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Arts & Life

Konocti Art Society supports local youth art

Annette Higday of the Konocti Art Society presenting a donation to Barbara Funke. Courtesy photo.

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Konocti Art Society has made a generous donation to support the Lake County Arts Council’s Summer Youth Art Program.

KAS raffles artwork during the Kelseyville Pear Festival which earns funds that are donated to a deserving charity or group.

The Summer Youth Art Program offers enriching classes for local students to learn various art forms.

Teachers donate their time for these classes, and the donated money helps with needed art materials.
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Written by: Konocti Art Society
Published: 06 November 2018

Holiday in the Pines arts and crafts fair planned for Nov. 10 and 11

MIDDLETOWN, Calif. – Cobb Mountain Artists presents the best artisan arts and crafts fair in Lake County, Holiday in the Pines, featuring high quality original art and craft from artists around the region.

This popular holiday show, the 15th annual, will take place Saturday, Nov. 10, and Sunday, Nov. 11, at the Twin Pine Casino and Hotel Event Center from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

In addition to great art, there will be door prizes, a raffle to benefit local school art programs, and music by the famous My Divas on Saturday.

Enjoy original art by painters, potters, jewelers, glass artists, ironworkers, wooden creations, and much, much more. New this year, you will find ornate candles, iron work, beautiful knit creations, a local author and more.

Cobb Mountain Artists' mission is to provide artists and craftspeople with outlets for their work, and act as a professional liaison to the public.

They hope you can join them at the most popular arts and crafts fair in Lake County this holiday season. There will be great art and crafts at affordable prices.
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Written by: Cobb Mountain Artists
Published: 05 November 2018

American Life in Poetry: Talking About the Day

Ted Kooser. Photo credit: UNL Publications and Photography.


Jim Daniels lives and teaches in Pittsburgh.

I love this poem from “Street Calligraphy,” from Steel Toe Books, of Western Kentucky University, Daniels' 17th book.

A young father and his two small children, tucked into a comfortable old chair at the end of a day. What could feel better than that?

Talking About the Day

Each night after reading three books to my two children—
we each picked one—to unwind them into dreamland,
I'd turn off the light and sit between their beds
in the wide junk-shop rocker I'd reupholstered blue,
still feeling the close-reading warmth of their bodies beside me,
and ask them to talk about the day—we did this,
we did that, sometimes leading somewhere, sometimes
not, but always ending up at the happy ending of now.
Now, in still darkness, listening to their breath slow and ease
into sleep's regular rhythm.
Grown now, you might've guessed.
The past tense solid, unyielding, against the acidic drip
of recent years. But how it calmed us then, rewinding
the gentle loop, and in the trusting darkness, pressing play.


American Life in Poetry does not accept unsolicited manuscripts. It is made possible by The Poetry Foundation, publisher of Poetry magazine. It is also supported by the Department of English at the University of Nebraska, Lincoln. Poem copyright ©2017 by Jim Daniels, "Talking About the Day," from Street Calligraphy, (Steel Toe Books, 2017). Poem reprinted by permission of Jim Daniels and the publisher. Introduction copyright ©2018 by The Poetry Foundation. The introduction’s author, Ted Kooser, served as United States Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress from 2004-2006.
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Written by: Ted Kooser
Published: 05 November 2018

‘Hunter Killer’ floats thrills; ‘New Amsterdam’ on TV



HUNTER KILLER (Rated R)

Noting that the producers of “Olympus Has Fallen” are behind the Gerard Butler post-Cold War military thriller “Hunter Killer” comes as no surprise. Once again, the leading man is tossed into a dangerous rescue attempt.

Gerard Butler, who’s also one of the many producers, is a natural fit for the action hero on a mission to save a world leader. His Captain Joe Glass is the new commander of the USS Arkansas ordered to find a missing submarine in the Arctic Circle.

The source material for this thriller comes from the novel “Firing Point,” written by George Wallace, the retired commander of the nuclear submarine the USS Houston, along with award-winning journalist and best-selling author Don Keith.

