Quick review: ‘Midnight Assassin’

December 23rd, 2011 by Rural_Rose

Midnight Assassin: A Murder in America's Heartland

Midnight Assassin: A Murder in America’s Heartland by Patricia L. Bryan and Thomas Wolf

My rating: 4 of 5 stars

 

 

My holiday/vacation/part-time-employment-status reading blitz continues!

I was intrigued by this book from the moment I heard about it, not only because it takes place in Iowa (where I just moved) and on a farm (which is the way I grew up), but also because I discovered that I have a few small things in common with one of the authors, (namely that we both once lived and worked in the same small-ish town, and we graduated from liberal arts colleges located a stone’s throw from one another).

Anyway, in addition to having the true-crime hook, the story ends up being quite moving and creates a human picture of the alleged assassin, who, you begin to realize, was in many ways a victim. I appreciate the huge amount of work on the part of the authors’ having worked-in the social and historical research from the time, creating a rich picture of what life must have been like for people (especially farm women) involved in the story.

After the initial draw of the true-crime element, I did start to feel that, in the section of the alleged assassin’s trial, there was less of a hook-y mystery than maybe I had been hoping for. But it was still a compelling read.

And on top of the personal/local connections I mentioned above, it turned out that part of what inspired the research on this story was that it had been reported on (for a Des Moines newspaper) by a young woman who went on to become an award-winning author who was a contemporary of Eugene O’Neill–and she was from Davenport.

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Hedge balls for sale (Hope you brought a wooden nickel!)

September 26th, 2010 by Rural_Rose
picture of hedge balls for sale at Hy-Vee

Hedge balls for sale at Hy-Vee

The first time I ever saw such a concept was on the Knox County Scenic Drive. My sister and I laughed about it all afternoon. Where we were grew up, these ugly little bombs seemed to be as common as the rocks on our gravel road, or acorn caps scattered under the trees.

Hey, wait a minute….
ACORN CAPS, 80 CENTS APIECE!
…anyone?

8 Responses to “Hedge balls for sale (Hope you brought a wooden nickel!)”

  1. Bob says:

    They’re supposed to keep spiders away, especially if you put them in corners.

  2. Emtj says:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maclura_pomifera

    Interesting. No evidence that they repel spiders.

  3. Rural_Rose Alison says:

    Now that’s a new one to me, about the spiders.

  4. Bob says:

    It’s what I was always told growing up. My grandmother always had one or two in the corners of her basement.

    Interesting side note: the Osage Orange, which gives us the hedge tree, is not native to the Midwest. It was imported during the nineteenth century as a means to grow European-style hedge fencing, a much cheaper but longer to cultivate form of fencing than board fences or split rail fences. The invention of practical wire fencing killed it as a productive form of farm management.

  5. Rural_Rose Alison says:

    @Bob, thanks for reading and commenting. That is so funny I’d never heard the spider-remedy theory (if I had, I would definitely have tried it)! Also, interesting about the Osage Orange– we can add them to the list of things in Illinois that aren’t technically supposed to be here: Asian lady beetles, Asian carp, (mass quantities of) deer… I know there are others I can’t think of right now.

  6. Mariah says:

    I have used thehedge balls for years and they work very well
    Mariah

  7. Rob says:

    I have used them and they work. It takes several. I put about 10 in my basement around the walls. I was told that farms used to put them up not as just fence but as a means to reduce insects.

  8. Rural_Rose Alison says:

    I might have to try this!

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Radio essay today on WIUM.

August 18th, 2009 by Rural_Rose

Here’s me remembering the goat named after The Gloved One, if ya wanna read/ take a listen.

Check out some of my other radio essays here.

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Stay penned? Not this kid

August 7th, 2009 by Rural_Rose

The following was originally aired as a commentary on Tri States Public Radio, the NPR member station for Macomb, IL.

(Listen to the audio version online on Tri State Public Radio’s web site)

Every summer during fair season, I want to be a kid again. But it has nothing to do with cotton candy or riding rides. It’s the kids in the livestock barns. When I see little girls who know how to lasso, I want a re-do of my own childhood.

