Halloween Chocolates
Author: David From http://www.musingsoverabarrel.com/ • Nov 6th, 2023Category: Blog Entries.Local
Cheers!
I was super excited about the new book from Bill Watterson and John Kascht. At 72 pages and 350 words you can read this book in 90 seconds. So read it 3 or 4 times.
I know a lot of Calvin & Hobbes fans are unhappy with the new work, but really, if you thought Watterson was going to do anything related to C&H, you don't really know the author like you think you do.
That said, I do think there is a direct line from Calvin to the story in The Mysteries. C&H was about maintaining your child like sense of wonder. Calvin doesn't age, but the benefit, even the necessity, of not growing up was essential to the comic. Just compare Calvin's constant sense of adventure with his parent's constant sense of resignation.
Now read The Mysteries again and contemplate the ending implied for the people in the book that think they have it all figured out.
Also think about who exactly Watterson is talking about in The Mysteries. Who are the kings people?
Watterson's genius is that he can say so much with 350 words.
I think it's time to revisit The Complete Calvin & Hobbes.

A couple of bloggers, Kev and Manu, are talking about how much they spend on recurring subscriptions, and that is something I've been meaning to check on for a while. Subscription fees, by design, tend to hit your account well past their usefulness.
Entertainment
Subtotal - $89.28
If you are wondering why I have both YouTube Premium (which includes YouTube Music) and Pandora, let's just say being married for 32 years teaches you which battles aren't worth fighting. Peacock I originally bought for the Premier League, but my team got relegated last season, so I haven't been watching much soccer. I need to check if anybody else is using Peacock regularly. Cup of Coffee is my absolute favorite online destination. It's a baseball Substack with a comments community that is straight out of a blog circa 2005. Clearly, I should pick one of Netflix and Hulu and alternate subscriptions every 3 months or something. Again though, that may fall into into the battle not worth fighting category.
Birds
Birding is a major hobby for us for supporting the two primary conservation organizations is important.
Subtotal - $10
News
I think some of the issues on the US can be traced directly to the collapse of the newspaper industry. Local papers kept local politicians in line, and nobody is really doing that job these days.
Subtotal - $15.25
Internet
Subtotal - $15.50
Yes, I really am down to 1 domain name. I recently switched from Google One to Dropbox, but given that Google is cheap I'm keeping it as a backup of the backup. I can probably save $2.50 a month by using S3 directly, and it's on my list of thing to do.
Total - $130 (rounded)
I was budgeting $110 for subscriptions, and it's been at least a couple of years since I did this sort of audit, so that is not too bad. I'd like to get it under $100 though.
There are 386,998 words in the directory containing my blog posts, or about 4-5 novels.
I made pretty good advertising money back in peak blog, so there is a strong argument I made more blogging than if I had self-published 4 or 5 novels.
But "I've published 5 novels" has a ring to it that you just don't get from "I've published 5 novels worth of blog posts."
I've spent a lot of time over the last 20+ years writing a lot of words that were read by not many people.
My high school English teachers would probably be impressed by the quantity, at least. The quality, not so much. The quantity of typos would kill them though.
There is no real point to this post. I just suddenly wondered what my word output was. I have never tried to calculate this before. It's super easy on Linux, one simple command. It turns out it is greater than I expected. I was thinking maybe two novels of words, not five.