Recent Posts - page 60
-
Bimbos of the Death Sun
No, it’s not what you think. This hilarious novel, by Sharyn McCrumb, is a satiric mystery about a fictional SF con (that’s science fiction convention, to you mundanes out there). The protagonist is a professor of electrical engineering at Virginia… Read More ›
-
Congratulations!
Congratulations to the Weston High School Math Team for finishing first in the state in the Massachusetts Math League!
-
Over the cliff
-
Friends of Dorothy
In my naive youth, I had no idea what a “friend of Dorothy” was; in-group descriptors, after all, are always known to members of the in group (and allies) long before they are known to the general public. “Friend of… Read More ›
-
Mollie on her kitty couch
-
Panic
Consider this. Here we have a great movie from 2000, starring William H. Macy, Donald Sutherland, Tracy Ullman, Neve Campbell, and John Ritter — so why hadn’t I ever heard of it before? Oh well, better late than never. It’s… Read More ›
-
“Libraries are a haven…”
For more reasons than one you need to read Angela Clarke’s story from six years ago. Shoutout to my sister-in-law Brenda for alerting me to this excerpt from Clarke’s account: My own fragility revealed that a library is not just… Read More ›
-
No Pi Day?
-
Weston’s 17th Fractal Fair
I returned to Weston yesterday for its 17th annual Fractal Fair. That’s a lot of fractal fairs! As you might expect for a subject that keeps evolving every year, with an entirely new set of exhibitors every year, the fair… Read More ›
-
Ingrid Thoft
No, “Identity Theft” is not the title of this book — though you can readily see why Barbara thought so when she glanced quickly at the cover. Identity is Ingrid Thoft’s second novel. In some ways it’s in the tradition… Read More ›
-
Old authors never die…
Lawrence Block’s latest novella, A Time to Scatter Stones, and one of Ruth Rendell’s last novels, The Monster in the Box, have something in common — a couple of things, in fact. It’s no coincidence that both books were written late in… Read More ›
-
The top universities for linguistics?
Are these really the top universities for linguistics? That’s what the QS World University Rankings by Subject says. I’ve been skeptical of lists like this as I watched high-school ratings over two decades from publications like Boston Magazine and U.S. News, paying special attention… Read More ›
-
Bay State Model Railroad Museum Spring Model Train Show
Wow! Look at that title: a noun phrase consisting of nine consecutive nouns! Maybe the show should be called Buchtstaatsmodelleisenbahnmuseumsfrühlingsmodellzugshow. On second thought, maybe not. OK, enough fooling around with German. Let’s get back to the show itself, which was… Read More ›
-
Happy Exelauno Day!
-
How many Tater Tots? — the answer!
Yesterday I posted this problem: Great Fermi problem that I just heard on the Ask Me Another quiz show on NPR: Estimate how many Tater Tots were consumed in the U.S. during all of 2017. The answer (from CBS News)… Read More ›
-
How many Tater Tots?
Great Fermi problem that I just heard on the Ask Me Another quiz show on NPR: Estimate how many Tater Tots were consumed in the U.S. during all of 2017. Correct answer will be posted in this space tomorrow.
-
Boston Chops
Apparently, Boston restaurateurs are supposed to be named Chris. The chef/owner of Ashmont Grill, our favorite every-day local restaurant — well, more like twice a month, but who’s counting? — is Dorchester neighbor Chris Douglass. Then, for my birthday dinner… Read More ›
-
I found the missing R!
I found the missing R! Remember my recent post about my neighborhood barber shop with the missing R? (In case you missed it, here is the photo again of the storefront, showing that it’s a Baber Shop, not a Barber… Read More ›
-
The Punishment She Deserves
Elizabeth George writes literature, not genre fiction. That’s the sensibility of her novels, even though they are technically mysteries, which should make them genre fiction. The Punishment She Deserves is the 20th of her Lynley/Havers books, and I think I’ve read all… Read More ›
-
“Why Girls Beat Boys at School and Lose to Them at the Office”
Gender-based generalizations are almost always wrong. When they aren’t wrong, they are at least misleading, because nobody listens when you explain that you are speaking in statistics, not in absolutes. Nevertheless, generalizations can be useful aids to thinking about the… Read More ›
Featured Categories
Books ›
-
The story of classic crime in 100 books
March 27, 2026
-
First do no harm.
March 24, 2026
-
At Midnight Comes the Cry
March 21, 2026
-
Vance and Moore… back when both of them were younger
March 11, 2026
Dorchester/Boston ›
-
Dot Block Diner
April 21, 2026
-
My front yard says that it must finally be spring!
April 5, 2026
-
Happy spring! Happy buck-a-shuck!
March 20, 2026
-
A special brunch at Tavolo
March 1, 2026
Food & Restaurants ›
-
Milkweed
January 16, 2026
-
Thai Oishii
November 16, 2025
-
Chinese food in Greater Boston, then and now
November 1, 2025
-
Dumpling Kitchen
October 11, 2025
Life ›
-
Interesting address
April 8, 2026
-
Taunton vs. Colmar?
March 4, 2026
-
Streets of Minneapolis
January 28, 2026
-
They understand us across the pond.
January 11, 2026
Linguistics ›
-
Picard: Welcome to the Sticks!
March 6, 2026
-
Everything you wanted to know about the Great Vowel Shift but were afraid to ask
February 8, 2026
-
Who’s better at understanding written English — you or some random teen in South Korea?
January 22, 2026
-
Will the real John McWhorter please stand up? (No, no, that’s not the real one; that’s the AI John McWhorter!)
January 18, 2026
Math ›
-
Very sad news
October 17, 2025
-
The metric system has gotten an update!
July 14, 2025
-
As Tom Lehrer says, that’s mathematics!
July 9, 2025
-
The Plinko Bounce
June 28, 2025
Model Railroading ›
-
Where are the women?
April 13, 2026
-
Famous railway modellers
March 16, 2026
-
“So you want a model railroad” — a well-known… okay… not-so-well-known Warner Bros. film from 1955
November 22, 2025
-
Three cheers for Jason Jensen — not only a model railroader but also a true American artist!
November 17, 2025
Movies & (occasionally) TV ›
-
The new Springsteen bio-pic
November 11, 2025
-
Breaking Silence: a truly outstanding documentary!
July 29, 2025
-
The Social Network
May 11, 2025
-
Dylan
January 8, 2025
Teaching & Learning ›
-
Triple threat: Carl Sagan, critical thinking, and an exam
October 13, 2025
-
Truly these are oldies but goodies — songs from… wait for it… two millennia ago!
September 28, 2025
-
Measles and polio down in the schoolyard
September 8, 2025
-
A former student’s PhD defense
August 15, 2025
Technology ›
-
Not the other Wes Moore
June 22, 2025
-
Bye bye Mark Z.
February 6, 2025
-
Posts you may have missed
March 15, 2024
-
I’m back!
February 28, 2024
Travel ›
-
Written in the South Pacific during World War II
February 17, 2025
-
Globle
February 15, 2023
-
No pirates. And it’s not in Penzance. But it’s nearby: It’s Death in Cornwall.
August 9, 2022
-
Miriam and Alan explore Scotland.
July 6, 2022
Weston ›
-
“Dear parents of math geniuses…,” writes Tanya Khovanova
December 6, 2022
-
How can girls succeed at the highest level of high-school debate?
November 20, 2022
-
Reading Latin and Ancient Greek for fun and profit. For what? Fun? Yes, fun. Really. And the profit was purely intellectual, not financial.
October 19, 2022
-
Trust what you read! (On second thought…)
September 2, 2022



