Video: Lively Siena, Pre-Palio

The night before Siena’s Palio, at midnight, the streets were filled with eating, drinking, singing, and camaraderie, as neighborhoods gathered to pump each other up for the big horse race. The city is full of both locals (who live this ritual as if it’s in their DNA) and tourists (who are generally clueless and are just waiting for the race), living in parallel worlds. Your challenge is to bridge those worlds.

Siena is divided into 17 neighborhoods, or contrade. Historically, these were autonomous, competitive, and filled with rivalries. Each contrada — with its own parish church, fountain, and square — still plays an active role in the life of the city. And each is represented by a mascot (porcupine, unicorn, she-wolf, and so on) and a distinctive flag — colors worn and flown all year long, but omnipresent as the race nears.  And, tonight, each contrada has a party going on.


This is Day 93 of my 100 Days in Europe series. As I research my guidebooks and make new TV shows, I’m reporting on my experiences and lessons learned in Vienna, the Alps, the Low Countries, England, Siena, and beyond. Find more on my travel blog.

(This post originally appeared at blog.ricksteves.com/blog/palio-party.)

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Garmin releases its first luxury smartwatch, the Fenix Chronos

scaled-5863 Garmin has just announced the Fenix Chronos, an amazingly elegant smartwatch with all the features of their standard GPS exercise watches – the Vivoactve, for example – with a case and aesthetic that would be at home in a fine watch shop. That’s right: this is the first fancy smartwatch that you could wear in the boardroom, bedroom, and gym. Oh, and it costs $1,499.99 for… Read More

Will Johnson/Weld Revolutionize American Politics?

One of the great big lies of modern American politics has been the idea of the package deal–if you want social freedom you have to accept the regulatory state, high taxes and crony capitalism OR, if you want economic freedom you have to trample on people’s private lives, control their thinking, impose religion on them, and teach them to pray in school before you send them off to war.

Those are the package deals offered voters by Democrats and Republicans. Sadly, many Americans haven’t questioned it. At each election they reluctantly decided whether they are more worried about social freedom or economic freedom. As we seesawed between Republicans and Democrats both freedoms suffered.

Faced with such choices the number of Americans who identified with either of the duopolistic parties shrank. More and more voters said they were independents. Today, self-identified independents outnumber Democrats and Republicans. These modern Mugwumps tend firmly toward in the moderate middle–they aren’t keen on intolerant Religious Right campaigns, nor are they fond of the tax and spend policies of Democrats.

The problem has been, as these moderates drop out, they leave the “activism” to the worst elements in each party. Fundamentalists Know-nothings have come to control Republican primaries and the Democrats are strongly influenced by those who most directly benefit from excessive government–the public sector unions.

The detrimental impact of intolerant religious fanaticism is obvious. Less obvious is the impact of the public sector unions. We face a crisis over the seemingly constant incidents of police brutality and witness horrific killings, where the officers get a paid vacation–called administrative leave. In the end, there are little to no consequences for the officers involved and incidents follow incidents.

Why is nothing done? The Chicago Tribune’s description of Chicago politics could apply in most big cities. “From the moment Chicago’s Fraternal Order of Police started negotiating its first contract with City Hall 35 years ago, the union identified an issue that would prove key to its members: ensuring officers had robust protections when they were investigated for misconduct.” The result of this “has been a flawed system in which officers are rarely held accountable for misconduct.”

These unions throw most of their cash at Democrats. So, the very people many on the Left expect to protect them from police misconduct are beholden to the unions that demand, and get, contracts protecting cops when they decide a black life doesn’t matter. As The Atlantic noted:

“There are, of course, police officers who are fired for egregious misbehavior by commanding officers who decide that a given abuse makes them unfit for a badge and gun. Yet all over the U.S., police unions help many of those cops to get their jobs back, often via secretive appeals geared to protect labor rights rather than public safety. Cops deemed unqualified by their own bosses are put back on the streets. Their colleagues get the message that police are all but impervious to termination.”

Similarly, anyone expecting the Republicans to actually shrink the size of government is deluded. The GOP has become God’s Own Party and theocracy is expensive.

