Here's the concluding segment of the 130th anniversary video of the Maine Warden Service (this one features my friend, the wonderful writer Kate Braestrup).
For more information about wardens visit the bureau's Web site.
News
Here's the concluding segment of the 130th anniversary video of the Maine Warden Service (this one features my friend, the wonderful writer Kate Braestrup).
For more information about wardens visit the bureau's Web site.
Here's the second installment in the video history of the Maine Warden Service:
I write about a fictional version of the Maine Warden Service. Mike Bowditch is not a real warden (if he were he would have been fired by now), but I do my best to give some sense of what the actual profession is like and the actual challenges Maine game wardens face. I hope I do so in a way that respects the sacrifices, bravery, and professionalism of the real men and women of the service.
Last year was the 130th anniversary of the Maine Warden Service. As part of the ceremony, Corporal John MacDonald and his team created a series of videos that do a far better job than my books at capturing their important but misunderstood profession. Here's the first installment in the series with two others to follow here over the next few days.
Alyssa Rosenberg has an interesting item today about a move by the Albemarle County School Board to take a Study in Scarlet off the sixth-grade reading list. The boardmembers deemed the first Sherlock Holmes novel insufficiently respectful to Mormons.
While lost of accusations of racism, sexism, or anti-religious bias that lead to book-banning are specious or un-subtle, this is a sensationalistic novel. There’s no question that Arthur Conan Doyle’s depiction of Mormonism in A Study in Scarlet, written in 1886, 42 years after Joseph Smith’s death but four years before the 1890 manifesto that disavowed plural marriage in the church, is sensationalist. The plot revolves heavily around a forced plural marriage and Mormon military units like the Danite bands.
Rosenberg points out that the book isn't entirely unsympathetic to Mormons, and the sensationalism flows in many directions. No one, she says, would ever mistake it for a definitive history of the Church of Latter Day Saints.
And more importantly, even if the details are sensationalistic, it is true that plural marriage and defense of the faith by force are part of early Mormon history. There’s a difference between a right to have the fact that you believe treated with respect, and the right to have the history your faith presented only the terms that make you comfortable, no matter the actual facts. Children also have a right to learn critical thinking in school, and works that offend no one are unlikely to help them develop those skills.
She would like to see the Baker Street Irregulars purchase a bunch of Sherlock Holmes books for Albemarle County schoolkids in response. That's a cause I would gladly support.
Christopher Morgan, writing for the Criminal Element, has some other good points about the Scandal in Charlottesville here.
At the Edgar Awards back in April I sat up in my chair when the award for best teleplay went to a British TV show which I had never seen and about which I knew next to nothing. Since the spring, I have discovered the dark pleasures of watching Luther myself and am looking forward to the American premiere of season 2 on September 28.
If you haven't seen the show before, you can currently stream the first season on Netflix. It's violent and disturbing, but Idris Elba and Ruth Wilson turn in great performances.