The Rabid Librarian's Ravings in the Wind
Born, like other comic book characters, out of an otherwise trivial but life-changing animal bite, the Rabid Librarian seeks out strange, useless facts, raves about real and perceived injustices, and seeks to meet her greatest challenge of all--her own life.
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Saturday, July 11, 2026
Wonderful
In July 1054, court astronomers in China recorded a new "guest star" near Tianguan, the star we now call Zeta Tauri.
| Hubble Space Telescope mosaic image of the Crab Nebula. Credit: NASA, ESA, J. Hester and A. Loll (Arizona State University). |
I didn't know this part - it makes it even sadder
This was on top of the post-polio syndrome and long Covid issues she was already dealing with. 😢
My sincerest condolences to her loved ones.
Anticipation
Everything is happily staked now. The Kellogg's Breakfast tomato is taller than I am, with the pot.
| Kellogg's Breakfast Tomatoes getting bigger |
| Jalopeños almost ready to pick |
| Carmen Sweet Italian peppers They are red at maturity but sweet green, too. |
| Indigo Cherry Drops fruit heavy on the vine, just needing to ripen |
Eureka!!! A memory from long ago...
[UPDATE: Every single one of them (The McGuffey's Eclectic Primer through the Sixth Eclectic Reader, plus the Eclectic Spelling Book) is available in .EPUB and other formats on Project Gutenberg, meaning they can be sent to a Kindle or be read on a Nook or Kobo. I just sent them to my Kindle Scribe. There is much happiness here now. You can find them here. All but the 2nd and 5th readers are also in .PDF (not sure why they're not), so they can be printed.]
I adore pop-up books
A giant pop-up book unfolds at LA’s Central Library
A pop-up book that’s seeking to break the world record for size has unfolded at the Central Library in downtown Los Angeles.Here is the site for the actual exhibition: Luceros y Penumbras from the Library Foundation of Los Angeles.
The art piece is 31 feet wide, more than 11 feet tall, and weighs in at 1,800 pounds.
Luceros y Penumbras, which roughly translates to “starlight and shadows,” is rooted in L.A. artist Daniel González’s experience visiting the library and his family in Mexico as a child.
Worrisome
Reading allows children to live in a vibrant world, surrounded by fairies, elves and talking animals, transporting them to places where the impossible becomes real. But reading for pleasure also helps children learn more effectively and broadens how they view, interpret and interact with the world. It gives them a form of expression that fuels their imagination and empathy for themselves and others.
But the percentage of children who read for fun is declining.
Just 37% of 9-year-olds and 14% of 13-year-olds read for fun almost every day in 2025, according to the National Assessment of Educational Progress. By middle school, just 1 in 7 kids say they read for pleasure each day.
#20 of goal of 24 for 2026
To be honest
Trying to garden again
With some success.
On May 14th, I went to the public library's Northside Branch for the Master Gardeners' plant giveaway and informational session, and they gave me four plants: a Carmen sweet Italian pepper, a Craig's Grande jalopeño heirloom pepper, a Kellogg's Breakfast Tomato, and an Indigo Cherry Drops Tomato. I planted them in some containers that hadn't had anything in years except decaying leaves and some earthworms, hoping they'd do well, knowing I'd have to water and fertilise. Thanks to Mother Nature, I haven't actually had to water more than a couple of times, even during a drought, as the leaves kept the soil moist and we've had quite a bit of rain since it got very hot. I did have something get the first couple of cherry tomatoes, and nothing has actually ripened yet. I have a very long Carmen pepper that I'm considering taking green rather than red, as they're still sweet. We'll see. I need to tie the Indigo Cherry to the stakes better, as it's starting to fall over; it has so much fruit on it, and I'm afraid it'll break. Here it is in pictures:
I'm hoping I can beat the squirrels to the tomatoes. That's been a problem in the past. We'll see.