These are problems of the package deal. Most moderate independents are not advocates of crony capitalism, high taxes and foreign interventionism. They embrace the libertarian middle.

That’s why the ticket of Gary Johnson and William Weld is doing so well–for a third party. Regardless of whether or not one likes them–I do–they have done something important, something with long term consequences. These two ex-governors have been hammering on a central them–you can have BOTH social freedom and economic freedom. You don’t have to give up the one, to have the other.

You can support depoliticized markets, a woman’s right to choose, small government, free trade and still be willing to embrace immigrants looking for a better life, while celebrating the joy of the gay couple next door when they marry. You can take the best undelivered promises the Democrats and Republican offer without embracing the rest of their platform. If enough people realize this, it will be a major paradigm shift in American politics.

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Conservative Talk Radio Shrugs Off Donald Trump's Shifting Immigration Stance

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Conservative talk radio has long been an influential bastion of anti-immigrant sentiment. When Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) backed a bipartisan effort to pass comprehensive immigration reform in 2013, prominent talk show hosts lashed out at the GOP darling, calling him a sell-out and pressuring him to reverse his position.

But mere hours after Donald Trump appeared to walk back his stance on immigration ― the GOP nominee’s signature issue ― in favor of a plan for granting undocumented immigrants legal status, prominent voices in the conservative talk show circuit responded with hardly more than a shrug. 

“Is Donald Trump now Jeb Bush? I don’t think most people think that,” Laura Ingraham said Wednesday on her radio show, referring to the former Florida governor’s immigration plan that included giving undocumented immigrants legal status. “They did make a mess of this immigration rollout or whatever it is they’re rolling out,” Ingraham added, but the “reason it’s a problem is not because his supporters will leave him, but that actually it takes the heat off of Hillary [Clinton].”

No matter what Trump did, Ingraham argued, a Clinton administration and a liberal Supreme Court would be far worse for the country due to a “wholesale remaking of America.”

Radio host Hugh Hewitt agreed. The conservative commentator pushed back against the notion from Republicans opposed to Trump that the GOP nominee would abandon his promise to appoint conservative justices to the highest court in the land. 

“You don’t have to trust Trump 100 percent,” he said, “you can trust him to be less bad than Hillary Clinton.” If Trump nominates a justice that is unpalatable to conservatives, Hewitt added on his show, Republicans “will vote to block his nominee. It is that simple.”

But the person who enjoyed Trump’s latest rhetorical gymnastics was none other than Rush Limbaugh, who opened his show Wednesday with an uncontrollable laughing fit. Struggling to speak as he wiped tears from his face, the conservative talk show host gleefully described how the Manhattan real estate mogul had managed to confound the establishment once again.

“Can you imagine what it must be like to be Jeb Bush today?” he asked. “They tried Jeb Bush, they tried Marco Rubio, they tried Ted Cruz. Who knew it would be Donald Trump to be the one to convince the GOP base to support amnesty?”

Limbaugh then enjoyed another hearty laugh over the predicament Trump super-fan Ann Coulter finds herself in. The conservative commentator and columnist held a book launch party to celebrate her new publication In Trump We Trust on the very same evening that Trump’s grand walk-back aired on Fox News with host Sean Hannity.

”Will this cause a problem with Trump supporters?” Limbaugh asked. “I’ve done an informal survey here, and apparently it won’t. Maybe Coulter.”

Limbaugh maintained that Trump fans would stick with their man because he does the unexpected. In this case: polling Hannity’s audience on whether he should deport 11 million undocumented immigrants out of the country.

“Trump is outside the normal parameters of politics. What happened last night, as far as Trump-ers are concerned, is no big deal,” he said. “This is all about not being scripted. Who cares if Trump asked the crowd ― we like that. That’s refreshing, they say.”

He appeared to be right.

On Thursday, Coulter, who regularly bashes immigrants, said she was still on board the Trump Train.

“It mostly worries me rhetorically … I mean, what to do with the illegals already here was never really a big part of it,” she told the Washington Examiner. “We’re getting a wall. We’re definitely getting a wall. That’s the one thing we know about a Trump presidency.”

