Salvation – season 1

Salvation (2017) is an American thriller TV series.

Not bad, as thrillers go. But only 47% on Rotten Tomatoes.

The cast is compelling.

Santiago Cabrera as Darius Tanz is good. Something like an Elon Musk.

… an asteroid that will impact the Earth in just six months, highlighting the attempts to prevent it and its worldwide ramifications. The show looks at how different individuals and groups of people react to the impending doom.
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Rhine Falls (Rheinfalls), Switzerland

The highlight of my Rhine river cycling tourso far — has been the the most powerful waterfall in Europe.

The Rhine Falls (GermanRheinfall) are 150 metres (490 ft) wide and 23 metres (75 ft) high. 

There are other highlights nearby, including the Wörth Castle (Swiss GermanSchlössli Wörth) — BUT I couldn’t safely leave my bike and gear to visit those.

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Argylle – Book and Movie

Watch the film. Skip the book.

Argylle is a 2024 spy action comedy film: Bryce Dallas HowardSam RockwellBryan CranstonCatherine O’HaraHenry CavillDua LipaAriana DeBoseJohn Cena, and Samuel L. Jackson.


Argylle Delivers Twisty-Turny Tedium, But Its Action Scenes Are Great

That sums it up.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

I thought the book would be similar.

It’s not.

I thought the book would be a fun action thriller — something like the film.

It’s not.

In 2024, Terry Hayes and Tammy Cohen were revealed as the writers of the tie-in novel to the film Argylle, under the pseudonym “Elly Conway“.

… I can’t really find any relationship between the movie and book from the word Argylle.

At most you might call the book some kind of origin story for Aubrey Argylle.

But the only interesting character for me was the Russian / American uber-villain and wealthy tycoon Vasily Federov.

Off to Cycle the Rhine 🚴

I picked up my bike in Munich. Friends had been storing it for me since LAST summer.

We had a great time. Several good meals. Plenty of wine. And one round of golf.

Claudia and her buoys 😀

I’m planning to cycle the Rhine north through Germany ➙ Continue up to Denmark ➙ Ferry to the Faroe Islands ➙ And on to Iceland.

I’ll fly out of Reykjavík.


I’ll start in July 2024 where I quit cycling summer of 2023 — in beautiful Lindau on Lake Constance, Germany.

… I want to get back to this kind of shape. 6 foot, 3 inches. 215 pounds. 😀

Summer 2023

I’ll mostly be riding the Eurovela 15 – Rhine Cycle Route.

As the Deutschland Rail ticket is still next to free in 2024, I’ll hop local trains as needed in Germany.

At some point I’ll leave the river and head for the Danish border. Likely joining the Eurovela 12, the North Sea Cycle Route

I must reach the north tip of Denmark to catch my long scheduled ferry to the Faroe Islands.

The Lantern Men by Elly Griffiths

Hmm. Not nearly as good as the previous novel.

In the 12th book of the Ruth Galloway series, everyone is surprised.

Ruth has a new job, home, and partner, and she is no longer North Norfolk police’s resident forensic archaeologist.

That is, until convicted murderer Ivor March offers to make DCI Nelson a deal.

Nelson was always sure that March killed more women than he was charged with. Now March confirms this and offers to show Nelson where the other bodies are buried—but only if Ruth will do the digging.

Curious, but wary, Ruth agrees.

March tells Ruth that he killed four more women and that their bodies are buried near a village bordering the fens, said to be haunted by the Lantern Men, mysterious figures holding lights that lure travelers to their deaths.

Is Ivor March himself a lantern man, luring Ruth back to Norfolk?

What is his plan, and why is she so crucial to it?

And are the killings really over?

The Good, the Bad and the Aunties by Sutanto

Silly and entertaining. I’d call this a Young Adult novel.

Jesse Q. Sutanto is a Chinese-Indonesian author.

She grew up in Singapore, Indonesia, and Oxford.

