Saturday, July 12, 2025

Sebald Interviewed - Circa "Austerlitz"

 I read W. G. Sebald's Austerlitz while in prison. I had been reading about the writer and the novel for some time, so I used the interlibrary loan to get the novel into Fort Dix. My notes are somewhere in one of the boxes stored in this room. If I am lucky it will appear here.

Until then, I offer you Sebald interview on Bookworm from YouTube. Readers and writers may take something of value from the interview, but I suspect it will benefit writers more. There is talk of influences and the writing of sentences. I gather Sebald derives much from Central European writers, of whom I think American writers are quite ignorant (excepting Kafka, of course). 


sch 6/30

Warring on Ourselves 3-7-2013

    [ I am back working through my prison journal. It is out of order… Well, the order is as I have opened boxes. The date in the title is the date it was written. I hope this is not confusing. What you are reading is what you get for your tax dollars. sch 7/10/2025

I have written elsewhere about our War on Crime/Drugs creating a culture in this country of one part against the other. Reading Michael Eric Dyson's Can You Hear Me Now?, I find this paragraph as generally supportive of my views:

There's no question that George W. Bush was prosecuting war on all fronts, so that cultural conflict became the war on terror by other means. What I mean, more specifically, is that all of this brouhaha occasioned by civil marriage versus gay marriages, for example, just served to ratchet up an atmosphere of paranoia which seemed to say: "You had better watch out because the terrorist lurks outside is also the kind of cultural terrorist that looms large domestically. Those who support a gay or lesbian living next door to them are the same people telling this country to be critical of the Bush administration; they want to reject your evangelical Christianity or conservative Judaism. They're now assaulting you." So I think there was a concerted ideological effort to create an environment of paranoia around cultural values and to link that cultural fear to political fear. That kind of ideological illusion is brilliant, but I think it's ultimately perverted.

Chapter 15: Homosexuality and Homophobia

I think therein lies an explanation for much of President Obama's behavior during his first term. The radical conservatives (AKA right-wing wing nuts) had pushed their agenda of hate so long, they expected to be paid in an equal amount of viciousness. Obama creates in them such a frenzy that they lose contact with reality. Unfortunately, they remain stuck in the craw of the body politic like a giant hairball. I think this problem began long before George W. Bush. 

A friend wrote me recently about how in her area, ammunition flew off the shelves out of fear of confiscation by the federal government. She actually wrote me:

We have a feeling soon only criminal will be armed - including the government. Are we experiencing fascism?

That such a liberal-minded, educated person should be pushed to such a position eradicates how overwrought has become civic life outside of prison. You people have gone crazy. Maybe I should rethink my commutation petition.

sch 

[7/10/2025:The roots of Trumpism go deep. sch.]

Friday, July 11, 2025

Something for the Conservatives

I have would like the so-called conservatives to answer one question: what are you conserving?

When I was young, I watched William F. Buckley's Firing Line on PBS. He was not a whiny complainer of unearned privilege demanding a return to an age when only being a white man sufficed for self-esteem. Yet, he never convinced me to be a conservative, only to improve my vocabulary.

 What’s Left of William F. Buckley Jr. - by Brian Stewart  is a review from The Bulwark of a new Buckley biography. I think our modern so-called conservatives detest history, but there is a good one here about the conservative movement and its creator.

There is also this:

For Buckley, the historical responsibility of conservatives was altogether clear: to offer a spirited defense of America, of its beliefs and rights and institutions. This raison d’être eventually left Buckley out of harmony with the conservative mainstream. With the ascendancy of an expressly anti-liberal and anti-intellectual right, Buckley’s mature and metropolitan one-nation conservatism seems to have outlived him by only a few years, which subverts the notion of a “revolution” that “changed America” proposed in Tanenhaus’s subtitle. In reality, the contemporary right has reverted to many of its old and dismal habits, exuding intellectual frivolity and endorsing a callous red-hatted populism in all of its folly and fury. The right today has joined the age-old assault upon America, deprecating its system, impugning its honor, and abandoning its unique place among the nations of the Earth.

