American Sirens by Kevin Hazzard

Nov. 9th, 2025 03:20 am
altamira16: A sailboat on the water at dawn or dusk (Default)
[personal profile] altamira16
This is the story of the invention of street medicine.

In Pittsburg, in the 1960s, there was an establishment that was called "Freedom House" that helped black people find jobs. They were approached by a foundation that wanted them to take on a more ambitious project. That more ambitious project involved collaborating with a doctor who was pioneering emergency medicine to do street medicine.

At this point in time, ambulance services were run by the police, the fire department, or funeral homes. The goal was to get people to the hospital as quickly as possible. No one necessarily rode in the back with the patients to make sure they were okay.

Dr. Peter Safar had read a paper that the breath being exhaled still had quite a bit of oxygen in it, and he invented CPR. He wanted to teach CPR to just about anyone. The medical establishment did not like this because medicine was too special to teach just anyone.

He had bigger dreams of civilians learning even more medicine and riding in specialized ambulances equipped with medical equipment. He took on his first class of civilians in the late 1960s and trained them for nine months and let them serve the black community in a part of Pittsburg. At this point, that community started to receive better care than everyone else in Pittsburg.

Then, Pittsburg elects a populist mayor who is trying to cut government and feels a bit Trumpian. The Mayor Peter Flaherty wantsed to give the money to the police, even though the police had a lot less medical training.

A new doctor is brought in to run Freedom House, and she trains them even further. She goes on to write the curriculum that is used by paramedics around the country.

The story in this book revolves around three central characters. John Moon is one of the paramedics who works at Freedom House. Doctor Peter Safar is a pioneer in anesthesiology and emergency manager. He saw Narcan being used to reverse anesthesia, and he decided to try it on overdoses in the early 1970s. I didn't realize Narcan had been around that long. Doctor Nancy Caroline comes in to run Freedom House during Flaherty's tenure as mayor, writes the training material used for all paramedics, and then goes on to do some disaster medicine around the world.

This book was excellent.

There is also a Netflix documentary about this.
alethia: (GK Doc)
[personal profile] alethia
Ran the Table (6653 words) by Alethia
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: The Pitt (TV)
Rating: Explicit
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: Jack Abbot/Michael "Robby" Robinavitch
Characters: Michael "Robby" Robinavitch, Jack Abbot (The Pitt)
Additional Tags: Post-Season/Series 01, Developing Relationship, Sexuality Crisis, First Kiss, First Time, Porn, everybody gets to speedrun a sexuality crisis, as a treat
Summary:

"Tell me something that brings you comfort."

"Something that brings me comfort?" Robby shot back, his tone mocking the frivolity of it, because he never was one to just follow directions.

"Yes," Gene said, eternally unfazed. "It can be the smallest thing, whatever comes to mind."

What came to mind was: Pens games, the trails at Frick Park, the rare book collection in the Oliver Room at Carnegie Main, a cortado at Sage Caffe. But what he said was: "Jack."

...wait. Shit.

Photos: Lake Charleston

Nov. 8th, 2025 10:47 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith posting in [community profile] common_nature
Today we visited the Charleston Food Forest, Coles County Community Garden, and Lake Charleston. These are the lake pictures, thus meeting my fall goal for birdwatching / leafpeeping. (Begin with the food forest, community garden.)

Walk with me ... )

(no subject)

Nov. 8th, 2025 10:29 pm
sorcyress: Drawing of me as a pirate, standing in front of the Boston Citgo sign (Default)
[personal profile] sorcyress
New Jersey wedding!

I am in the tiny seaside town of Ocean Grove, which appears to be one of the very few remaining "camp meeting" towns in the united states. Apparently this used to be a big thing in the 1800s? Also the town is chock full of queers, since there was some amount of depression throughout the 1970s-early 2000s and then all the fringe arty folks started moving in where the property was cheap.

It's a really charming place!