In 2021, Sutanto published her hit novel, Dial A for Aunties

The Good, the Bad and the Aunties (2024) is one of the sequels. A comedy.

On Meddy Chan’s honeymoon travels, the happy couple flies to Jakarta for a Chinese New Years family reunion.

… theft, hostage taking, and abduction. But it’s nothing the aunties can’t handle.

Farewell Austria – Leaving Salzburg

Of the 4 largest cities in Austria, Salzburg is easily my favourite.

This time I walked several times through high parklands above town. Up on these cliffs.

There are surprisingly few people up there.

And great vistas, of course.

The old town is great.

But there are many modern touches, as well.

All that said — I much prefer Germany to Austria. 😀

Visiting Kitzbühel, Austria

You’ll already know the name Kitzbühel as a legendary winter sports resort

The famous Hahnenkamm mountain above Kitzbühel, where every January the world’s best downhill skiers race for World Cup glory. Many consider it the most challenge course on the circuit.

I went to hike down that famed slope. Over 1200m. … I took a cable car up. 😀

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Crazy Canucks Tod Brooker and Ken Read won here.

The town itself is not particularly gorgeous when compared against other famed ski villages.

But I still enjoyed it.

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Phantom Orbit by David Ignatius

David Ignatius is an acclaimed journalist and expert on the CIA.

A fiction author, as well, with 11 novels in the suspense/espionage fiction genre.

This is the first for me — and probably the last. The story telling was TOO SLOW.

An un-Thriller.

Phantom Orbit is his 2024 book. And it is very much up-to-date in terms of technology. The detail, relevancy, and realism are impressive.

Threats to the American GPS system and satellites, especially from Russia and China, is the main thread.

It follows Ivan Volkov, a Russian student in Beijing …

The years pass, and they are not kind to Volkov.

After the loss of his son, a prosecutor who’d been too tough on corruption, and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Volkov makes the fraught decision to contact the CIA.

He writes: Satellites are your enemies, especially your own…Hidden codes can make time stop and turn north into south…If you are smart, you will find me.

The Year of the Locust by Terry Hayes

Terry Hayes is the English-born Australian screenwriterproducer and author.

His first book was the acclaimed novel I Am Pilgrim (2013).

Hayes and co-author Tammy Cohen were revealed as the writers of the tie-in novel to the film Argylle, under the pseudonym “Elly Conway”.

The Year of the Locust (2023) is his 2nd solo novel — and WHAT A NOVEL.

Any other writer would have broken it up into 3 books.

It’s LONG.

BEST consider it 3 books.

… an epic espionage thriller filled with wrath and retribution, faith and forgiveness, sacrifice, love and loss, all in the name of an almighty being.

It’s a mind-bending story of one man’s evolution from spy to savior when the world descends into “utter darkness.”

Hayes has constructed the plot as a quest narrative, taking Kane to the ends of the earth and back to save humanity from a person who has earned his place in the “pantheon of terrorism.” …

In the novel, Hayes takes us on a deep dive into the workings of the CIA and the National Security Agency when Kane prepares for each stage of his journey. The settings are immersive and the historical details remarkable.

From Afghanistan to Pakistan, from D.C. to Russia’s deep state and so many places in between, each landscape where Kane journeys is described in rich geographic detail with compelling backstories that contextualize each region’s cultures and values. …

At close to 800 pages, this is a really big book with really big themes and chapter after chapter of blockbuster action (and graphic violence), often ending in foreshadowing that cranks up the suspense.

The first three-fourths of “Year” definitely is the book many readers of Hayes’ first novel, “I Am Pilgrim” (another allusion to sacred texts), have waited 10 years to read. When the final part of the novel shifts into sci-fi territory, the sudden syncopation in the plot lines may throw some readers off. It’s bonkers and breathtaking.

Review: ‘Year of the Locust’ is a bonkers gem from the writer of blockbuster ‘I Am Pilgrim’

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