The right has now grown untethered from a traditional emphasis on moderation and prudence. Mainstream conservatives have been seduced by a shallow partisanship that has made them receptive to illiberal ideas and corrupt tribunes. They have lost the ability to discern sound conservative principle from grotesque contrarianism. Most alarmingly, they have lost the power to recognize, much less to ostracize, demagogues of all stripes. If Buckley’s task was to reconcile the best of the American tradition with modernity, the new right is stuck with the paradox of holding a philosophy—or at least the patina of a philosophy—of “conserving” and an actual order it does not want to conserve.

Give me the Declaration of Independence, and Lincoln, and FDR; give me MLK, Jr, Eugene Debs, and Walt Whitman; and, if that makes me a conservative, then so be it. Take away white privilege, misogyny, and the worship of the rich; and if that makes me a liberal, then so be it.

Today, the group counselor stated he still had not made up his mind about my politics. Obviously, he does not read this blog.

Literary Hub published an essay about a book I read decades ago by my favorite American historian, Peter Balakian's What a 1964 Book About American Anti-Intellectualism Can Teach Us About the Trump Era. The following feels related to the Buckley biography review:

Trump’s weaponization of anti-Semitism and DEI panic to justify massive federal budget cuts do not mask his real goal: the destruction of knowledge producing institutions, critical thinking, free intellectual inquiry which are threats to his authoritarian efforts to destroy the rule of law and the Constitution. It is unprecedented. In his first months, President Trump’s assaults on universities, especially Harvard and Columbia, the Smithsonian museums, Library of Congress, NEA and NEH, Kennedy Center; the termination of the Department of Education, efforts to censor the press, media, and law firms; censoring facts about American history from slavery to climate science from the web sites of the EPA, NEA, NIH, Smithsonian, and banning books at the US military academy libraries make it clear that what Hofstadter saw as a malignant manifestation of embittered scapegoat hunting populist strains in our culture has now emerged with unprecedented political ferocity. This President’s disdain for critical thinking is tied to an ideological agenda. 

We have descended into a new chapter of anti-intellectualism. McCarthyism was a short-lived phenomenon propelled by an alcoholic Republican Senator who died young during a sordid career. Richard Nixon, who was hostile to liberal culture, would have liked to go after higher education was wise enough to tell his conservative Republican colleagues when they advocated cutting huge amounts of federal funding to universities that “we’d be cutting off our nose to spite our face.” 

Hofstadter would have recognized Trump’s brand of businessman anti-intellectualism. From gold toilet seats to gold airplanes, Trump is the monetized man exploiting his power as president to make billions—even issuing meme coins of himself and his wife and promoting monetizing crypto currency programs to enrich himself; he posts on social media “it’s a great time to get rich,” or “it’s a great time to invest.” It has been documented that his private business practices have defrauded banks, contractors, and customers. His claims that elite universities are full of lunatics, radicals and Marxists, anti-Semites and racists are not only ludicrous lies, but propaganda designed to alienate a segment of the nation from higher education and distract Americans from the deep sources of Anti-Semitism and racism ensconced in the MAGA movement.

I really do suggest reading Hofstader. He may not have the heft in academia he once enjoyed, he has a sense of the country's greatness - and weaknesses:

The American university is the envy of the world—drawing students from every continent—for the intense faculty mentoring that fosters young adults into professional and civic life. The twenty-first century American university is one of the great achievements of modern civilization and the destruction of the relationship between higher education, the federal government, and the business community would set America back to a parochial era that we left a long time ago. 

A liberal democracy depends on its intellectual and cultural producers to pursue their work with both freedom and support from the wider society and the federal government—if these are destroyed, we will slide into an authoritarianism that will smash 250 years of great building. Reading Hofstadter now will give Americans a long view of how vital intellectuals have been to our nation from the great minds of the Founding Fathers to today’s intellectual work-force from Cambridge to San Diego, from Seattle to Miami. His book reifies what Americans need to know in order to resist this irrational paroxysm of anti-intellectualism so we can emerge—as Hofstader did from the McCarthyist 50s—into a new age of moral and cultural growth that followed that period, and I believe will follow this one. 

Nick Bowlin's Easy to Exploit (The Drift) points out something ignored or elided in the Buckley book review, the current conservatives pursuit of power of the sake of power, not for any ideals. 

