FYI May 10, 2022

On This Day

1688 – King Narai nominates Phetracha as regent, leading to the revolution of 1688 in which Phetracha becomes king of the Ayutthaya Kingdom.[7]
The Siamese revolution of 1688 was a major popular upheaval in the Siamese Ayutthaya Kingdom (modern Thailand) which led to the overthrow of the pro-French Siamese king Narai. The Mandarin Phetracha, previously one of Narai’s trusted military advisors, took advantage of the elderly Narai’s illness, and killed Narai’s Christian heir, along with a number of missionaries and Narai’s influential foreign minister the Greek adventurer Constantine Phaulkon. Phetracha then married Narai’s daughter, took the throne, and pursued a policy of ousting French influence and military forces from Siam. One of the most prominent battles was 1688’s Siege of Bangkok, when tens of thousands of Siamese forces spent four months besieging a French fortress within the city. As a consequence of the revolution, Siam severed significant ties with the West, with the exception of the Dutch East India Company, until the 19th century.

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Born On This Day

1898 – Ariel Durant, American historian and author (d. 1981)[89]
Ariel Durant (/dəˈrænt/; May 10, 1898 – October 25, 1981)[1] was a Russian-born American researcher and writer. She was the coauthor of The Story of Civilization with her husband, Will Durant. They were awarded the Pulitzer Prize for General Non-Fiction.

Biography
Ariel Durant was born Chaya Kaufman in Proskurov, Russian Empire (now Khmelnytskyi, Ukraine) to Jewish parents Ethel Appel Kaufman and Joseph Kaufman. Ariel later went by Ida.[2] The family emigrated in 1900, living for several months in London 1900–01 en route to the United States, where they arrived in 1901. She had three older sisters, Sarah, Mary, and Flora, and three older brothers, Harry, Maurice, and Michael.[2] Flora became Ariel’s companion and sometime assistant, and moved with the Durants to California.

She met her future husband when she was a student at Ferrer Modern School in New York City. He was then a teacher at the school, but resigned his post to marry Ariel, who was 15 at the time of the wedding, on October 31, 1913.[3] The wedding took place at New York’s City Hall, to which she roller-skated from her family’s home in Harlem. The couple had one daughter, Ethel Benvenuta Durant (1919-1986)[2] and adopted a son, CAPT Louis Richard “Lipschultz” Durant (1917-2008) who was the son of Ariel’s sister Flora Kaufman Lipschultz and her former husband, Joseph Bernard Lipschultz (divorced 1928.) Louis had lived in Will and Ariel’s home with his mother, Flora, when he was quite young (1920 Census).

Ariel Durant legally changed her first name to Ariel after the character from Shakespeare’s The Tempest, which was the nickname her husband gave her because he said she was “strong and brave as a boy, and as swift and mischievous as an elf”.[1]

The Durants were awarded the Pulitzer Prize for General Nonfiction in 1968 for Rousseau and Revolution, the tenth volume of The Story of Civilization. In 1977 they were presented with the Presidential Medal of Freedom by Gerald Ford, and Ariel was named “Woman of the Year” by the city of Los Angeles. The Durants received the Golden Plate Award of the American Academy of Achievement in 1976.[4]

The Durants wrote a 420-page joint autobiography, published by Simon & Schuster in 1978 (A Dual Autobiography; later ISBN 0-671-23078-6).

The Durants died within two weeks of each other in 1981 and are buried at the Westwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery in Los Angeles, California. Ariel told Ethel’s daughter, Monica Mehill, that it was their differences that made them grow.[2]

 
 

FYI

 
 
NASA: Astronomy Picture of the Day
 
 

Culture: Empathy and imagination help us to engage when we enjoy a book or an audiobook – but why do we feel so sad when we come to the end? Howard Timberlake survives the post-book blues.
 
