Monday, January 12, 2026

Big Read '26

 Today begins another year of The Big Read, a global online book club organized by The Trollope Society.  Every other Monday through the year, as I did all last year, I join in the discussion via Zoom meeting with Anthony Trollope fans all around the world to discuss one of the prolific author's novels.  Today begins discussion of Rachel Ray, the story of a young country girl as she deals with the hurdles and difficulties of building a social life for herself.  She does this while enduring the critical gossip of a small town, the well-meaning but hapless advice from a weak-minded mother, and the downright maliciousness of a religious-zealot sister.  Even being nearly 200 years old, the story rings true in many aspects and is relatable today.  I look forward to hearing what my fellow Trollopians have to say later today.

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Sunday, January 11, 2026

Blog to blog...to blog

 

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In a recent post, I described how I had sent a postal cover to a blogger who solicits them, and it had been received by him in France.  In return for sending him these, he promises to send one of his own and I received mine two days ago.  He definitely has the right touch- the envelope has received beautiful hand stamp cancellations, as opposed to my lackluster processing plant high speed dot-matrix cancellation.  Also, in addition to the international postage, mine included a commemorative landscaped stamp of lower Manhattan, one of my favorite places in the world.  This is surely just a coincidence; I don't think he could have known of my frequent trips to New York City over the years.  And inside were included some picture postcards of Mende, the hometown of Daniel, my French correspondent.  Mende is an ancient community in the south of France, with a history that dates to Roman times, around 200 BC.  It is a cathedral town, and the Mende Cathedral is, like the more famous one in Paris, called Notre-Dame, and also is dedicated to Saint Privat.  This whole exchange has been very interesting.

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Saturday, January 10, 2026

Happy Birthday, Mr. Zip!

 In its 250 years of history, the US Postal System has been the driver of diverse areas of technology and innovation.  It was at one point, more than the military, an early user of aviation.  It has been a leading innovator in the advancement of optical character recognition (OCR) that we take for granted today.  And on this day in 1964, Mr. Zip was introduced to the nation.  He was, for over 20 years, the character who would represent the introduction, some months before his debut, of postal zip codes.  Familiar today, these five digit (becoming 9 digit in 1983) codes would help increase accuracy and speed of mail delivery by assigning a systematic code number to each post office in the country.  It was a great step forward in postal efficiency, and would later aid in delivery automation that continues to today.  So happy birthday, Mr. Zip!  Your place in the history of this country will never be forgotten.

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Sunday, January 4, 2026

Pizza Passport

 One interesting gift we received for Christmas was a Pizza Passport. (It was such a great idea, I bought one to give as a gift, and also received one from someone else.)  These are nifty little "passport" sized booklets made for a number of major US cities, listing the prominent independent pizzerias in the metro area.  For each restaurant, one can find basic information on location, history and specialty pizza, and after visiting, you can record and rate your experience.  So we have our project for the coming year!  Many of the places listed in the Birmingham passport are familiar to us.  A few are new to us.  One that is listed unfortunately closed permanently earlier last year.  And a couple we like are not listed; but the book has several blank pages to record those.

So we began the Great Pizza Journey of 2026 last night at Tortugas Homemade Pizza of Hoover, Alabama (there is a second location on southside Birmingham).  This is a venerable old shop we've visited before, but not for many years.  It is the area's only pizzeria devoted to Chicago-style deep dish pizza.  It was founded in 1999 by Carlos Vizcaino, an immigrant from Ecuador with ties to Chicagoland.  Inside the shop are many Chicago flavored wall decorations: newspaper clippings, photographs, sports jerseys, and the like.  Ambiance is bare-bones strip mall casual.  There is a generous amount of table seating in the two "wings" each side of the kitchen area, but on a Saturday night we saw the place fill quickly, with several waiting to be seated as we left.  When we arrived, we were quickly seated, but waited about 15 minutes to first be served.  Once our server finally arrived, things went smoothly.  We ordered drinks to enjoy during the advised 45 minute wait for our deep dish pizza to be baked. We ordered the passport's recommended pie, the Wrigleyville, with smoked sausage, Italian sausage, green bell peppers and onions. (Tortugas also does standard thin crust pizza which arrives much faster, based on what we could see of nearby patrons.)  Our pie was worth waiting for, as the server no doubt routinely assures impatient customers.  Light, crisp crunchy crust envelopes a generous amount of fillings, cheese, and sauce.  The sauce is tangy, with rich tomato flavor and a hint of herbs.  Knife and forks, and a sufficient amount of napkins are provided to enjoy this hearty pizza, a worthy example of the Chicago style.  It was indeed worth the wait.