“I don’t think it is a change in policy,” she added of Trump. “The policy is anyone who’s here illegally is here illegally, does not have the right to be here. We’ll decide whether it’s in our interest to let them stay or not. Perhaps it is in our interest to let some of them stay.”

Editor’s note: Donald Trump regularly incites political violence and is a serial liar, rampant xenophobe, racist, misogynist and birther who has repeatedly pledged to ban all Muslims — 1.6 billion members of an entire religion — from entering the U.S.

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Exploits patched by Apple today hint at years of surreptitious government hacks

219233_ahmed_mansoor-1 You’ll want to be updating your iOS devices to 9.3.5, the version released today by Apple — especially if you’re a prominent human rights activist. A recently thwarted attack on just such a person employed not one but three zero-day exploits. And that’s just the beginning of the story. Read More

Here’s More Evidence That Trump's 'Poll Truthers' Are Wrong

As Donald Trump’s presidential campaign sputters onward, a number of denialists have emerged ― including Trump’s own pollster-turned-campaign manager, Kellyanne Conway ― to claim that the GOP nominee is doing better in online polls than in polls conducted over the phone by live interviewers. These “poll truthers” argue, incorrectly, that this supposed discrepancy proves there’s actually a big segment of uncounted voters who will turn out to vote for Trump on Election Day. They’re just afraid to admit that to pollsters ― or so the argument goes.

Evidence shows that something very different is happening. Trump’s support doesn’t change much depending on how the polls are conducted. But Hillary Clinton’s does. And like most other aspects of current polling, it’s not good news for the Trump camp.

In telephone polls conducted by live interviewers, Clinton averages an 11-point lead over Trump in the HuffPost Pollster average. She’s approaching 50 percent, whereas Trump is struggling below 40 percent. These polls are averaging only 5.5 percent undecided and 4.4 percent for other candidates.

Polls conducted either online or using automated voice technology over the telephone, without a real person on the other end of the line, tell a different story. In these polls, Clinton averages just under 44 percent support, a 5-point drop from the live telephone polls, while Trump loses less than 1 percentage point, still sitting at about 38 percent.

That 5 percent who supported Clinton in live telephone polls, but not in these other polls, seems to have gone to the “undecided” column. In online and automated phone polls, undecideds increase by 5 percent, growing to over 10 percent of voters. Support for “other candidates” increases slightly, to 5.8 percent.

How would that happen? It’s likely that this change is what pollsters call a “mode effect,” which means that there’s a difference in results based on how the poll was conducted. In live interviewer telephone surveys, respondents usually aren’t given an “undecided” option. If someone does say they’re undecided, most of the time the interviewer will ask a follow-up question along the lines of, “If you had to choose today, which candidate would you pick?” or “Do you lean toward any candidate?”

A lot of the time, voters who are undecided do nevertheless have some idea of what they might do. And they’ll often choose a candidate on the follow-up question.

Contrast that with an automated phone or online poll: Respondents are given an option to select “don’t know” or “undecided” on the first question, and in many cases there isn’t a follow-up question to ask whether the respondent is leaning toward a candidate. With the explicit option given, more respondents will choose “don’t know” or “undecided” in the first place. If there’s not a follow-up question to ask undecided voters which way they’re leaning ― or even if there is ― the numbers for “undecided” will be higher in polls conducted this way.

Since it’s Clinton’s support that increases when undecideds are pushed in live telephone surveys, the polls indicate that undecided voters tend to lean more in Clinton’s direction. The “shy Trump voter” theory could still be argued ― perhaps these voters say they lean toward Clinton, but really they lean toward Trump and don’t want to tell an interviewer that. But if that were true, we’d still expect to see Trump’s support drop in live interviewer polls ― and it doesn’t.

Trump’s support is stuck somewhere in the upper 30s regardless of poll method. The “shy Trump voter” theory doesn’t hold up, no matter how you slice the numbers.

Editor’s note: Donald Trump regularly incites political violence and is a serial liar, rampant xenophobe, racist, misogynist and birther who has repeatedly pledged to ban all Muslims — 1.6 billion members of an entire religion — from entering the U.S.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

13 Illuminating Books That Should Be Required Reading

Good morning, class. Raise your hand if you actually read your summer assignments, Great Expectations and Nineteen Eighty-Four. Yes, raise your hand if you did read those books. Did read, yes. What’s that you say? An extension, you say? Too hot outside to focus? Well. I don’t know if I ― OK. But just this once. 

