James Enge's Blog

October 17, 2025

Joys of Analogue Media

One of the long-lost pleasures of vinyl that I’m recently recovering is going through stacks of used LPs at record stores. These are thinner on the ground than they were in the 20th C, but when I find one I almost always come away with something great.

The sleeves of 3 LP records: Orff’s CARMINA CATULLI (Philadelphia Orchestra conducted by Ormandy), Prokofiev’s ALEXANDER NEVSKY (NY Philharmonic, conducted by Schippers), & Mahler’s Symphony Number 1 (Columbia Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Walter).

I don’t remember being crazy about Orff’s Carmina Catulli, but it is the most famous setting of Catullus’ verse, which I’m teaching again next semester in my Upper Latin class.

There’s some Latin in Prokofiev’s Alexander Nevsky, too: the ...

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Published on October 17, 2025 14:13

September 5, 2025

For the Record…

I finally replaced the turntable that broke a couple of moves ago, and have been enjoying long soaks in analogue sound. It’s fun to finally listen to the vinyl I’ve been buying to support bands over the last few years, & also to drag old favorites out of boxes in the basement.

4 album sleeves: the Wolverines Classic Jazz Orchestra (but not the one you’re probably thinking of), an album of Prokofiev’s music (“Lt. Kijé Suite”, “Suite from Live for 3 Oranges”, “Classical Symphony “), an SP by the Fearless Flyers, “Nouvelles Aventures” by Calibro 35).

The Prokofiev is the first album I bought with my own money. Weird that I still have it when so many other things and people have been lost over the years.

The aforesaid boxes are completely disorganized, so disco...

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Published on September 05, 2025 20:21

September 3, 2025

This Means Snore: THE WAR OF THE ROSES by William Adler

I’ve never seen the Danny De Vito film The War of the Roses (1989). It came out during the first Christmas season that I celebrated with my first wife and my first child. I had lots of things to occupy me in those days, and going to see a dark comedy about a nasty divorce didn’t seem like a worthwhile thing to add to the list. Much later on I had my own divorce to contend with, and a movie like that seemed still less appealing.

But a remake has just been released (The Roses, 2025), featuring ...

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Published on September 03, 2025 14:35

August 13, 2025

CW: Trumpolatry

Many things about Trumpism are disgusting, but there’s a specific kind of abject ecstacy in Trumpolatry that is really repulsive. “It’s like something from Tacitus,” I always think. Today I ran across the quote I’d been not-quite remembering.


clamor vocesque vulgi ex more adulandi nimiae et falsae: quasi dictatorem Caesarem aut imperatorem Augustum prosequerentur, ita studiis votisque certabant, nec metu aut amore, sed ex libidine servitii.


Tacitus, Historiae 1.90


“The shouting and th...


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Published on August 13, 2025 12:58

August 10, 2025

The SF/F Watcher’s Lament

Of all sad words of tongue or pen,
the saddest are “Prequel again?”

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Published on August 10, 2025 22:09

Deus Ex Homine: Brackett’s THE SWORD OF RHIANNON and Zelazny’s ISLE OF THE DEAD

I’ve been following with interest Steven Silver’s great series of reviews of the Tor Double books at the Black Gate. His latest, scrupulously fair, review of Brackett’s The Sword of Rhiannon+de Camp’s Divide and Conquer reminded me of one of my favorite Latin sayings: de gustibus non disputandum est. Or, in the words of a cinematic classic:

“Your point of view is so different from mine.”
Michelle (Robyn Paris) in The Room (2003)

People get to like what they like and not like what they don...

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Published on August 10, 2025 16:32

August 9, 2025

Two Duds: WAS IT MURDER? by James Hilton and A QUESTION OF PROOF by Nicholas Blake

Fiction set at upper-class British schools was a popular genre in the 19th and early 20th C, and murder mysteries were the dominant form of popular fiction in the early and mid-20th century, so it’s only natural that cross-pollination would create a sub-genre: the murder mystery set at an upper-class school.

I’ve read three of these things: A Question of Proof by “Nicholas Blake” (really C. Day Lewis), A Murder of Quality by “John Le Carré” (really David Cornwell) and Was It Murder? by “Glen ...

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Published on August 09, 2025 14:59

July 31, 2025

Water We Fighting For?

Typo of the day: Tuhursday (for an intended Thursday). Easily fixed, but now I’m wondering who Tuhur was.

Mr. Internet tells me it’s a Sundanese word meaning “dry”. Maybe Tuhur was the archenemy of that Wonder Twin who turned into water?

Screenshot of an old Super Friends cartoon. The image shows a bucket of water with a face imprinted on the water.
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Published on July 31, 2025 12:46

July 28, 2025

Dumkupf vs. Laocoön

A cartoon from an old (1927-vintage) issue of The New Yorker. It made me smile, even though it’s probably supposed to appeal to class and ethnic biases.

Cartoon of a shop window for cartoon by O. Soglow (?) in The New Yorker issue for Sept 17, 1927

“Look, my dear friend Amaryllis Partington-Smith-Symythe-Vanderbilt-Smythington-Smyth–a banausic of foreign abstraction, decorating his shop-window with classical statuary! Très amusant!”

“Wasn’t your dad a fruit-peddler named Rabinowicz?”

“SHUT UP, YOU WHORE!”

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Published on July 28, 2025 22:14

July 18, 2025

De Rerum Natura

A wonderfully cool day for July here in the Great Black Swamp—the high temp around 75ºF (≈ 24ºC). I opened all the windows in my bookroom, so now I can hear the musical sounds of people mowing their dumb lawns and the mechanical groan of the AC unit next door.

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Published on July 18, 2025 12:45