these with the main collection of maxims is quite beyond me.
5. Canonisation of St Teresa, an account of the various clerical and political maneuverings that eventually led to her being declared Saint.
6. Bull of Gregory XV for the Canonisation of St Teresa.
As I've been reading through the "Complete Works" over time, this is clearly minor, but some of it was very much worth my time.
Five out of ten cloisters.
P.C. Cast and Kristin Cast: Give Up the Night (2026-26)
It's set on an island in a version of the Pacific Northwest, where the Elementals live and the Acadamia de la Luna teaches the "Moonstruck" how to use their power.
Wren Nightingale (a name which all by itself screams "romantasy," doesn't it?), at the end of the previous book, found herself the target of an assassination attempt by Celeste, one of the Acadamia's leaders. When she failed to kill Wren, Celeste turned the dagger on herself to make it look like Wren had attempted to kill her. As this book begins, Wren is on the run, with the help of a companion Air Elemental.
Wren's love, Lee Young, is one of the witnesses to Wren's apparent attempt to kill Celeste. He knows that something is wrong here, but he isn't sure what, and as Celeste is taking him under her wing and promising him great things, he's a bit dazzled.
So, well, stuff happens, and Wren gathers a small band of friends to complete an ancient ceremony that will free the Elementals and end Celeste's control of the Acadamia and ... well, frankly, despite all sorts of apparent danger, it all really comes too easily for her.
The book ends with what might have been the satisfying end of a duology, or better a two-volume novel, but is clearly set to make an ongoing series. Pfui.
Four out of ten incredibly useful maps.
vital question
I was reading and I came across the word "pilfer" and I asked myself
Pelf sure is a stupid-sounding word, though.
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- books,
- histfic,
- homosexuality,
- litcrit,
- litfic,
- meme,
- reading,
- russ,
- sff,
- victorians
Wednesday saw the return of the heron, catching A FROG
What I read
Finished Never Had It So Good, and while I am less whelmed than I was on first reading it 50 years ago (aaarrgh), and consider that as panoramic social novel of provincial life, does not quite reach the level of South Riding, yet, that is the comparison one thinks of. I also mark up Mr Jones in contrast to The Angry Young Men who were his contemporaries over a whole range of issues.
Finished Considering The Female Man by Joanna Russ, or, As the Bear Swore, which was fascinating, and very readable, but has not somehow inspired me to rush off and do a re-read.
Then thought I should really read Adania Shibli, Minor Detail (2017), for forthcoming in-person book group.
In hopes of a change from that - it's grim - read Marion Keyes, The Mystery of Mercy Close (Walsh Family, #5) (2012), a recent Kobo deal, which was itself not entirely the most cheerful read.
On the go
Amazon helpfully alerted me to Kindle-only publication of Alexis Hall, Never After, currently in progress, also not really bringing the delicious froth - opium-addicted Victorian rent-boy rescued from homelessness on the streets by clergyman (unexpected and unwanted 3rd son in aristo family, put him into the church) with his own backstory baggage.
Up next
There's a new Literary Review.
Also I had a mad binge on Kobo the other day, mostly Dick Francises which had come down to promotional prices, but I also finally succumbed to the most recent Edward St Aubyn which has been tempting me. The previous one was so much less gruesome than the Melrose sequence that perhaps this will be the change of pace I'm looking for?
2026.04.08
In the first of three stories supported by the Pulitzer Center, MinnPost’s mental health and addiction columnist Andy Steiner reports on how the Big Beautiful Bill could disrupt substance use treatment for patients and providers.
by Andy Steiner
https://www.minnpost.com/mental-health-addiction/2026/04/medicaid-substance-use-disorder-treatment/
Why a bill to help Minnesota hospitals may be doomed and why it matters
The Senate easily passed the measure on drug discounts for hospitals. But House Republicans do not want the bill to be enforced.
by Matthew Blake
https://www.minnpost.com/state-government/2026/04/bill-helping-minnesota-hospitals-doomed/ ( Read more... )
concert review: Catalyst Quartet and friends
Tuesday's was kind of different. The main item on the program was the song cycle Sea Pictures by the canonical Englishman, Edward Elgar, with the original orchestral accompaniment arranged for piano quintet. Terrence Wilson at the keyboard joined the Quartet. The singer was Nikola Printz, whose dark mezzo unleashed a lot of power when Elgar called for it, but pompous grandeur and drama are not the highlights of this cycle. Elgar was at his best being coy and charming in the two best settings in the bunch, "In Haven" and "Where Corals Lie," where Printz's voice could be surprisingly intimate.
Now watch the chain of connections (not the order in which the pieces were played in the concert). A suite for quartet, Fantasiestücke by Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, something of a protégé of Elgar's. Coleridge-Taylor was Black, and when he visited the U.S. he met with Henry Burleigh, the Black pupil of Antonín Dvořák who introduced Dvořák to Afro-American spirituals, which inspired the Largo of Dvořák's New World Symphony. So we got Printz singing a setting of "Going Home," the spiritual that was later made out of the theme of that Largo, and (for quartet) the Sorrow Song and Jubilee by the contemporary Libby Larsen, a tribute to Burleigh and Dvořák incorporating fragments from another spiritual, "Swing Low Sweet Chariot." From her program notes, Larsen evidently thinks Dvořák incorporated "Going Home" into his symphony rather than the other way around.
It was a bit of a challenge in my current state going up to the City for a concert (and I have five more in the next week, so I'd better gird myself), but this one for all its oddity turned out to be worthwhile.
- america,
- art,
- bigotry,
- dice,
- doom,
- electricity,
- germany,
- ghibli,
- goodnews,
- history,
- intelligence,
- iran,
- lgbt,
- links,
- ohforfuckssake,
- oil,
- prehistory,
- renewables,
- shipping,
- solarpower,
- trade,
- transgender,
- uk,
- windpower,
- women
Interesting Links for 08-04-2026
- 1. If you're wondering when the oil shortages are going to bite, ths map on this page is very helpful
- (tags:oil trade shipping iran doom )
- 2. German rollout of renewables is decoupling the price from that of gas.
- (tags:germany renewables GoodNews )
- 3. Record wind and solar saved UK from gas imports worth £1bn in March 2026
- (tags:uk renewables GoodNews solarpower windpower electricity )
- 4. Native Americans had dice and games of probability before other cultures (about 12,000 years ago)
- (tags:dice America prehistory )
- 5. Longwell Green Women's Institute closes after 62 years because of transgender ban
- (tags:LGBT transgender bigotry OhForFucksSake women UK )
- 6. The Image Boards of Hayao Miyazaki
- (tags:ghibli art history )
- 7. Intelligent people are better judges of the intelligence of others
- (tags:Intelligence )