Now that school’s back in sesh, and the oppressive gloom of the heat dome is giving way to crisp, snuggle-inducing air, we think it’s time for students and former students alike to push the boundaries of the usual syllabi and curl up with something new. Not that classics aren’t classics for a reason ― although some, if we’re to take students’ words for it, are a little outmoded in their language and themes.

But the Western canon is largely made up of a monolithic scheme of writers (read: white, male), so adding in variety would not only expand readers’ understanding of American life, it would better represent American readership.

We’ve rounded up a few books ― some of them new, some of them newish ― that we think should be required reading. Some directly confront women’s issues like infertility; others are lyrical explorations of black life in America. Have a look, and read on.

The Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead

Whitehead pulls no punches in this deftly structured, brilliantly written novel, which takes on slavery, the Tuskegee syphilis experiments, a white supremacist state similar to Nazi Germany, and the United States’ full history of white brutality against black people. The Underground Railroad is a necessary antidote to sanitized histories of America’s racial divide, as well as a stunning example of both historical and speculative fiction at their most powerful. ― Claire Fallon, Books and Culture Writer

Read our review of The Underground Railroad

I Love Dick by Chris Kraus

Kraus’ game-changing fictionalized memoir begins familiar enough, with a woman obsessed with a man. Yet over time the book changes shape, as Kraus’ emotional fixation becomes in itself an object of intellectual fascination, a work of art and a thing of beauty. She becomes empowered in her abilities as a writer and artist, unashamed of her feelings, sloppy and maniacal as they may be. The stunning piece of writing, a predecessor to brilliant and proudly difficult women like Lena Dunham and Sheila Heti, is a must-read for feminist writers and those who crush super hard. ― Priscilla Frank, Arts and Culture Writer

Read our interview with Chris Kraus

Americanah by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

Americanah is a story about immigration that follows two teenagers, Ifemelu and Obinze, who, after falling in love in dictatorial Nigeria, wish to move to America. Alas, only Ifemelu sees her dream come true, while Obinze temporarily lives as an undocumented immigrant in London. In the U.S. though, Ifemelu is confronted with what she calls Racial Disorder Syndrome, a byproduct of the complex American power structures she decides to explore on her blog. The rest of the novel is heart-wrenching and smart, illuminating an incredibly human story tied to the legacies of boundaries, nationalism and injustice. ― Katherine Brooks, Senior Arts & Culture Editor

Another Brooklyn by Jacqueline Woodson

Woodson’s seamless transition from lyrical young adult novelist to author of a heartfelt, socially significant book for adults speaks to her breadth as a writer. Both Brown Girl Dreaming ― winner of the National Book Award and the Newbery Medal ― and Another Brooklyn are written in her distinctly spare and poetic style, but the latter carries an emotional weight with buoyancy. It’s about a young girl, August, who moves to Brooklyn from the South after her mother grows tragically absent, and fills the void with blossoming friendships. When she first sees three confident, quirky girls from her school walking arm-in-arm, she instantly longs for their companionship. But, as the group of young women grow out of their gangly frames and into the sometimes restrictive shape of adulthood, their relationships with one another change, too. Woodson writes as touchingly about friendship as she does about jazz, gentrification and the ‘70s. ― Maddie Crum, Books and Culture Writer

Read our review of Another Brooklyn 

The Art of Waiting by Belle Boggs

Does having kids really kill your dreams? How does in vitro fertilization actually work, and how much does it cost? Why do so many refuse to believe young women when they say they don’t want children? What are the logistics of pursuing adoption, in the United States and abroad? These are some of the questions answered in Belle Boggs’ collection of nuanced and unsparing essays. They revolve around the question of infertility, a disease which, for too long, has remained quarantined to women’s blogs and medical offices. Boggs interweaves her own experience with infertility with those of doctors, professors, unconventional families and even gorillas at the North Carolina zoo, shedding light on a complex human health issue that has remained cloaked in silence and shame. ― Priscilla Frank