I'm here because Racheline has been coming here every summer since they were a child, since their grandparents live quite close, and it's where they and Patty decided to host their wedding. So yeah, driving down from Boston throughout the late morning and early afternoon and here in time to walk by the seaside and join in for the extremely charming ghost tour and do a bit of wandering in and out of queer little witchy shops. A great day, honestly!

The drive was _so_ needed. Like, traffic was worse than I'd hope (but way better than it could've been) and google desperately wanted me to go over the GWashington instead of the Tappen Zee (to the point where I have a stunning screencap in which I added "Tappen Zee" as a stop along my route...so google maps shows a route that goes over the bridge, then doubles back and south to cross the Hudson proper at the GWashington.) but other than that, it was a real nice reminder that I was raised on road trips and I still get a lot out of them. I stopped twice on the way down to stretch my legs and be not in car, and that was just about perfect. And I arrived only about half an hour after my original projected arrivial time, even with Merritt traffic and remapping shenanigans!

Also the car I'm borrowing has a CD player and like, I can't believe people make weird faces at me when I ask if their cars I'm gonna drive have such beasts, they're _just good_. Yes mostly because I can put in horrible mix tapes I made in 2003, but also it's just very soothing to have music that hums along with no interruptions or bad wifi connections and not having to give a stranger's car permission to talk to my phone. Some of the answer is eventually to create some more playlists on my laptop/phone, probably?

Anyways, I just checked and I'm realizing I made zero posts about the wedding last weekend, so, uh, that was also good? My life has been very very busy.

I hope you are well and having good adventures!

~Sor
MOOP!

Thirty Days, 30K: Day 8

Nov. 8th, 2025 08:52 pm
lizvogel: What is this work of which you speak? (Cat on briefcase.) (Work)
[personal profile] lizvogel
Woke up early today and snuck downstairs for a little writing before an exciting morning of cleaning the eavestroughs in the cold. Do I know how to party or what? But the writing went well (444 words in a little over an hour!), and the eavestroughs really weren't too bad.

Sat myself down for another writing session this evening, and plugged along even though I was having trouble getting started... and trouble reaching around the purring cat to the keyboard.... Some problems are good to have. :-) And then buckled down and produced. I just crossed 100K! Woot! 100,007 to be precise, which includes working in some bits I've been wanting to find a place for, and setting up for some stuff to come. Whoo boy, are my characters in for some surprises... *evil writer grin*

1706 words today. That's the third time I've hit a daily count that would have been good even for old NaNo. But I'm finding the thousand K per day a much more copacetic target; I can write a lot and still have a life. This is a good thing.

9847 new words and counting.

sovay: (I Claudius)
[personal profile] sovay
I was thrilled to be informed last night of the new mapping of Roman roads, almost doubling the previously known mileage of the mid-second century CE. Naturally it has produced an interactive dataset, Itiner-e. I am waiting for the sea-roads to come online, but in the meantime I could walk from Durovernum to Segontium in about five days, more or less up the A5. Colpeper would flip. The smaller, less paved, less historically continuous routes are even neater, flooded under modern dams or trodden between the constellations of villas. "The roads are anywhere that the Romans walked."

