Author Archives: CharlieClaywell

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About CharlieClaywell

I have been a writer for years, mainly as a reporter, but I have always enjoyed history, especially non-mainstream stories buried inside old documents. My blog mostly centers around those stories. On occasion, though, I deviate and talk about my dog, vintage toys and what it's like to be middle-aged.

MLB.com Writers Share Their Favorite Baseball Books

Came across this on Freshly Pressed…

Mark Newman's avatarBaseball Books

Time for some summer reading? You’re in luck. We invited our esteemed writing colleagues at MLB.com to suggest at least one favorite baseball book. Ball Four tops Moneyball, 8-6, for most mentions. David Halberstam has the most suggested works with three. Some titles will surprise you. These 47 folks write about baseball for a living, in some cases books as well, so take their advice and happy reading.

Jordan Bastian: Fifty-nine in ’84 By Edward Achorn.

Mike Bauman: Eight Men Out by Eliot Asinof.

Summer of '49Jason Beck: I read Summer of ’49 while in college, and for me it’s still the standard. Really good individual storytelling woven into the bigger context of a pennant race and its place in the larger culture.

Barry Bloom:The Iowa Baseball Confederacy by W.P. Kinsella. Shoeless Joe was turned into a cliche by the movie “Field of Dreams.” Iowa stands on its own as…

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Categories: American History

The Giver: Movie Effectively Delivers Dark Message

200px-The_Giver_CoverI read The Giver when my daughter read it for school and was impressed by how Lois Lowry delivers such a dark message in a powerful way.

The movie also accomplishes this very well, even though, it does not follow the book.

The story centers around the teenager Jonas — a messiah figure — who as a Receiver must take in all the memories of past societies so normalcy can be maintained in the current world. Long before Jonas was born, city elders had created a society where sameness, truthfulness and conformity ensured humanity would never fall to the ills of war, pain or any other negativity caused by an emotional reaction to life.

The story is dark and thought-provoking as one learns that society’s woes, like murder, have simply been replaced by government-sanctioned killings. Less desirable members of society, whether they are the elderly or non-thriving infants, are sent to Elsewhere. One of the most disturbing moments in the story is when Jonas realizes that his father, a caretaker in a children’s nursery, culls young infants from society by euthanizing them.

Despite a strong performance by the Giver (Jeff Bridges), the chief elder (Meryl Streep), Jonas (Brenton Thwaites) and Fiona (Odeya Rush) the movie failed to draw a large crowd on its opening weekend. This could be an indication of viewer fatigue with young adult dsytopian society movies — like Divergent and Hunger Games — or the fact that The Giver is more cerebral, making it somewhat more difficult to transition to the large screen.

But, having watched all three of the movies, The Giver holds its own very well. No, it is not the book, but someone who has never read the book can watch the movie and will be pulled in to the jarring nonsensical approach to living that a society based on sameness and ‘reason’ creates.

And everyone will be hoping Jonas can handle the weight of his calling and that he can save the life of the infant boy, Gabriel.

 

Categories: movies | Tags: ,

How 10 Percent Of The Voters Made A Choice Everyone Has To Deal With

-flagsI know this is sacred territory. Some Americans equate voting with the only civil right that matters.

But does every vote matter — or is it possible the system is flawed?

Growing up I heard a lot of folklore about the ‘one vote that mattered’ in elections, but as far as a I can tell, there have been very few, if any, significant elections altered by a single vote. The only one that comes to mind for me is the 1876 Presidential election, which was in fact decided by one vote. But the election is hardly an example of how well the system works. It is just the opposite and the election is a black spot on America’s past.

I write about this because I live in Ohio’s 8th Congressional District. House Speaker John Boehner, just two steps away from presidential power, has represented this region for decades — ever since he was first elected in 1990.  Since 1990, besides running unopposed several times, he has never faced any serious competition.

But, the region is hardly prosperous. Parts of the gerrymandered district  are under-employed, impoverished and in decline. Although not responsible for all the woes that have beset this area, Boehner seems to have done little to stem the economic fallout.

Which goes back to the original question, does every vote really matter.

In Ohio, we use a closed primary system. What this means, in a nutshell, is every May (sometimes March), when it is time for voters to decide who will appear on the November ballot, not everyone has a say. FairVote.org offers this explanation of closed primaries,

In a closed primary, only voters registered with a given party can vote in that party’s primary. Parties may have the option to invite unaffiliated voters to participate, but such independent voters usually are left out of the primary unless they decide to give up their independent status.

So during the primary, a large percentage of voters in Boehner’s home county of Butler and in Preble County, where I live, do not cast a vote for their potential Congressmen — instead being required to wait until November.

In fact, in the 2014 May primary, 83 percent of the 234,320 Butler County voters (193,833) had no say. In Preble County, a region which is small enough that its voting base has no sway on national politics, 65 percent — or 17,800 voters had no say in who would be on the November ballot as their potential representative in Congress.

Or to put it another way, only a small number of voters in the 8th District do decide which candidates end up on the ballot.

In Butler County, 19,900 voters chose Boehner as their party’s candidate for the 8th Congressional District while 3,631 chose Tom Poetter as the Democrat candidate — but all of the county’s 234,320 voters have to accept it — and then choose between them come November.

Which, one could argue, doesn’t really reflect the will of all the people.

Categories: 8th congressional district, American History