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Thanksgiving liver? Un-American!

Happy Thanksgiving, everyone. We are delighted to have younger son Lev home, but we dodged a culinary bullet. We nearly had to dine on Russell’s famous Thanksgiving fried liver.

The trouble was, I was late in getting started cooking. I’d worked on a short story, gone to the gym to work out, and strolled to the store to get the butter we’d forgotten. Plenty of time, methinks.

We’d decided to skip turkey this year, opting for a huge pork shoulder. But when we got it out of the fridge and unwrapped it, the carcass smelled like roadkill. I checked the sell-by date: Oh. This past Monday.

“We have liver,” said Nonna, my Russian wife. “I like your fried liver.”

“Not for Thanksgiving! We can’t eat liver. It’s un-American.”

She checked the freezer. “There’s pelmeni.”

“No! We’re treasonous enough not eating turkey. We can’t possibly eat pelmeni. Or liver. They’ll strip us of our citizenship.”

“I’ll never understand these Thanksgiving traditions of yours. What does it matter what we eat?”

“God is watching.”

I dumpstered the dead hog flesh, dashed to the store (by car this time), and got another ample pork shoulder. After speeding home, I hastily Grokked how long I should cook a six-pound pork shoulder, and…. What!? Seven hours!?

By now it was one o’clock. And I had to pick Lev up at the Greyhound station in 50 minutes.

Oh, well. Thanksgiving dinner at 8 PM. We doused the hog meat in olive oil and our very delicious mix of herbs and spices and stuck it in the oven.

When I picked up Lev, I broke the bad news. “Looks like we’re going to have to cook liver if you’re hungry. The pork shoulder won’t be ready until 8.”

“I’m down with that,” he said. “I like liver.”

How long, O Lord, must I dwell among the Philistines?

Luckily, as it turned out, the AI lied. Three hours was enough to cook us a crispy-crusted, tender, delicious heap of pork. And the liver can wait for another day.

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Of salamanders and missing cats

I called my mother on Saturday, and as usual nowadays, she couldn’t really hear me. She misplaced her hearing aids while in rehab earlier this year, probably the third or fourth pair she has lost. Pity, because these were very advanced and expensive ones, probably costing $5,000.

But really, they provided only limited help. Her hearing, like my own, has declined to a point where hearing aids can’t do much to correct the problem.

Mom mentioned something annoying one of her caregivers had done. I said, “Was it Alejandra?”

“What?” Mom said.

“Was the caregiver Alejandra?”

She said, “I heard you say, ‘Was there a salamander?”

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Dig into a trove of my 40-year writing career

Since editors and companies are asking, I’ve added a tab above with examples of my writing. Many stories and photographs are lost after a 40-year career, but here is your go-to site for the works of Working.

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Plug from the Russian translation’s editor

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My old pal Germanicus, starkers

Reflections on a Roman sculpture.

The other day at the Art Institute of Chicago, we ran into a familiar figure: a bronze of the Roman general Nero Claudius Drusus Germanicus, generally known simply as Germanicus.

The statue stands in an exhibition of ancient Roman sculptures from Italy’s Torlonia Collection in Italy.

I felt as if I knew him. I first encountered Germanicus in 1976 as a teenager, while watching the BBC Masterpiece Theatre series “I, Claudius.” He was seen as was something of a first-century JFK, charismatic and full of promise before he was tragically assassinated.

I later read the source novel by Robert Graves, a tale of intrigue, murder, and palace coups among Caesar Agustus’ family. Germanicus won victories as a general on the German frontier but was later poisoned in Syria. Many blamed Emperor Tiberias, a brooding dissolute who was jealous of Germanicus’ popularity. Most dangerously to Tiberias, the soldiers adored their general.

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Of dementia, frog jumping, and angel campouts

Or, a son’s letter recalls an amphibian’s ignoble end.

My mother has been diagnosed with dementia, so I have been sending her letters to spark old family memories. This week I wrote to her about our family’s visit to the Calaveras County Fair & Jumping Frog Jubilee in the mid-1960s. More on that below.

Dementia takes many forms. The rehab facility wing where she’s staying features a rectangular hallway around a courtyard where shrubs and eucalyptus trees are planted. Some patients sit staring out the window wherever staffers park them. Others propel themselves in their wheelchairs with their stockinged feet, determined to keep circling, circling, hour after hour. Get out of their way or they’ll scowl at you and gibber a rebuke. During my recent visit, one poor fellow asked me whenever he circled by, “Where am I?”