I had every opportunity to develop farm-cred. My parents put me and my sister in 4-H. And I actually lived on a farm, unlike the rest of the kids in our club, which was called the Peppy Peppers.

But the town kids, somehow, were the ones who showed hogs and cows come fair-time.
Me? I did Drawing. And Photography.

My sister didn’t show animals, either, but she did crochet and counter-cross-stitch her way to the state fair. The best I ever did was a blue ribbon for a latch-hook rug but I made it from a kit I bought at Ben Franklin. (All my 4-H work, I made sure, could be done in front of the AC and the TV.)

Dad must have begun to notice his daughters were getting away from the fundamentals of farm life. Because one day he came in for supper announcing he had a surprise for us.

We ran out into the front yard, me hoping for a new 10-speed. Or a pool.

But it was a goat. A little black billy goat.

And instantly, it charged at me. It was being affectionate, but I screamed. “Get it off me!”

My sister laughed. She thought it was cute. So we’ll say she was the one who picked out his name.

Dad came outside with an old Pepsi bottle he had filled with milk and topped with a gray rubber nipple. He got hold of the goat, tipped back his little head, and gently yet forcefully got it to suckle.

I guessed it was kind of cute (standing still).

Later, there was a knock at the kitchen door. (That’s a big deal when you live out in the country.)

Mom went to see who it could be. But no one was there.

She was still looking out when there was another knock.

“Wait a minute.” Mom peered down through the top half of the screen door. “Aha!”
Michael Jackson had gotten out of his pen and was bashing his little head against the metal.

“It’s the goat!” we giggled. “You’re so silly, Michael Jackson!”

Later in the summer, my sister and I had an official chore: to rub a stinky ointment on the goat’s head twice a day. I guess it was like goat Orajel for horn cutting pain. Or maybe horn control.

But we couldn’t get it on him. It was impossible to get him to stand still. He was like a four-legged, black-furred junebug, banging constantly against his pen and against the kitchen door, because he always got out.

Soon, Dad was the one doing horn-deterrent duty.

We didn’t have him a whole summer. Did we even have him a full month? I think Dad finally foisted him off on our cousins, who were also farm kids though I’m not sure why they were expected to do better at keeping him in his pen than we had.

Now I realize the Michael Jackson episode was a foreshadowing of the poor excuse for a farmer’s daughter I was to become. The few times I was ever asked to do chores like walk beans I whined my way out of them.

I could have learned a lesson about raising animals, a small step in keeping our family’s farming tradition from fading away. But what I really cared about was getting into town, where my friends had cable, so I could watch MTV.

The next summer at the fair, I showed not a cow or a sow but a comic strip about a little girl who tries to get out of doing her homework.

These days, I regret that I never learned any of the 4-H skills that would come in handy in real life. (Last time I checked, you can’t latch-hook a button back onto your blouse.) But I have to accept the fact that when I was actually in 4-H and had the chance to learn about farm life, it just wasn’t me.

I guess I couldn’t help it any more than Michael Jackson could help not wanting to stay in his pen.

What I really wanted was to moonwalk, not walk beans.

One Response to “Stay penned? Not this kid”

  1. Deanne says:

    I enjoyed EVERY word of this! Thanks so much Alison!

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Snowy Morning, #10

January 10th, 2008 by Rural_Rose

(White Christmas at my family’s farm, 2008)

Check out more of my photos of the region on my Photography page or via Flickr.

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Snowy Morning, #9

January 10th, 2008 by Rural_Rose

(weathervane in my parents’ yard. White Christmas in 2008.)

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Snowy Morning, #8

January 10th, 2008 by Rural_Rose

(Allis Chalmers’-themed White Christmas at my family’s farm, 2008)

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Snowy Morning, #7

January 10th, 2008 by Rural_Rose

Silo and jimpsonweed(?) on my family’s farm. Christmas 2008)

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Snowy Morning, #6

January 10th, 2008 by Rural_Rose

(White Christmas on my family’s farm, 2008)

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Snowy Morning, #5

January 10th, 2008 by Rural_Rose

(White Christmas on my family’s farm, 2008)

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