Outdoor Dancing

One of the things I love about summer in New York is all of the dancing (much of it free!) that takes place outside. Last Friday Dustin and I went to the Midsummer Night Swing Ceili Dance. The last time I went to a Ceili was in early high school, when Bronwen and I went to one in Portland that was in the common room above a police station, so I’d forgotten exactly how much fun it is. It’s also amazing exercize — a woman in our set was wearing a pedometer and a couple of hours in announced that we’d danced four miles.

On Sunday we make it over to the Pier 54 Moondance for swing to the Sultans of Swing (Who Dustin actually danced to at Crystal Ballroom in Portland about six years ago.).

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Your very own radio

If you haven’t already checked it out, go to pandora. You give them an artist or a song (or multiple artists and songs), they analyze it and play music that’s similar. If you don’t like a song, you give it a thumbs down and skip it. It’s a great way to find new bands, or listen to stuff that you can’t quite justify owning. It’s also great for those moments when you know what type of music mood you’re in, but you don’t want to actually choose the specific music.

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Dorothy L. Sayers

I have a soft spot in my heart for mystery novels. As many as I read, however, I keep coming back to my favorite detective, Lord Peter Wimsey. How can you not fall head over heals with this kind of monologue:

“Take my cab and tell him to hurry. He may for you; he doesn’t like me very much. Can I,” said Lord Peter, looking at himself in the eighteenth-century mirror over the mantelpiece, “can I have the heart to fluster the flustered Thipps further—that’s very difficult to say quickly—by appearing in a top-hat and frock-coat? I think not. Ten to one he will overlook my trousers and mistake me for the undertaker. A grey suit, I fancy, neat but not gaudy, with a hat to tone, suits my other self better. Exit the amateur of first editions; new motif introduced by solo bassoon; enter Sherlock Holmes, disguised as a walking gentleman. There goes Bunter. Invaluable fellow—never offers to do his job when you’ve told him to do somethin’ else. Hope he doesn’t miss the ‘Four Sons of Aymon.’ Still, there is another copy of that—in the Vatican.** It might become available, you never know—if the Church of Rome went to pot or Switzerland invaded Italy—whereas a strange corpse doesn’t turn up in a suburban bathroom more than once in a lifetime—at least, I should think not—at any rate, the number of times it’s happened, with a pince-nez, might be counted on the fingers of one hand, I imagine. Dear me! it’s a dreadful mistake to ride two hobbies at once.”

The first novel, “Whose Body?” is in the public domain and available for free online.

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