Blues Brothers Movie

Happy 4th of July. I’ve always admired American music, technology, innovation, and film.

A perfect example is Blues Brothers 1980.

After Animal House, John Belushi had the #1 movie, #1 album, and #1 late night TV show. A huge star.

In The Blues Brothers, Jake and Elwood are on “a mission from God” to prevent the foreclosure of their Roman Catholic orphanage.

The Blues Brothers were controversial in a very American way. The intrinsically racist Hollywood film industry assumed they couldn’t sell a celebration of Black music and culture. The industry was wrong.

For example, Ted Mann, head Mann Theatres, refused to book the film as he didn’t want Black patrons. Mann was Jewish.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

Belushi was self-destructive, as is the USA.

I relate more to the Canadian, Dan Ackroyd.

Dan published Blues Brothers: The Arc of Gratitude in 2024. His personal recollections of the Band with interviews with many of the key players.

Broadchurch – season 1

Very intense. Very good.

Great cast.

The eight-episode series began with the murder of an 11-year-old boy in the fictional, close-knit coastal town of Broadchurch in Dorset, United Kingdom. The series depicted the impact that suspicion and media attention have on the community. …

Broadchurch series one received widespread critical acclaim and high viewership ratings. …

I was impressed with the originality of how the killer was revealed.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

Blood Money by Thomas Perry

The 5th book in the excellent Jane Whitefield series is the best yet, I’d say.

Blood Money (2002)

Jane Whitefield, the fearless “guide” who helps people in trouble disappear, make victims vanish, has just begun her quiet new life as Mrs. Carey McKinnon, when she is called upon again, to face her toughest opponents yet.  

Jane must try to save a young girl fleeing a deadly mafioso.   Yet the deceptively simple task of hiding a girl propels Jane into the center of horrific events, and pairs her with Bernie the Elephant, the mafia’s man with the money.  

Bernie has a photographic memory, and in order to undo an evil that has been growing for half a century,he and Jane engineer the biggest theft of all time, stealing billions from hidden mafia accounts and donating the money to charity.  

Heart-stopping pace, fine writing, and mesmerizing characters combine in Blood Money to make it the best novel yet by the writer called “one of America’s finest storytellers,”

Happy Canada Day 2025

With that idiot Trump again in office — I’ve never been happier to be a citizen of Canada.

As per the U.S. News Best Countries rankings, Canada is #5 in terms of quality of life, behind Sweden and Denmark.

If you don’t like Canada, you are free to leave. 😀

We don’t restrict personal freedoms as the ReTrumplican governments do in the USA.

Where They Wait by Scott Carson

Scott Carson is the pen name of Michael Koryta, one of my favourite authors.

Where They Wait (2021) is so readable, you’ll be a couple of hundred pages in before you realize you’re terrified…and then you can’t put it down. Mesmerizing.”

—Stephen King

I notice that Stephen King is always generous with each author setting a book similar to his style … in Maine. 😀

This book is very readable. It’s a bit slow getting going. But I still recommend it — unless you hate horror.

Recently laid-off from his newspaper and desperate for work, war correspondent Nick Bishop takes a humbling job: writing a profile of a new mindfulness app called Clarity. 

It’s easy money, and a chance to return to his hometown for the first time in years.

The app itself seems like a retread of old ideas—relaxing white noise and guided meditations. But then there are the “Sleep Songs.” A woman’s hauntingly beautiful voice sings a ballad that is anything but soothing—it’s disturbing, and more of a warning than a relaxation—but it works. Deep, refreshing sleep follows.

So do the nightmares.

Whistle by Linwood Barclay

Linwood Barclay is an excellent author.

Whistle is his 2025 book.

a supernatural chiller in which a woman and her young son move to a small town looking for a fresh start, only to be haunted by disturbing events and strange visions when they find a mysterious train set in a storage shed.

“Terrific.”— Stephen King on Whistle

It did remind me of a King novel.


Contemplation of a Crime by Susan Juby

The first book in this series — Mindful of Murder — is excellent.

Book 2 not nearly as good.

And book 3 — Contemplation of a Crime (2025) — I could almost call BAD.

Sketchy and unlikely plot. Not much happens.

I won’t continue with these books.

Buddhist butler and reluctant investigator Helen Thorpe bands together with her fellow butler-school graduates to rescue her very wealthy employer and his son …

Butler Helen Thorpe is not one to judge, but the participants in Close Encounters for Global Healing are astonishingly unpleasant.

The five-day program brings together people from across the political spectrum with the goal of helping them bridge their ideological and personal differences. …

The motley assortment of participants includes a burned-out environmental activist, an internet troll, a clued-out consumerist, an alleged white nationalist, and a man who was arrested at the Freedom Convoy in Ottawa. …

No rapprochement between the warring—or at least endlessly bickering—parties seems possible. But when something deadly happens, they must learn to work together. …

Danger in Numbers by Heather Graham

This novel — Danger in Numbers — didn’t work for me.

It’s 1st in the Amy Larson & Hunter Forrest FBI book series — but I won’t be continuing.

Amy and Hunter are super likeable protagonists. Graham is a romance author. The romance is compelling.

But the plot is dumb.

Pacing too slow.

A ritualistic murder on the side of a remote road brings in the Florida state police. Special Agent Amy Larson has never seen worse, and there are indications that this killing could be just the beginning.

The crime draws the attention of the FBI in the form of Special Agent Hunter Forrest, a man with insider knowledge of how violent cults operate, who might never be able to escape his own past.

The rural community is devastated by the death in their midst, but people know more than they are saying.

As Amy and Hunter join forces, every lead takes them further into the twisted beliefs of a dangerous group that will stop at nothing to see their will done.

Paranoia by James O. Born & James Patterson

I haven’t read the Michael Bennett book series — but #17 Paranoia (2025) is an excellent read.

An easy read, too.

Like the Alex Cross and Women’s Murder Club series, FAMILY is very important in this series.

Michael Bennett is an Irish American New York City detective — who raises 10 mixed race adopted children. In this book, his wife is pregnant. That would make 11 children.

In this one, Bennett is investigating a series of deaths of retired cops. Accidents? Suicides?

The assignment is top secret and he is to report to Inspector Cantor only.

Bennett brings in his new, young partner on the case.

The bad guy is super skilled former military.

Weirdly, the title and marketing is all about paranoia. A very minor focus of this plot.

Anna Daley Young ➙ “The Joker”

The Joker (1973) was that evocative hit by Steve Miller Band.

Boston born singer-songwriter Anna Daley Young puts a fresh take on it in 2025.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

‘Cause I’m a picker, I’m a grinner
I’m a lover and I’m a sinner
I play my music in the sun
I’m a joker, I’m a smoker
I’m a midnight toker
I sure don’t want to hurt no one