Kindred by Octavia Butler

Octavia E. Butler’s Afrofuturist novel follows a black woman caught between two time periods ― California in the 1970s and Maryland before the Civil War. With the sci-fi/fantasy twist of time travel, Butler explores the inhumanities and cruel sacrifices black people faced during antebellum slavery, investigating how issues of power, gender and race can persist in America today. If it’s not already on your required reading list (and it might be, because it was published in 1979!), add it. ― Katherine Brooks

The Association of Small Bombs by Karan Mahajan

While “9/11” remains a national invocation of grief in the U.S., it’s less common for Americans to openly grapple with the quotidian terroristic violence elsewhere in the world: suicide blasts that kill a handful of bystanders, car bombs that tear through crowds. In Mahajan’s eye-opening novel, a single small terror attack in an Indian marketplace forms the crux of a saga that profoundly damages many people over the course of years. He delves into the psychology and troubled background of the bombmaker, the grief of the parents of two young boys who die, and the guilt and lingering bodily pain of their friend who survives. Though the justice system is eager to simply convict someone and get it all over with, and the victims of the attack quickly feel forgotten and alone, Mahajan’s empathetic and artistically startling exploration of the story offers one richly literary entry point into the important work of facing the global human impact of terror. ― Claire Fallon

Read our review of The Association of Small Bombs

Zero K by Don DeLillo

We live in a cultural landscape where a media outlet that prided itself in its scrappiness, its watchdog role, and its dedication to its readers can be shuttered due to the money, power and whims of an inordinately wealthy individual. That alone answers the question of why dystopian stories are popular; they mirror life’s grimmer realities. And Don DeLillo’s Zero K ― which may not be so neatly categorized as a dystopia ― speaks to those realities in a critical but uncynical way. DeLillo mocks the jargon-filled language of Silicon Valley types, but he also questions the value of technologies such as cryonics in an even-handed and fascinating way. ― Maddie Crum

Read our review of Zero K

Invisible Man, Got the Whole World Watching by Mychal Denzel Smith

Invisible Man, Got the Whole World Watching is a coming-of-age story from a young black man who never fully expected to come of age. How could he when he grew up amid countless stories of other young black men whose lives were stolen from them, both in his community and on the news? Smith communicates the devastating reality for black men today, interweaving his own story with those of individuals from Trayvon Martin to Barack Obama. “The everyday condition of blackness in America is enough to drive you crazy,” he writes, and the message is impossible to look away from. ― Priscilla Frank

On Such a Full Sea by Chang-rae Lee

Looking for a fresh dystopian read? Chang-rae Lee’s On Such a Full Sea paints a fascinating picture of future America, where “New Chinese” populations ― forced to leave China after environmental decline ― dominate urban centers like Baltimore. The story rests on the actions of Fan, a young woman who decides to leave the comforts of her self-contained and surveilled neighborhood ― B-Mor ― to search for her disappeared boyfriend. As she moves within the various social strata of her universe, readers are given a glimpse into what economic inequality and environmental degradation can amount to. ― Katherine Brooks

Chelsea Girls by Eileen Myles

Chelsea Girls is not a memoir, but it’s written in the same luringly confessional tone. The narrator, Eileen, reflects on her childhood in Massachusetts, where she obliquely came to the realization that she identifies as queer. She remembers, with equal emotional weight, the death of her father (an alcoholic) and the Halloween when he dressed up as a woman, taking his children from door-to-door, playing the part of a goofy older sibling rather than a true authority figure. She reflects on first heartbreaks and first jobs in New York City, and stumbles into nuanced retellings of adulterous affairs and pill addictions. Myles’ style predates that of the first confessional bloggers, wearing her womanhood proudly, as a badge, rather than cowering behind the shame she’s been made to feel. ― Maddie Crum

Eleven Hours by Pamela Erens

What if, instead of making tender youths watch “The Miracle of Life” in health class, risking numerous teenagers passing out on the linoleum, we regularly exposed them to honest narratives about the experiences of pregnancy and childbirth? This slim, carefully observed novel about two women at different stages of pregnancy ― a nurse guarding an early, precarious one and her patient, a lonely woman going through labor without her partner, who left her for their best friend ― portrays childbirth with a clear-eyed simplicity that is both poetic and very educational. ― Claire Fallon

