Good Tuesday afternoon, Stroock's Books reader(s). We have returned from a brief sojourn to the Stroock Northern Strategic Direction where things are more or less okay. As we wrote the last sentence we thought, don't tempt the gods. It seems we've tempted the gods.
On the drive to and back from the Berkshires we thought of potential alternate history WWII stories and came up with nothing. We've seven weeks till submission. Okay, we did a little research and eliminated one idea, this is a good thing.
We did spend a lot of mental energy on War Night's Lexington story. Right now, Lexington begins at the University of Kentucky campus and ends there. Nice book ends, no? We're strongly considering wrapping up the story in this manner. There will probably be details to add in between. We'll be working on that today.
Well, we got a little PR for The Great Nuclear War of 1975. Thank you, Sarah Hoyt.
The Jerusalem Post reports, 'In a revealing survey by the Jerusalem Center for Foreign Affairs (JCFA), some 64% of the Israeli public stands against establishing a Palestinian state as part of the normalization process with Saudi Arabia.' Well duh and what's wrong with the other 26%? Outside of the peacenik Meretz, the rump Labor Party, and the Arabs, there is no constituency in Israel for a 'Palestinian' state. None whatsoever.
Israel is off to a bad week with the Rafah bombing and more diplomatic opprobrium. Someone else wrote that the war has been a diplomatic catastrophe for Israel. Quite right. The way to end the catastrophe is to end/win the war. Good news on that front as Israeli tanks are advancing up the Philadelphi Corridor and also into central Rafah. Good. The longer the war goes on, the worse the situation gets for Israel. Finish it, Bibi.
Last night we watched The Bridge on the River Kwai (again) which we regard as one of the ten greatest war movies ever made. We'll be sharing a few thoughts all week. To start, this film is about three different attitudes toward war, the honorable (Japanese) the proper (British) and the pragmatic (American). Do reader(s) not have just a bit of sympathy for the hapless Colonel Saito as his plan falls apart and the camp is taken over by his British antagonist? Exit question, Colonel Nicholson is the bad guy, isn't he?
The nice men are coming today to rebuild our downstairs bathroom.
The Bridge over the River Kwai is a fantastic movie. I always picture Col Saito as a man who was locked into Japanese traditions of abhor surrender and the mission is always completed on time. Col. Nicholson had the unenviable mission of keeping his soldiers in high spirits and them seeing their officers in charge and not as pawns to the Japanese army. To the point where he could not even allow in his mind the commandos to complete their mission. The American was there just to survive as easily as possible.Great story of drama. The whistling scene is a favorite.
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