The Workings in the late ’60s, several years after the Angels Camp trip.

Mom can appear mentally sound if forgetful—conversant and aware of where she is. But she often falls into confusion. At first she thought she’d been kidnapped, rather than transferred here from a hospital after a fall. She still keeps telling us that my mentally disabled brother Jeff is lost, out wandering the Mojave Desert where we lived fifty-seven years ago.

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Chemodan III: ‘Awfully happy’: George Walton finds love—and escapes the USSR with an aristocrat wife

This is the third post in a series about a mysterious suitcase that once belonged to a young Briton who followed his father into a career as a diplomat in the USSR in the 1930s. Check here for parts one and two.

Even before his posting abroad, George already had connections with the Soviet literary scene. With Reginald Merton he translated Aleksandr Neverov’s 1923 novel Tashkent: City of Bread (Victor Gollancz, London, 1930). The work prefigures the defining horror of George’s time in the Soviet Union: the famine induced by the Bolsheviks’ violent collectivization. From 1931 to 1934, millions would die in Ukraine, Russia, and Kazakhstan under the communists’ harebrained war on successful farmers, whom it dubbed “kulaks.”

In the novel, famine stalks the Volga River region around Samara. Twelve-year-old Mishka Dodonov has lost his father, grandparents, and other relatives to the hunger. To find grain for his mother and brothers, he rides the rails 1,300 miles to Soviet Uzbekistan.

From America to the starving of Russia: a 1922 poster hails food aid from the U.S.

In the Walton-Merton translation, the novel reads:

“The two younger ones were useless little people in these hard times; one spent his time begging for gruel, while the other was carving a toy windmill for the roof. The mother was weak with hunger. She used to go down to the stream for water but had barely strength enough to get back. But for all her cries and laments the famine showed her no mercy.

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Chemodan I: A mysterious suitcase’s tale of war, revolution, and love in the time of Stalin

This is the first in a three-part series. Check here for parts two and three.

I knelt packing my bag on the floor of the London townhouse of Andrew Fox, a British businessman and friend from when we both lived in the Russian Pacific seaport of Vladivostok. I had come here to interview him for a memoir piece on the 1990s and early 2000s in Russia’s “Wild East.” This was a turbulent era when mob-linked political bosses kidnapped journalists, a shipping industry whistleblower was blown to bits by TNT planted under her bed, and the governor threatened to jail Andrew, who also happens to be the honorary British consul general to the city.

I was double-checking my passport, wallet, and other essentials (My hearing aids! Oh, in my ears) when Andrew came thumping downstairs with a leather suitcase. As scuffed as old shoes, it was peeling open and dusted with dried mold that rubbed off like chalk on one’s clothes.

Unidentified photograph found in the suitcase, likely of George Walton, his wife Natalia (Tata), and his Russian mother.

“Before you go, did you want to take a look at this?” he said.

That’s right; he had mentioned something about a suitcase full of old British documents concerning Russia. I was heading to St Pancras to catch a train back to Belgium. Yet who could resist this strange object? “Suitcase” translates as chemodan in Russian, a word as ordinary as its English equivalent. But when applied to this curiosity, it seemed to describe a magical object that might pop up in an Isaac Bashevis Singer story.

“Sure,” I said. “We have time.”

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Pardon the J6ers

For four years we have heard of the horrors—unique in American history, we’re told—of the January 6, 2021, “insurrection” and “attack on the Capitol.”

On the first anniversary, Veep Kamala Harris shuddered to recall “dates [that] echo throughout history … that occupy not only a place on our calendars, but a place in our collective memory: December 7, 1941, September 11, 2001, and January 6, 2021.”

During an address to a joint session of Congress, President Joe Biden cast his troubled gaze 160 years back in history, calling J6 “the worst attack on our democracy since the Civil War.”

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A step in the right direction, but…

Washington Post owner Jeff Bezos fired off an op-ed on Monday explaining his decision to stop endorsing presidential candidates. The move is the right one, even if many of the newspaper’s staff are in open rebellion.

“Most people believe the media is biased,” he writes. “Anyone who doesn’t see this is paying scant attention to reality, and those who fight reality lose. Reality is an undefeated champion.”

Reports say the Amazon founder also intends to employ more conservatives, a welcome move, given that the legacy media’s idea of a conservative tends to be never-Trumpers like the Post’s Jennifer Rubin. She has flipped on some of her most heartfelt issues rather than share a position with the ex-president.

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