Passport score: 4 of 5

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Tortugas of Hoover, Alabama

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Casual, with Chicagoland memorabilia everywhere


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The Wrigleyville pizza

Thursday, January 1, 2026

2025 stats

 Happy New Year!  2026 is only a few hours old, and I am already up and Postcrossing.  Stats for last month and the complete year are already available, and it was a moderately active one for me.  In the last twelve months I sent 1,043 postcards to recipients around the world and received 1,012.  In December the numbers were 72 sent and 95 received, bringing my lifetime totals to 11,905 cards sent and 11,866 cards received.  That's a lot of stamps and trips to the local post office! Over the past year, I've made contact with 64 different countries, from American Samoa to Ukraine.  My Postcrossing rank is hovering around where it's been for some time: 28th among 77,303 American Postcrossing members, and #1 among 809 members in Alabama.  It's been a rewarding and enjoyable hobby in 2025, and I look forward to more of the same in 2026.  Write on!

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Wednesday, December 31, 2025

So long, '25!

 On the last day of this seemingly long year, some of us inevitably turn a little contemplative and assess the past twelve months and the changes they've brought to the world.  In just such a mood I write this on a cold, sunny morning in central Alabama, while weighing my role in the universe.

From a personal standpoint, it's been a pretty mixed year.  As are most of them, I suppose, with ups and downs that culminate in a general sense of turmoil or serenity, as the case may be.  Early on in the year, I experienced a potentially serious health episode which resulted in my first ever ambulance ride and ICU admission.  Things turned out alright, and I used the episode to spark a renewed effort in personal wellness.  Through the rest of the year, I've accomplished some much-needed weight loss, improved my fitness, and improved some worrisome medical measurements.  By December, my annual physical exam produced a panel of blood test lab results that were, as my medical professional wife called "textbook perfect."  This is an area that I hope to continue in the coming year.  This summer also saw a landmark birthday for me, which was allowed to pass with a minimum of fanfare, as I had hoped.  Age hasn't produced wisdom, but it has certainly provided experience, which is maybe the next best thing.

The past year also saw our first real vacation in over five years.  In it, I overcame my aversion to the hassles and disappointments that so often accompany modern air travel, and we had perfectly smooth travel to a beautiful location on the midcoast of Maine.  Wonderful weather and beautiful scenery made it an enjoyable and memorable trip.  I only wish such a trip could be reliably reproduced!  Closer to home, I expanded my literary horizons with regular participation in the Trollope Society Big Read, where we read and discussed works of the prolific Victorian author.  That's also something I will continue this year.  This year I took the plunge and arranged to have professional landscapers to tend to our property, freeing me from the drudgery of lawn mowing and yard work.  It's made a tremendous difference in my life, and I wish I'd turned to this option years ago.  And finally, I've been diligently puttering along with Postcrossing, where I exchange postal messages with other like-minded people all around the world.  The daily arrival of a tiny personal connection to another human being does wonders for one's outlook on life.

Taking a wider view, things are decidedly less rosy.  My country continues to suffer a despicable felon at the head of government.  In the past year, nearly everything that could seriously be said to "make America great" has been dismantled or seriously damaged.  As a working research scientist, I have grown an astonishing capacity to absorb the daily developments that represent destruction of the nation's once respected and admired scientific system.  Higher education is under assault, research funding is a shambles, once respectable agencies are now run by crackpot hacks, and the nation's proud scientific tradition is a smoking ruin.  Restoration, if begun tomorrow, would take years to return us to the condition we boasted only 12 months ago.  This is just the area of life with which I am most familiar.  But almost every other aspect of American life has been systematically destroyed in the past year.  The environment is being destroyed, the arts are being demolished, rule of law is being contorted to unrecognizable dimensions, public health, safety, and welfare are a shadow of their former selves, international relations are a shambles, and simple American principles like Freedom of Speech are no longer upheld.  To merely express disapproval of the current regime is to invite thuggish retribution from the government or its agents.  It is difficult for me to express how much I despise the current demented resident of the White House (what remains of it) or of his ignorant cult of supporters.  Fortunately, Postcrossing members do not often delve into politics, and I am only occasionally required to apologize for the disgrace that my country has become.

Since my personal life is on balance a good one, and since the conditions of the wider world are so bad, perhaps it is understandable that my coping mechanism has been to ignore the outside to that extent possible, and instead focus on life close to home.  If I were a better person, I might try to do small things to change the world for the better, for that's what will be required if we are ever to return to a sensible existence on this country.  But I simply don't have that sort of energy.  So I'll content myself with my books, my postcards, my experiments - in the laboratory at work, and in the kitchen at home - and try to hold on until the national pendulum inevitably swings back towards sanity.  Will that begin in the year that begins tomorrow?  I'm not hopeful.  But it surely will eventually, given enough time.  And I will try my best to endure until it does.