The market is constantly widening the gap between economic winners and losers in America, thanks in large part to the policy consensus embraced by both parties. As Hochschild’s research shows, the punishment many rural Americans have received has fueled reactionary hatred and resentment that spoils potential economic alliances. The mistake — and it’s a common one — is to take electoral results as definitive, to regard rural people as possessing fixed, unchanging political attitudes. Their attitudes, like political attitudes everywhere, are products of history, shaped by the distinctive structural forces of the places where they live. Many references to the urban-rural divide are attempts, at times imprecise, to have a conversation about the rift between places that attract capital, talent, and investment, and those where resources are removed, where investments dry up, and where populations dwindle. This is the divide that matters.

Who benefits from these divides other than political leaders using them to retain power. Why do conservatives put up with this?

Plenty of space below in the comments section for your responses, conservatives.

sch 7/10 

Indiana Does Away With Diversity, Equity and Inclusion

Governor Braun saves us from the dreaded DEI - diversity, equity and inclusion.

Thank Heaven for our salvation! What we will have merit, excellence and innovation.

Good thing we've got the high school graduates we have for our future of merit, excellence and innovation.  Indiana's high school graduation rate hit record high in 2024 — but some students still struggling (Indiana Capital Chronicle). Because it looks like it will be them, not college graduates doing the excelling and the innovating - according to their merit, of course. ‘Unacceptable’: Indiana ranks among worst in U.S. for adults with college degrees (Mirror Indy).

And will we be having college students with the meritorious knowledge and skills that will bring excellence and innovation to Indiana? Niki Kelly's Fewer college degree choices is latest result of GOP higher education focus (Indiana Capital Chronicle) points to a possibility of even fewer college graduates in Indiana:

An initial review by higher education officials identified a stunning 408 programs to be eliminated, suspended or merged. That’s nearly 20% of the degree offerings in the state.

Among those being terminated:

  • A bachelor’s degree in teaching German at Ball State University
  • A fine arts master’s degree in visual arts at Ball State University
  • Bachelor’s degrees in education for physics, chemistry and math at Indiana University Bloomington
  • An associate’s degree of applied science in public safety at Ivy Tech Community College
  • A master’s degree in public administration at Purdue Fort Wayne
  • A master’s degree in accountancy at University of Southern Indiana

A recent Newsweek article said Indiana’s Republican Gov. Mike Braun has called for more practical degrees that lead students into jobs, but the alterations to Hoosier higher education also come at a time when colleges across the country are coming under increasing scrutiny over funding and the programs they offer.

***

Workforce shortages have turned into a major thorn for state leaders, and this move is clearly a way to push students into specific industries and sectors that business and state leaders want to emphasize to fill open jobs in Indiana.

But nothing will cause burnout and transiency in employment more than not loving what you do.

And if the degree options aren’t here, young Hoosiers will go elsewhere. 

How did DEI threaten the future of Indiana?

Grants to reduce racial health inequities.

Scholarships for Black and Hispanic students.

Racial bias training.

A camping initiative for Black Hoosiers.

***

To comply with Braun’s executive order, the Family and Social Services Administration will be abolishing the Office of Healthy Opportunities, which former Gov. Eric Holcomb created to “work with communities served by the Administration to address factors influencing health outcomes, such as housing, education, transportation, and access to services.” 

***

The Department of Child Services also eliminated an empty Strategic Equity position in September 2024 that was tasked with assessing barriers to the agency’s programs or services. Additionally, several reports offering advice to families navigating transracial adoption have disappeared and mission statements have been revised. 

IDOH will eliminate two positions outright: a disparities coordinator and a maternal health coordinator. Indiana has one of the worst maternal mortality rates in the world — and Black mothers are more likely to die in the year following childbirth than their white counterparts.  

***

At least one initiative funded by the state’s Career Coaching Grant initiative was specifically tailored to support minority and low-income students. The program — administered by the higher education commission to fund career exploration activities in schools across the state — launched in March 2024 and grants will “naturally conclude” at the end of 2025, according to the governor’s report.

Two additional grant programs will also sunset at the end of 2025 after receiving no new funding in the current budget. The College Success Program, created in the 2023 budget to support minority and first-generation college students, issued grants to Indiana State, Purdue Northwest, and Valparaiso University — all of which included language supporting students of color or underrepresented backgrounds.  

***

Braun’s directive, for instance, prompted the Department of Natural Resources to purge campfire-emblazoned flags and other merchandise from state facilities, strip stickers from state-owned vehicles and scrub trainings from its human resources platform. 