Read our review of Eleven Hours 

Swamplandia by Karen Russell

Throughout the course of high school, students are typically tasked with reading a few coming-of-age stories ― you know, those books that introduce you to the term “bildungsroman.” Teachers assign Catcher in the Rye and This Boy’s Life, but they should consider Karen Russell’s Swamplandia, the story of an alligator-wrestling girl growing up in the isolated Everglades, who ― in one gorgeously written story ― experiences a fairy tale’s worth of death, trauma, and abandonment, with moments of familial bliss mixed in. It’s certainly not a traditional coming-of-age tale, but the ghosts, Seths, and gothic swamp vibes make it all the more worthy of a spot on a required reading list. ― Katherine Brooks

Check out the books we recommended in 2015 here.

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9 Boy Books for Long Summer Days

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By Sarah Jane Abbott | Off the Shelf

We know the many girls of literature –whether they are gone or on a train or marked with a dragon tattoo–but as the hazy August afternoons grow long, I’m looking for something else: the boys of summer! Whether you love literary fiction, memoir, horror, or anything in between, here are some boys you’ll want to meet.
 

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The Boys in the Boat by Daniel James Brown
This is an intimate account of how nine working-class boys from the American West came together to form the eight-oar crew team that competed at the 1936 Berlin Olympics against Adolf Hitler’s elite German rowing team.
 

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The Boy in the Black Suit by Jason Reynolds
Matt wears a black suit every day for his job at a funeral home, which he took to help out with the bills since his widowed dad is an alcoholic grappling with his own grief. Just when things seem really bleak, he meets a girl who just might be able to help him rise up again when life keeps knocking him down.
 

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Flash Boys by Michael Lewis
In Michael Lewis’s game-changing bestseller, a small group of Wall Street iconoclasts realize that the U.S. stock market has been rigged for the benefit of insiders. They band together―some of them walking away from seven-figure salaries―to investigate, expose, and reform the insidious new ways that Wall Street generates profits.
 

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About a Boy by Nick Hornby
Will Freeman is a single, child-free man who goes to single parents’ support groups to pick up available mothers looking to meet a Nice Guy. It’s there that he meets Marcus, a strange twelve-year-old who latches on to him. Maybe Will can teach Marcus to grow up cool–and Marcus can teach Will to just grow up.
 

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Boy, Snow, Bird by Helen Oyeyemi
This brilliant novel recasts the Snow White fairy tale as a story of family secrets, race, beauty, and vanity. It boldly confronts the tyranny of the mirror to ask how much power surfaces really hold.
 

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Beautiful Boy by David Sheff
David Sheff’s fiercely candid memoir follows his journey through his son Nic’s addiction to drugs and tentative steps toward recovery.
 

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This Boy’s Life by Tobias Wolff
This unforgettable memoir introduces us to the young Toby Wolff who, separated by divorce from his father and brother, develops an extraordinarily close relationship with his mother. As Toby fights for identity and self-respect against the unrelenting hostility of a new stepfather, his experiences are at once poignant and comical.
 

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Anansi Boys by Neil Gaiman
This exhilarating and fiercely funny mythology tale for the modern age is complete with dark prophecy, family dysfunction, and mystical deceptions. After Fat Charlie Nancy’s father drops dead, he learns that his dad was a god–and a trickster one at that. Now, a brother he never knew he had is on his doorstep–and Charlie’s life is about to get a lot more interesting . . . and a lot more dangerous.
 

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A Suitable Boy by Vikram Seth
Set in the early 1950s, in an India newly independent and struggling through a time of crisis, A Suitable Boy takes us into the richly imagined world of four large extended families and spins a compulsively readable tale of their lives and loves as a young woman and her mother search for a suitable boy for her to marry.
 

See the full list at Off the Shelf, a daily blog that connects great readers with great books.