The book’s action-packed plot, based on Wallace’s extensive knowledge, twisted and turned through a Russian nationalist coup, Black Ops Navy SEAL mission and an attack submarine captain faced with decisions that could ignite another World War.

You could be forgiven for thinking that the plot sounds like it was ripped from the pages of a Tom Clancy novel. In any event, it is loaded with thrills that should work for an entertaining diversion even if many critics scoff at the whole enterprise.

Following the script of Wallace’s novel, “Hunter Killer,” which refers to a special type of naval vessel designed to approach the enemy without detection, involves the necessity of the Americans stepping in to thwart a military overthrow of a foreign government.

In the process of locating the missing US sub close to a Russian naval port, Glass gets word from Washington, by way of Gary Oldman’s grizzled Admiral Charles Donnegan, that a rogue Russian general has kidnapped his country’s president (Alexander Diachenko) in a brazen coup.

Teaming up with Navy SEALs on the ground, Glass, much to the consternation of his dubious crew, makes common cause with the Russian sub Captain Andropov (Michael Nyqvist) that he rescues from a sunken vessel.

As it turns out, without the Russian captain’s help to navigate the treacherous entry, booby-trapped with mines and sonar devices, to the Russian naval base of Polyarny, Glass and his crew wouldn’t come close to surviving the journey.

The traitorous Russian Admiral Durov (Michael Gor), serving as the defense minister, obviously seems keen on igniting a military conflict with the United States while using the absence of the Russian president to justify his reckless offensive.

Meanwhile, the action gets really tense with the quartet of Navy SEALs penetrating the Polyarny camp to liberate the president in a hail of gunfire from the Russian soldiers either loyal to or duped by Durov.

Much of the action, though, takes place in the confined space of the submarine, which not only allows the stoic Captain Glass to command his vessel with a determined rebellious streak but touches upon the conventional but suspenseful tropes of underwater danger.

Fitting for edge-of-the-seat thrills, “Hunter Killer,” coming off more like a throwback to the last century’s geopolitical struggles than a contemporary thriller, is surprisingly gripping action drama that can be fun.



‘NEW AMSTERDAM’ ON NBC NETWORK

If you are not getting enough medical dramas on other networks, such as ABC’s “The Good Doctor” or FOX’s “The Resident” and “9-1-1,” then maybe you have time in your busy nighttime viewing to tune into NBC’s new series “New Amsterdam.”

The question that only you can answer is whether “New Amsterdam” should be added to your must-watch list. But it might take only one episode to figure out that the medical cases seem designed to tug on heartstrings as much as they are intended to stir taut drama.

The leading figure is Dr. Max Goodwin (Ryan Eggold), an iconoclastic practitioner appointed as the unlikely medical director of New York’s New Amsterdam public hospital and who’s bound to run afoul of the hospital’s trustees.

To shake up the lethargy that afflicts a public facility, the good doctor who prefers to be called by his first name fires the entire cardiac surgery unit, putting the staff on edge while the rest of us wonder how long he will last in the job.

Just as quickly, he rehires Dr. Floyd Reynolds (Jocko Sims), an African-American graduate of Yale medical school. It’s just as well because there is a romantic subplot involving Dr. Reynolds and Dr. Lauren Bloom (Janet Montgomery), another key character.

What’s a hospital without a psychiatry department where the chairman is Dr. Iggy Frome (Tyler Labine), a rumpled figure whose appearance and demeanor seems fitting for a weary yet caring college professor.

Every episode introduces various types of patients, each one drawing the attention of Max (how does he find the time?), whose catchphrase is “How can I help?,” from the kid from Liberia with signs of Ebola to a troubled young woman in the care of Dr. Frome.

“New Amsterdam” looks to end each week with tidy resolution of every patient’s ordeal. This might help prevent any thought of hanging in for the long run unless you are wondering about what Dr. Goodwin is not revealing.

Tim Riley writes film and television reviews for Lake County News.
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Written by: Tim Riley
Published: 03 November 2018

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