That’s because the campfire, dubbed a “unity blaze,” is the logo for North Carolina-based Black Folks Camp Too. Founder Earl B. Hunter Jr. launched the company to combat “generational fears” — like of lynchings — that Black people may hold of the outdoors, ABC 11 reported

***

One of 32 Community Collaboration Fund grants awarded in 2024 — designed for Hispanic women in the cleaning industry — was labeled inappropriate. 

***

The Indiana Real Estate Commission was one of several entities overseen by the Public Licensing Agency that admitted to approving DEI-related continuing education courses. But it’s the only one that requires such training for licensure, according to the report.

The training includes an hour of instruction on listing agreements, an hour on fair housing laws and cultural diversity, and five hours on negotiating and counseling skills.

The agency will have the commission redraw its rules to “remove these specific requirements … to the extent that they can do so without violating the federal Fair Housing Act,” the report concludes. 

Braun report identifies 350 examples of DEI in state government (Indiana Capital Chronicle)

So pretty much that helped anyone who wasn't a white male threatened the life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness of Hoosiers is DEI?

I may be in a minority here, but it seems to me DEI is actually a right guaranteed by Indiana's Bill of Rights - one most often ignored by all three branches of Indiana's government:

Section 1. WE DECLARE, That all men are created equal; that they are endowed by their CREATOR with certain unalienable rights; that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness; that all power is inherent in the PEOPLE; and that all free governments are, and of right ought to be, founded on their authority, and instituted for their peace, safety, and well being. For the advancement of these ends, the PEOPLE have, at all times, an indefeasible right to alter and reform their government.

IHB: Article 1 - Bill of Rights

 What can be done about a government that denies its citizens an equality of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness?

sch

Books: D. H. Lawrence: Sons and Lovers

 I never understood the fuss about D.H. Lawrence. While in college, I tried reading one of his novels; maybe Lady Chatterley's Lover. That was the novel I knew about (as did so many) then, and I remember TJ and me going to see a movie version of Lady Chatterley's Lover (a soft-core version starring Sylvia Kristel, of which I can only remember feeling dissatisfied by the movie's silliness; it did not encourage me in reading Lawrence.) That took me being in prison, and deciding if I was to write, then I needed to fill in the holes of my literary education. I read Lady Chatterley's Lover, and every other of his novels in Fort Dix FCI's leisure library, without ever really understanding what was so important about Lawrence. Maybe I came too late to be impressed by free love; certainly, his ideas of gender roles left me cold.

Still, I am trying, so I tried listening to the video below. It is a post-grad lecture from an Indian university. Parsing the accent, I decided there were things being said worth listening to - it may be I found the time spent better than with the novel! 


I recollect my feelings towards Lawrence as not being so warm towards human relationships. Perhaps, this comes more from his later novels than with Sons and Lovers. There does seem less of an ideology to his first novel - as I try to push my memory.

That Freud entranced Lawrence does not surprise me. Sigmund's influence ran long and wide. Is that why I find Lawrence's characters so... schematic?

Other than his willingness to put himself into his writing, to follow his own muse wherever it went, I am not sure - even now - what to learn from Lawrence. Perhaps, his willingness to buck the crowd is more than enough.

sch 6/30

Reforming The Criminal Justice System 3/3/2013

    [ I am back working through my prison journal. It is out of order… Well, the order is as I have opened boxes. The date in the title is the date it was written. I hope this is not confusing. What you are reading is what you get for your tax dollars. sch 7/5/2025

Ah, a federal prisoner writes of reforming the criminal justice system! Probably wants you to let him and the rest go free! Not exactly.

I think Michael Eric Dyson makes a great point in the following, while missing out on a premise of the system:

The life of poor black folk is caught between crime and punishment. Most critics argue that those of us who beg for rationality and clarity, and for consistency and fairness, in the criminal justice system are seeking amnesty for all black criminals, or an escape of responsibility for misbehavior. Neither is true. Criminal should be held accountable for their crimes. The practice of murder to resolve conflicts has ravaged too many poor communities and must be opposed with every bit of our strength.

Chapter 16; Poverty and Class; Can You Hear Me Now?