Because it would otherwise have closed before I could see it, for the first time in five years and ten months I made it out to the MFA to see Deep Waters: Four Artists and the Sea, a meditation on marginalization, migration, and the sea as site of simultaneous beauty and atrocity pairing John Singleton Copley's Watson and the Shark (1778) and J. M. W. Turner's Slave Ship (Slavers Throwing Overboard the Dead and Dying, Typhoon Coming On) (1840) with Ayana V. Jackson's Some People Have Spiritual Eyes I & II (2020) and John Akomfrah's Vertigo Sea (2015). This last is a three-screen video installation subtitled Oblique tales on the aquatic sublime, which turns out to mean a breath-stealing churn of jewel-like navigations from black smokers through kelp forests to polar sheets against which is always playing the human use of the sea as unrenewable dump-site, the extraction of furs and oils and the disposal of bodies including a reenactment of the Zong massacre as if captured in the same grainily archival footage as the foundering vessels of Vietnamese boat people or the winter hunting of bears at Spitsbergen, the floe-slither of seals, the shoal-flick of egrets, the unzipping of a whale aboard a modern factory ship and the head-on gaze of enslaved faces whose humanity has outlasted the scientific racism that commissioned their immortalization by daguerreotype. Periodically one or more of the panels fills with theatrically historical tableaux, seaward figures stranded among a litter of clocks and chairs, bicycles and bones, a pram, a golliwog doll. The aristocratically scarlet-coated, tricorned Black man who surmounts the foreshore like a traveler by Caspar David Friedrich is Olaudah Equiano, enigmatically presiding like the memory of the Middle Passage. The soundtrack similarly interweaves journalism and opera, Nietzsche and Woolf, Melville and Heathcote Williams. It runs 48 minutes and is a hypnotically visceral, gorgeously difficult watch. It doesn't hijack the static art so much as it seems to gather it up, like a great wave. That it is ten years old has outworn none of its urgency on colonialism, immigration, the environment; it hit me much harder than I had imagined and I do not regret it. The waves I grew up with always knock you down.

To my bitter disappointment, I could not get an adequate photo walking home after sunset with only my phone for a camera, but the combination of a local porch-hung pride flag with the action of the wind on its accompanying anatomical model left over from Halloween now produces what I feel would be a respectably Chuck Tingle title: Mooned by the Gay Skeleton.

Just one thing: 09 November 2025

Nov. 8th, 2025 06:24 pm
[personal profile] jazzyjj posting in [community profile] awesomeers
It's challenge time!

Comment with Just One Thing you've accomplished in the last 24 hours or so. It doesn't have to be a hard thing, or even a thing that you think is particularly awesome. Just a thing that you did.

Feel free to share more than one thing if you're feeling particularly accomplished!

Extra credit: find someone in the comments and give them props for what they achieved!

Nothing is too big, too small, too strange or too cryptic. And in case you'd rather do this in private, anonymous comments are screened. I will only unscreen if you ask me to.

Go!
pauraque: drawing of a wolf reading a book with a coffee cup (customer service wolf)
[personal profile] pauraque
This is a collection of short stories set in the fictional Central European country Orsinia. Most of the stories are new for the book, though a couple were published previously, and the invention of the country itself was one of Le Guin's first creative writing projects. It's basically an alt-history Czechia or Hungary, borrowing from real wars and political events; stories set in the Cold War era show Orsinia as a satellite state of the Soviet Union. Aside from the alternate history, the stories have no speculative elements.

I hadn't read this before because it didn't sound like it was up my alley. But it was next up in my chronological read of Le Guin's books, so I gave it a chance, and guess what? It wasn't up my alley!

I freely admit that a big part of the issue is that I'm the wrong audience for what she was trying to do here. A number of the stories are the sort of litfic where the entire plot is family/relationship drama and everyone is miserable, which is a genre that I find deadly dull even if Ursula Le Guin writes it. But I also don't think the prose is up to her usual standard. It's more reminiscent of her early work, and some of it openly is early work! But even the stories dated 1976 read like revisions of something pulled from the previous decade's drawer.

What surprised me the most is how generic I found the worldbuilding to be. It comes off like she wanted to write about Central Europe but didn't have the depth of knowledge to write about any specific country, so instead we have this Ruritanian stand-in that does not have any real weight to it or any distinctive qualities or culture. The stories I enjoyed the most were the ones set prior to the 20th century, which at least took me to an interesting time if not to an especially compelling place.

So yeah, this wasn't for me. Oh well, at least it was short.

=^.^=

Nov. 8th, 2025 02:35 pm
settiai: (Furry Trio -- settiai)
[personal profile] settiai
On Monday, I noticed that the small cat tree that allows the cats to look out the window at people/dogs/geese wandering around outside was looking a little rough. By which I mean that the tallest part of it was noticeably leaning when it had a cat on it.

