January 8, 2023 Salty Air Publishing Newsletter

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January 8, 2023 - Falmouth, MA
In this issue:
Stuff & Complexity
Wind, Sand and Stars
Gas Cooktops
Footprints Cafe
Literature Map
Reidea Lighter
PHR Books
PHR Work In-Progress
More Free Books
Stuff & Complexity
If you have just one stick, not much can go wrong. It's simple, and if you have a purpose for a stick, a simple stick will serve the purpose. But then you see a more sophisticated stick - one that has more features and does more things. So you get a second stick. You can handle an even more sophisticated stick, one with dual quasipods and high speed rear view mirrors.
And now you're making more money so you can get other stuff besides sticks - whamdingers and tuntootlers and framfiddlers (to paraphrase Dr. Zeus). Every one of those devices adds convenience, color, and pleasure to your life. And brings complexity.
A baby faces its mother and father and then adds more and more people to its life. And people add complexity. And people and stuff can go wrong. The more people and the more stuff, the more complexity. Limiting change limits complexity. But it also limits color in the tapestry of life. Not all color or complexity is pleasing. But even the simplest event - like a broken stick - is a splash of color and expands the experience of a life well lived.
Stay well,


Paul@paulhraymer.com
Wind, Sand and Stars - Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
   Saint-Exupéry is most famous for his Little Prince (Le Petit Prince), but he wrote some other exceptional books such as Wind, Stand and Stars and Flight to Arras.

He was a French aviator who was born in 1900 and disappeared in 1944 during the second world war. Aviation was in its infancy during the first world war and the purpose of airplanes were just being explored. Saint-Ex loved flying and became an airmail pilot, delivering mail from Paris over the Pyrenees across the Mediterranean and the Sahara, flying across the South Atlantic and then over the South American continent, over the Andes to Chile. An extraordinary feat in an open cockpit.

Wind, Sand and Stars recounts some of those adventures. Staint-Ex was a philosopher and wrote with the passion of a lover. He dives into the souls of the people he describes. One of the tales about his friend Guillaumet who crashed in the Andes includes the line, "What serves a man is to take a step. Then another step. It is always the same step, but you have to take it." Guillaumet was afraid that if he didn't manage to reach an obvious location, his body wouldn't be found and his wife wouldn't get his insurance and so he continued to move forward, step by step through the frigid air.

This is not a major work, but it is beautifully written and reflects a world getting used to the beginnings of technologies - airplanes, automobiles, radio, telephone. The world confronted these changes with wars and economic upheavals, and Saint-Exupéry reflected the turbulence of those times superbly.
Gas Cooktops
People love gas stoves. But they're not good for health in homes. When things burn, lots of pollutants and particulates get emitted into the air. I have been told that chefs like them because they provide greater control of the heat on the pot. And since they are associated with fine cooking and great chefs, they get installed in high end homes, sporting six or eight burners.

That may be true and I would be the first to tell you that I am not a chef, but induction stoves provide extraordinary control as well and they are a whole lot better for the environment.

Gas stoves produce large amount of nitrogen dioxide (NO2) that is not good for the chef. According to the American Lung Association, NO2 "causes a range of harmful effects on the lungs including:
  • Increased inflammation of the airways;
  • Worsened cough and wheezing;
  • Reduced lung function;
  • Increased asthma attacks; and
  • Greater likelihood of emergency department and hospital admissions.
New research warns that NO2 is likely to be a cause of asthma in children."

I want to say that there is something organic and living about the dancing flames of a gas stove and the shiny, smooth, glass surface of an induction stove is clinical and sterile. But any time we can get fire out of the house from cigarettes to gas stoves to gas furnaces, the better the air quality will be and the healthier the occupants.
Bookshop.org supports local bookshops and writers. They have raised over $24 million for bookshops! Click the link below to visit the books I have reviewed in this newsletter. Thank you.
Click for books and bookshops mentioned here
Footprints Café
Stefanie Corbin the proprietor of Footprints Cafe has moved her shop from Buzzards Bay to New Bedford, MA. New space. New year. Congratulations!

127 W. Rodney French Blvd. ~ 3rd FL
New Bedford, MA 02744
Benjamin Bunny & The Rabbit Hole
(These are things I use. I don't get paid to put them here, but I might be lucky if there is an affiliate link.)
Literature Map
This app lets you identify authors that are close to one another with a word cloud. Plug in an author you like (or hate) and find authors that are similar. The closer they are to your target author, the closer they will be in a variety of ways. This one is for John Kellerman. When I plugged in Robert Coover (one of my favorites), the names were spread out over my whole screen!
(Thanks Jane Friedman)
REIDEA Lighter
My daughter gave me this thing for Christmas. I have collected a million books/boxes of matches over the years, so I was wondering what I was going to do with this. It's electronic. You charge it off your computer or USB block. You switch it on on the base and a blue light lights. And when you're ready to light something - woodstove, candle, etc. - you slide the switch forward and a little electronic arc appears on the end. It works great. I've been repairing the lines on a model boat and this thing cuts and seals the nylon line beautifully! Who knew?
PHR Books
Residential Ventilation Handbook V2
Recalculating Truth
Death at the Edge of the Diamond
Second Law
Also available on-line and in fine bookshops.
PHR Work In-Progress
 Confined Spaces is making progress. Confined spaces are not often pleasant places to be.
Things That Go Bump in the Night
Here's another free book opportunity. Bookfunnel provides a means for a group of authors to get together to give away electronic copies of their books in return for adding subscribers to their mailing lists. There are some great undiscovered authors in these books (including me!). Click this button and check them out.
Free Books!
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Salty Air Publishing Newsletter is a free, bi-weekly newsletter from Paul H. Raymer that launched in 2020. More than 2,000 subscribers receive it. Knowing that you are giving me your time to read these words, it is my goal to be as interesting and helpful as possible.

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