Lawyers distinguish between crimes that are evil in themselves (murder, rape) and those are wrong because some law makes them illegal (the selling of alcohol during Prohibition). Most of us at Ft. Dix Federal Correctional Institution come within the second category.

 There would far less black men in this prison if you would agree to reforming our drug laws.

The federal system conceived of "consistency and fairness" as meaning imprisoning everyone. The federal sentencing guidelines incorporated a mathematical solution for judges: calculate all the sentences given and compute an average range for a sentence. No one has questioned the concept as just or its efficacy. Imposing punishment ends all questions of its correctness.

Why should a non-violent offender see prison? Put them on probation with the goal of changing behavior without also imposing prison life, with its professionalization of criminal behavior. Yes, that would include me.

I think these questions need asked about our federal criminal justice system (they may also raise points about the criminal justice system in your state).

  1. What good did Bernie Madoff's prison sentence do for his victims?
  2. Why was it necessary for Wesley Snipes to spend 2 years in federal prison?
  3. How does the public benefit from mandatory minimum prisons sentences?

[7/5/2025:

One thing missing from prison is information. No Google. I would have liked to see what others thought about the books I noted above. Well, I got that chance now, and you can decide if I am a moron or not. You may also want to follow the links provided in the text.

Federal Sentencing Guidelines (Roanoke Criminal Attorneys)

An Introduction to Federal Guideline Sentencing

An Apt Analogy?:  Rethinking the Role of Judicial Deference to the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines Post-Kisor (Fordham Law Review)

Proposed Simplification of Federal Sentencing Guidelines [2025

Daylight Between Sentencing Guidelines and Commentary? Third Circuit Says Yes, and 2B1.1 is Next (Welsh & Recker, P.C.)

How the public benefits from mandatory minimum prisons sentences, or not:

How Mandatory Minimums Perpetuate Mass Incarceration and What to Do About It (The Sentencing Project)

Sentencing Laws and How They Contribute to Mass Incarceration (Brennan Center for Justice)

FAMM Policy Briefing: Mandatory Minimum Sentences

Are Mandatory Minimum Drug Sentences Cost-Effective? (RAND)

The DPRC researchers focused on cocaine, which many view as the most problematic drug in America today. They took two approaches to mathematically model the market for cocaine and arrived at the same basic conclusion: Mandatory minimum sentences are not justifiable on the basis of cost-effectiveness at reducing cocaine consumption or drug-related crime. Mandatory minimums reduce cocaine consumption less per million taxpayer dollars spent than spending the same amount on enforcement under the previous sentencing regime. And either enforcement approach reduces drug consumption less, per million dollars spent, than putting heavy users through treatment programs. Mandatory minimums are also less cost-effective than either alternative at reducing cocaine-related crime. A principal reason for these findings is the high cost of incarceration.

The Human Cost of Mandatory Minimums (American Civil Liberties Union)

Ah, but the profits for those building prisons and supplying prisoners with goods and services! And the employment possibilities for those lacking other talents - these are union jobs! I did not dig enough into the above reports to see if they pointed out these benefits to businesses, to politicians, to the unemployed.

There will be no change now with Trump - they want their opponents in jail.

And, no, my opinions have not changed. When I wrote the above entry, I was a little over two years at Fort Dix. I would leave around April of 2021. Nothing in the time I was incarcerated after writing this entry, nothing during the four years (almost five) of supervised release, has changed my thinking.

sch]

Thursday, July 10, 2025

Writers: Short Stories - Mavis Gallant, Jhumpa Lahiri, Grace Paley, Flannery O’Connor, Edna O'Brien

 Jhumpa Lahiri's “Jubilee is available for free (well, free as of 6/30/2025) from The New Yorker.

A wooden ruler with the etched faces of Henry VIII’s six wives running down the middle; ticket stubs from Hampton Court and the Chamber of Horrors, where we walked ahead of our mothers, hand in hand; a few wrappers of Dairy Milk. I still see clearly the brochure from Madame Tussaud’s, a green nameplate on the cover with white lettering. We shuddered at the likeness of one particularly sinister man standing in an olive-colored three-piece suit with old brown pharmaceutical bottles behind him. We’d seen him in the chamber dedicated to those who poisoned and stabbed and slashed. Later, flipping through the brochure, sitting side by side, we braced ourselves for his effigy; how we dreaded turning to that page. A Mavis Gallant story I discovered only recently likens the compulsion to save tickets and programs to a type of narcissism: that’s how a mother interprets a daughter’s need to hold on to memorabilia. But was that not what Gallant had done in some of her stories, and taught me to do? Intertwining invention with preserved bits and scraps of life? Already that spring, about to turn ten in the city of my birth, I was attempting to leave some trace, struggling to glimpse myself on a murky surface.

