The Glass Character
Showing posts with label climate change. Show all posts
Showing posts with label climate change. Show all posts
Wednesday, September 25, 2019

To My Old Brown Earth

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Primal Pete Seeger. His last song. I just watched, for the second time, the PBS bio of Seeger, and could not help but shudder at how muc...
Saturday, November 14, 2015

Things fall apart: thoughts on the attack on Paris

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This started out as a journal entry, then evolved from there. I have been known to delete posts that I later thought were too negative...
Sunday, October 19, 2014

The most terrifying video I've ever seen

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Back when this first came out, in 1968, nobody knew what the hell he was talking about. It was just some kind of nonsensical sci-fi visio...
Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Summer in Siberia: or, a day at the bitch

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Monday, July 1, 2013

We didn't do the green thing back then

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(This is the sort of pass-it-around thing I don't usually like, but the more of it you read the more light bulbs come on.) Checkin...
Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Day of the Ice Heave (or: the Earth Strikes Back)

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This is raw footage, shot in portrait rather than landscape (which I thought went out of style 5 or 10 years ago), but I include it in it...
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Monday, December 31, 2012

Top Ten News Stories of 2013!

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    (BLOGGER'S NOTE . You thought 2012 was awful? Wait until you read these stories from 2013! How come I know all this stuff in...
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About Me

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Margaret Gunning
Port Coquitlam, British Columbia, Canada
Welcome to Margaret Gunning's blog: a tribute to the strangeness of the ordinary. Ms.Gunning is the author of The Glass Character (Thistledown Press), her paean/tribute to the brilliant silent screen comic Harold Lloyd. Researching and writing this novel celebrating Harold's legacy and legend was by far the most compelling (and fun!) experience in her long and varied writer's life. The novel is available on Amazon and Kindle, Thistledown Press, and other major book sites. Her previous novels, Better than Life (NeWestPress) and Mallory (Turnstone Press) explore her lifelong fascination with family secrets, alienation, and the surprising joys of the ordinary. She has also written hundreds of book reviews (Montreal Gazette, Vancouver Sun, Toronto Globe and Mail) and newspaper columns for small-town papers across the country. Her philosophy: "Everything that happens is happening for the first time."
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