More Recommendations from Off the Shelf:

Girl Crazy: 15 Literary Ladies You’ll Want to Know

13 Books to Read After A Man Called Ove

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Why UT-Austin Students Are Handing Out Dildos on Campus

As college students return to campuses all over the country this week, two University of Texas students organized and pulled off a creative, impactful and provocative public protest against the new concealed-guns-on-campus law, passed by the Texas State Legislature last fall. Jessica Lin and Ana Lopez consider the new law allowing anyone with a Texas concealed carry permit to carry their gun onto all public university campuses an obscenity, which got their wheels turning.

University of Texas’s flagship campus in Austin was the scene of America’s first/worst school mass shooting back on August 1, 1966. Ironically, 50 years later, Texas right-wing legislators selected that same date in 2016 for the new campus-carry law to go into effect. 14 people on the UT campus were killed and 32 were injured by a student shooter perched on top of the Texas campus’ most visible landmark in 1966. One has to wonder about short memories in the Longhorn state.

Now, thanks to a nationwide push by the National Rifle Association and their right-wing ideologue political supporters, several states have passed concealed-guns-on-campus laws over the past decade. Many other state legislatures have taken up bills relaxing concealed carry laws to include campuses, Georgia’s legislature passed such a law which was vetoed by Republican Gov. Nathan Deal just a few months ago.

This week’s UT-Austin protest was dubbed “cocks not glocks” with thousands of rubber dildos passed out and displayed by students to bring attention to the “absurdity” of allowing concealed guns on campus. When Lin and Lopez researched campus obscenity laws last fall, they found that it was illegal to openly display the sex toys and law breakers could receive citations from law enforcement. Thus the idea was hatched to highlight the absurdity that carrying a sex toy was breaking the law, while carrying a deadly loaded weapon was legal. The protest is meant to dramatize the absurdity “with something more absurd“.

Said Jessica Lin recently, “If the guns around you aren’t making you uncomfortable, then maybe this dildo protest will make you think twice about what it is that makes you feel uncomfortable, and why.” Observers have labeled this type of symbolic protest agitprop and it may just catch on.

Local Texas news coverage has reported that literally thousands of UT-Austin students swamped the on-campus sites where dildos were given away and the hashtag #cocksnotglocks has caught fire on Twitter and Facebook. The local Moms Demand Action for Gunsense in America supported the protest and national gun violence prevention organizations and activists are taking note as well.

Sadly, several UT-Austin professors have sued the state of Texas and some have already declared their intention to leave their jobs due to the potential danger presented by concealed guns on campus. Further, nearly all private Texas colleges and universities have opted out of the law, as private colleges have the same rights as any private property owner or business to prohibit concealed guns on their premises. So now Texas families and students have a double standard; safety for private college students, and risk for public university students. That’s an obscenity.

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Coldplay Celebrates Life in Concert

The British Band Coldplay inspired approximately 92,000 people in a full house stadium at the Rose Bowl concert Saturday August 20th in Pasadena, CA. As the magnetic lead singer Chris Martin ran down the ramp into the audience, sometimes waving an American flag over his head, a display of fireworks exploded from the stage into the sky. But most impressive was Martin’s opening message to the fans, “The world is more friendly than you think.” Illuminated wristbands glowed throughout the stadium while the audience intently listened to the music and positive words of the songs, including “Everglow”. Martin dedicated the song to the violent events that happened in Orlando, Fla., Baton Rouge, La., Germany and other places and asked the crowd to send “good vibes” to the people in those areas. The fans swayed to the thought provoking piano ballad and waved their arms displaying a sea of illuminated colorful wristbands. Unification and the celebration of life is alive and well through the power of music played by Coldplay in concert. A second concert was held on Sunday August 21st due to the ticket sellout within minutes for the previous Saturday concert.

Jennifer Hu, Senior at UCLA said about the concert, “I like Coldplay’s poetic lyrics and overall the feelings their songs evoke. Their newest album seems to be optimistic, fun, and hopeful. It’s a celebration of life in all its colors. Being at the concert made me feel very emotional, getting to hear all of my favorite songs live, in a stadium filled with twinkling lights.”

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Photo by Catherine Bauknight

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Photo by Catherine Bauknight

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Photo by Catherine Bauknight

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Photo by Catherine Bauknight

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