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The Sympathizer by Viet Thanh Nguyen

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Last month, when I visited Chicago, I found myself with an hour or so to kill up in Old Town. I had enjoyed dinner with my friend Candy Minx at a place called Mash, across the street from the Old Town School of Folk Music (dinner was great – I had bbq brisket with Mac ‘n’ Cheese, corn muffins and salad). Candy had to start work across at Old Town right after dinner. She had given me a ticket to see Jerry Douglas perform a solo dobro show that evening, but the show didn’t start for over an hour. I went for a walk around Old Town and found myself in a really good bookstore. There was an author in there speaking, and while he was going on and on about whatever book he had on the shelves, I looked for something to read that captured my imagination. I went in with little more than that simple idea in mind.

I came across The Sympathizer by Viet Thanh Nguyen on what I think may have been a “staff picks” shelf. Here’s what I read on the back:

“The narrator, a Vietnamese army captain is a man of divided loyalties, a half-French, half Vietnamese communist sleeper agent in America after the end of the Vietnam War. A powerful story of love and friendship, and a gripping espionage novel, The Sympathizer examines the legacy of the Vietnam War in literature, film and the wars wew fight today.”

The book was all of those things. It offered up a unique perspective and was a fascinating read. I suppose it’s partly about living as an outsider in America, partly about the immigrant and refugee experience. It also examines identity and ideology, friendship and politics, and at the same time is a strange personal adventure story – oh, and let’s not forget it’s also a spy story.

The Sympathizer is at times frustrating, sad and horrific. Still, it has an underlying satirical wit, which appeared sometimes in unlikely circumstances. It’s a brilliant and complex effort – not a feel-good story – but a great read all around.

Recommended.

 

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Flower power for LAMP

The figures are in and the recent Long Branch by the Lake Garden Tour raised over $3500 for LAMP. Congratulations to all the gardeners as well as local businesses who supported this initiative!

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Secret Gardens of Oakville

Today we took the self-guided “Secret Gardens of Oakville” Garden Tour, presented by the Oakville Horticultural Society. As always, Tuffy P was very prepared and Google Mapped out a route for us to visit the gardens from furthest west to furthest east (closest to home). For those not from around here, Oakville is the next community SW from Mississauga (which is just west of Toronto).

There were 9 gardens on the tour, and as always at garden tours, there was a mixed bag, large and small, simple and elaborate, creative and, well, not so creative. The highlight for me was the garden of a woman who was an expert on insects. Her garden was a haven for butterflies, moths, and particularly bees. Here, she is showing us a variety of bees collected from her garden….

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She has also created a bee hotel, a structure made from skids, bricks, logs, pine-cones, pieces of bamboo, along with mud and a water source.  The hotel is home to mason bees and leafcutter bees, which require hollow stems or holes for nesting. These are small, stingless native bees, which are important pollinators. This gardener suggests that one mason bee can do the work of 1- to 25 non-native honey bees. Hmmm….maybe we can turn an Imagination Station from our garden into our own funky bee hotel?

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Here is  a glimpse of some of the gardens we saw today.

We would have like to have seen more gardens with veggies. There was one excellent veggie patch, which included a really nice asparagus patch (we liked that a lot…maybe we’ll try to develop our own).

 

 

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Dance Party at the Jazz Festival

Miss Sharon Jones and the Dap Kings blew into town tonight to play the TD Toronto Jazz Festival – in the big tent at Nathan Phillips Square. Fortunately for us, Tuffy P heard about the upcoming show while I was off on a road-trip back in May, and got us a pair of tickets.IMG_5969.jpg

She’s 60 years old; she’s fighting cancer – and with the help of a fantastic soul/funk band and two strong back-up singers, Sharon Jones put on a killer, high-energy performance tonight.

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The weather is nice but….

We have enjoyed lovely weather around these parts for some time and while that is pleasant enough, it’s time for a couple days of rain. Normally at this time, I’d be thinking about which forests to visit in search of the first chanterelles of the season. Without rain, though, there isn’t going to be many mushrooms fruiting.

Is it too much to hope for a few good rainfalls in July? I looked at the long-range forecast for the enchanted mushroom forest, and from a forager’s perspective, it isn’t good. There are a few days with possible thunderstorms or scattered showers predicted, but I didn’t see any sustained rains in the forecast at all.

I guess I’ll have to stay home and play the banjo instead.

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Two kinds of games

Today in my travels I passed a large television screen tuned into soccer or futebol or whatever you like to call it. They were interviewing an expert who was explaining the finer points of the game. He said there are two kinds of games – when you have the ball…..and (wait for it) …when you don’t have the ball. And this was the best part….. the team that doesn’t have the ball wants to get it back.

Now I understand. Unfortunately, I didn’t have time to listen for more nuggets.

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The Boneyard – a new Lazy Allen story

My goal has been to publish a new Lazy Allen story each month. Mea maxima culpa, I missed May. I could blame the fact that I was away on a roadtrip for a couple weeks, but the truth is I’ve had some new stories brewing in my little brain, and not one of them was fermented quite enough to publish. For the ones and twos of readers out there who have been anticipating a new story, sorry about the delay.

The new story is called The Boneyard. You can read it, and all the rest of the Lazy Allen stories on the Lazy Allen story site or on my Patreon page. I hope you like it.

I created the characters in these stories with the intention of writing a novel. At some point along the way, mired in the muck, I realized what I had on my hands was not a novel at all but a series of stories, set back in 1982. They feature Lazy Allen and Staashu Dudas, two ex-musicians working in a bottling plant, who get together and start up a polka-punk band. Some of the stories are about work-life in the factory. Others are about the band. Still others feature Lazy telling stories about his former life as a polka accordion player.

I’ve written each of these as a stand-alone story, but they seem to be emerging as kind of a serial. If you haven’t read any of these stories before, you might enjoy going back to the first of them, called The Bottle & Can, and reading them in the order they were written.

I have received very little feedback on these things, so if you read them and love them or hate them or whatever, feel free to add your comments here, on the story site or on Patreon. Don’t worry, I have thick skin.

I set up the Patreon page after deciding to publish these stories on a blog site instead of sending them around to literary publications and what-not. I like the Patreon model, in which I can make my stories are made available free for everyone, but people who love the them and want to support the Lazy Allen project can do so at a modest rate of $1 per story.