How do we face up to death, our own transience?

And by some weird miracle, The Walrus today published “A Wonderful Country”: A Mavis Gallant Story Rediscovered 

I called him the Hungarian because I couldn’t pronounce his name. If he had a name for me, I never heard it. We weren’t what you’d call chummy.

A much different rhythm than Lahiri's story.  A real estate transaction that seems small, that is sticking with me right. A life in an eggbeater.

Although Rewriting the Rules: Flannery O’Connor’s “A Good Man Is Hard to Find” (Library of America) has excerpts, it is not the whole short story as with the previous links. Its title is truth in advertising; which does not make it any less worth reading.

Although O’Connor—in the spirit of Chekhov’s famous dictum about the onstage gun needing to go off—has prepared us for the appearance of the Misfit, in a more profound sense she has radically rewritten the rules that seemed to have governed her tale. The effect is dizzying, and intensifies when it becomes obvious that the family can only be murdered by the Misfit and his men.

***

...Her darkly funny, violent world continues to exert tremendous appeal—and fascination—not least because of its collision of incongruous elements: the low and the transcendent, the comic and the speculative, the grotesque and the divine. In her meticulously crafted fiction, these opposites resolve via the unlikely transmutations and orderings of the creative act. For within her peculiarly personalized spiritual orthodoxy, ultimately nothing is incongruous; all is one. As she wrote, quoting the French theologian Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, “Everything that rises must converge.”

I think of Lahiri as elegiac, Gallant as sharply condensing lives as an observational vignette, and O'Connor as twisted.

sch 6/30

I had not heard of Grace Paley until the last ten years, since I went to prison. I had heard of Zadie Smith. I still have not read Grace Paley, but I have read Zadie Smith (and written about her on this blog).

The New Yorker that published the Lahiri story, also published a Zadie Smith story. That I have not read, yet. I chose to read her write about Grace Paley: Zadie Smith on Grace Paley’s “My Father Addresses Me on the Facts of Old Age.

Paley reminded me of my past but also of my present: living in Greenwich Village, with a poet as a partner, trying to write while bringing up two kids. The startling aspect, to me, was that she included it all. She didn’t put a cordon around a short story and use a special literary voice to create it. In her expert hands a short story is like one of those cavernous shoulder bags you’ll need to carry in the city if your plan is to tote around four or five novels, a feminist treatise, a bunch of diapers, somebody’s lunch, a photocopy of a zoning law to brandish at a community-board meeting, and a large banner that reads “END THE WAR.” Paley is an everything-and-the-kitchen-sink sort of a writer, with an emphasis on the kitchen sink. The domestic is not banal to her, nor is it bourgeois. It’s perhaps a little perverse to write a story called “The Silence” in homage to one of the chattiest writers on the block, yet for me Paley has always served as a kind of stimulant to honesty. I can get all up in my head when I’m writing. But if I read a bit of Paley just before I open the document I feel some of that wildness and openheartedness enter me. My character Sharon in “The Silence” is a fictional person from a shadowy region of my mind, but Paley cleared the space and built a little platform so that Sharon could step forward and just . . . be. My Sharon is dealing with “the Change,” which seems also to be on Paley’s mind in “My Father.” (“We should probably begin at the beginning, he said. Change. First there is change, which nobody likes—even men. You’d be surprised. You can do little things—putting cream on the corners of your mouth, also the heels of your feet.”) But Sharon is not a participant in what I want to call “menopause discourse.” She doesn’t really have a language for what’s happening to her. She’s just trying to get through it.

When I gave up writing in my early twenties, one part was not having anything to write. What I did not learn until I began telling my Indiana stories to people from the East, until I read Joyce Carol Oates's western New York stories and Thomas Hardy's Wessex novels, was that where there are people there are stories to tell. You look around and see what you can see, and then try to recreate the life you see on paper.

Edna O'Brien's illuminating short stories



sch 7/1