 
 
 

Sorry about the PayWall

The Wall Street Journal: Tech Industry Warns That More Remote-Work Jobs Are Headed Out of U.S. Worker shortages, limited immigration in the U.S. may favor jobs in Canada and elsewhere
 
 
 
 

By Rich Chamberlain Contributions from Rob Laing, Music Radar: “It got heavy sometimes” – Steve Jones breaks down the myths and music of the Sex Pistols’ Never Mind The Bollocks
 
 
 
 

By ADI IGNATIUS, Harvard Business Review: Accenture CEO Julie Sweet on the Most Important Skill Job Seekers Need Today
Accenture CEO Julie Sweet shares the one interview question applicants are often asked to answer: What have you learned in the last six months that was not part of work? “It’s a really simple, but very effective, way of understanding whether you’re hiring someone who likes to learn,” she says.

 
 
 
 

By Zac Cadwalader, Sprudge: The Surprisingly Long History Of Instant Coffee
 
 
 
 

By Jessica Stewart, My Modern Met: 15 Mouth-Watering Winning Images of the Food Photographer of the Year
 
 
 
 

By Ryan Roslansky, Business Insider: LinkedIn CEO: Company culture and values should be evaluated regularly. Here’s the step-by-step internal process we took to update ours.

 
 
 
 

By Nilay Patel, The Verge: How big companies kill ideas — and how to fight back, with Tony Fadell Stories and lessons from his new book, Build: An Unorthodox Guide to Making Things Worth Making
 
 
 
 
By John Timmer, ARS Technica: Corals convert sunscreen chemical into a toxin that kills them The chemical in the sunblock is fine until the coral alters it.

 
 
 
 
NPR, The Associated Press: Paris trial to open for 2009 plane crash that left 152 dead and 1 alive

 
 
 
 
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May 10, 2022 Kindle Freebie:
Heroes Live Here: A Tribute to Camp Pendleton Marines Since 9/11 Kindle Edition
by Amy Forsythe (Author)

Heroes Live Here: A Tribute to Camp Pendleton Marines Since 9/11 contains more than 150 full-color images and beautifully designed graphic illustrations depicting Camp Pendleton Marines involvement in combat operations in Afghanistan and Iraq. It’s a one-of-a-kind book filled with perspectives and reflections from post-9/11 warfighters who’ve called Camp Pendleton home.

This book guides readers through the sprawling military base and shares heartwarming tributes behind more than a dozen monuments honoring those who served and sacrificed in Operations Enduring Freedom and Iraqi Freedom.

Heroes Live Here started as a passion project to showcase the memorials and markers on Camp Pendleton and has turned into a collaborative work of art that honors our fallen heroes of the post-9/11 generation. Amy was first stationed at Camp Pendleton in 1995 and still has strong ties to the base and surrounding communities.
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 

Recipes

Taste of Home: 100 Recipes from the Women We Love

 
 
Just the Recipe: Paste the URL to any recipe, click submit, and it’ll return literally JUST the recipe- no ads, no life story of the writer, no nothing EXCEPT the recipe.
 
 
DamnDelicious
 
 


 
 

 
 

 
 
 
 

E-book Deals:

 

BookGorilla

The Book Blogger List

BookBub

The Book Junction: Where Readers Go To Discover Great New Fiction!

Books A Million

Digital Book Spot

eBookSoda

eBooks Habit

FreeBooksy

Indie Bound

Love Swept & The Smitten Word

Mystery & Thriller Most Wanted

Pixel of Ink

The Rock Stars of Romance

Book Blogs & Websites:

Alaskan Book Cafe

Alternative-Read.com

Stacy, Carol RT Book Reviews

Welcome to the Stump the Bookseller blog!

Stump the Bookseller is a service offered by Loganberry Books to reconnect people to the books they love but can’t quite remember. In brief (for more detailed information see our About page), people can post their memories here, and the hivemind goes to work. After all, the collective mind of bibliophiles, readers, parents and librarians around the world is much better than just a few of us thinking. Together with these wonderful Stumper Magicians, we have a nearly 50% success rate in finding these long lost but treasured books. The more concrete the book description, the better the success rate, of course. It is a labor of love to keep it going, and there is a modest fee. Please see the How To page to find price information and details on how to submit your Book Stumper and payment.

Thanks to everyone involved to keep this forum going: our blogging team, the well-read Stumper Magicians, the many referrals, and of course to everyone who fondly remembers the wonder of books from their childhood and wants to share or revisit that wonder. Isn’t it amazing, the magic of a book?