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Friday, December 26, 2025

Blog to blog

 A few months ago, I discovered the blog "La Boite aux Lettres du Monde", which my high school and Duolingo French lessons enable me to translate as "Mailbox of the World".  The blog author, Daniel, solicits postal mail with interesting stamps from all over the world, which he posts on his blog.  In return, he promises to reply to senders with mail of his own.  This is a man with whom I share a like mind, so I sent off my letter on about November 30th.  Today, Daniel has posted my letter.  For the international 1st class 1 ounce postage rate of $1.70, I used two first class forever stamps ($ 0.78 each) and a vintage 14 cent stamp.  The paired forever stamps come from this year's issue of battlefield scenes of the American Revolutionary War, which was issued this past April.  Some of that stamp issue are matched pairs, or two stamps that combine to make one scene; the ones I used were from the Battle of Lexington and Concord.  I've had great enjoyment following this blog, and seeing all the beautiful stamps from around the world, and I look forward to receiving my reply from Daniel.  Stay tuned.

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Thursday, December 11, 2025

Big Read finale

 For the past year, I have been participating in The Big Read from the Trollope Society.  In bi-weekly Zoom meetings from London, UK, I have joined in the discussion of several worthy novels by the prolific Victorian author Anthony Trollope.  Coming into 2025, I was well familiar with Trollope's best-know novel series, the Chronicles of Barsetshire, and the Pallisers, but little beyond that.  By following along with this year's reading list, I have been exposed to a much wider selection of the author's works.  Some of the books I have enjoyed greatly...others, not so much.  But it was all time well spent.  And now I embark on the final reading assignment of the year.  It is the short story Christmas at Thompson Hall, first published in 1876.  Instead of buying a bound paper copy of the book as I usually do, I've instead downloaded the text from Project Gutenberg to read on my vintage 2nd generation Kindle.  Instead of turning pages, I'll be virtually flipping them with a button press.  But by the final meeting on December 22, I will have completed the entire reading list of this year's Big Read.

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Saturday, December 6, 2025

Playlist

 Since he began several weeks ago, I've been a regular listener to the podcast of actor Bill Nighy, Ill-advised.  In each weekly episode (which usually drop on Thursdays) Bill dispenses answers to listener-submitted questions on a wide variety of topics.  Everything from personal relationships to sartorial tips receive Bill's ostensibly well considered opinions.  Bill himself cuts off any excessive expectations, however, by prefacing each show with the boast that it is at best an opportunity to squander time.  And it's certainly helped me to do that; my job requires the squandering of large amounts of time, which I do via podcasts and audiobooks while I labor away at the lab bench in the furtherance of science.  Anyway, the show concludes each week with a musical playlist, a compendium of music that Bill recommends.  He is, we are to understand, a devotee of diverse musical genres.  Since I am not, I usually gloss over this segment of the show.  But then is the book segment, for Bill is an avid reader.  And he's mentioned a couple of titles recently that I have greatly enjoyed.  The first is The Bookshop, by Penelope Fitzgerald, which I just finished.  The short novel is the story of a brave young woman, Florence Green, who overextends herself and her capital resources to open a bookshop in a small, dreary coastal town in 1960s England.  In doing so, she upsets the rigid social order of the dull, drab village, and plunges headlong into the morass of bureaucratic red tape and hidebound local inhabitants.  Fitzgerald's delightful novel is a fascinating study of human nature and the incongruous hurdles that are thrown up by prejudice and ignorance.  Apparently, the novel was also made into a feature film of the same name, which Mr. Nighy appeared in.  From this, I immediately moved on to Nighy's next book recommendation, Berlin Game by Len Deighton.  I'm only a few chapters into this first book of a nine book series, but am already enthralled.  It is a cold war spy thriller set in divided Germany shortly after WWII, and it reads very much like a novel of John Le Carre or Graham Greene.  This was once my favorite type of fiction, and it's a pleasure to be reunited with the style by such a well written book.  I expect I'll enjoy this and all the ones to follow.  Bill Nighy's book tip batting average is running high- I hope I can keep up.

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Friday, November 21, 2025

Rare card alert

 As a Postcrossing member for more than 13 years, I've eagerly (but hopefully not obnoxiously) spread the word about my hobby.  Along the way, I've convinced a handful of family and friends to join me in sending postal mail to random strangers around the world.  But in sending nearly 13,000 postcards to randomly assigned people, it was only this week that for the first time I sent a card to someone I know in real life.  This rare card didn't go too far- just to Jacksonville, Florida to an old friend from my college days.  But in sending this first ever card to someone who is not a total stranger, I achieved another first in this hobby that has occupied so much of my time.  Write on!

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