Cat pictures under the cut. )

Misc things

Nov. 8th, 2025 04:41 pm
oursin: Brush the Wandering Hedgehog by the fire (Default)
[personal profile] oursin

I am not encouraged to read the actual book, but this is amazing BURN:

beneath the carapace of difficult writing and literary allusion, there’s the gratifying gooey centre of a blockbuster PG western, with limited nudity, violent scenes and oddly simple moral choices.

Am now wondering how many pretentiously lit'ry tomes there are of which this could be said....

***

I was thinking that surely there is a class factor involved here, i.e. parents who can actually afford to be this over-involved in their offspring? When Helicopter Parents Touch Down—At College. Okay, am of generation which is quite aghast at this - I bopped off to New York for a summer during my uni years when making a phone call would have been prohibitively expensive.

***

Like I am always going on, 'exotic' ingredients have a long history in global circulation, c.f. lates from the Recipes Project: Globalising Early Modern Recipes

***

This is amazing and fascinating: The most widely used writing system in pre-colonial Africa was the ʿAjamī script - so widespread.

***

Lost grave of daughter of Black abolitionist Olaudah Equiano found by A-level student:

Olaudah Equiano (1745-1797), also known as Gustavus Vassa, escaped enslavement to become a celebrated author and campaigner in Georgian England. His memoir, The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano, or Gustavus Vassa, the African, was a bestseller.
His book tour brought him to Cambridgeshire, where he would marry and have two children with Susannah Cullen, an Englishwoman from Ely. They settled in Soham, supported by a local network including abolitionist friends, safe at a time when reactionary “church and king” mobs were targeting reformers.

***

Myths about people debunked:

‘Heroic actions are a natural tendency’: why bystander apathy is a myth Modern research shows the public work together selflessly in an emergency, motivated by a strong impulse to help

Debunking “When Prophecy Fails”

In 1954, Dorothy Martin predicted an apocalyptic flood and promised her followers rescue by flying saucers. When neither arrived, she recanted, her group dissolved, and efforts to proselytize ceased. But When Prophecy Fails (1956), the now-canonical account of the event, claimed the opposite: that the group doubled down on its beliefs and began recruiting—evidence, the authors argued, of a new psychological mechanism, cognitive dissonance. Drawing on newly unsealed archival material, this article demonstrates that the book's central claims are false, and that the authors knew they were false.

neotoma: Neotoma albigula, the white-throated woodrat! [default icon] (Default)
[personal profile] neotoma
I reported through the apartment complex's online service request page that there was water dripping from my bathroom ceiling fan on Sunday 02 Nov 2025, and got no response.

Yesterday (Friday, 07 NOV 2025), I emailed the PM and got the maintenance staff (3 guys names Noel, Vladimir, and Martin (the supervisor) who confirmed that there was leakage and went upstairs to figure out what was causing it.

Apparently my upstairs neighbor's bathtub leaks.

There are plumbers here now, and they're going to have to take my bathroom ceiling apart.

Further documentation as this progress.
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll


Six books new to me: two fantasy, one science fiction, one that seems to be a mix of both, one horror, and one non-fiction.

Books Received, November 1 - November 7

How is it November already?


Poll #33815 Rings of Fate by Melissa de la Cruz (January 2026)
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 34


Which of these (mostly upcoming) book look interesting?

View Answers

Rings of Fate by Melissa de la Cruz (January 2026)
5 (14.7%)

Foundling Fathers by Meg Elison (June 2026)
14 (41.2%)

Letters From an Imaginary Country by Theodora Goss (November 2025)
15 (44.1%)

The Essential Horror of Joe R. Lansdale by Joe R. Lansdale (October 2025)
3 (8.8%)

Fallen Gods by Rachel van Dyken (December 2025)
7 (20.6%)

The Lost History of the New Madrid Earthquakes by Conevery Bolton Valencius (May 2024)
21 (61.8%)

Some other option (see comments)
1 (2.9%)

Cats!
26 (76.5%)

A walk on the Mortimer trail

Nov. 8th, 2025 02:57 pm
cmcmck: (Default)
[personal profile] cmcmck
We'd promised ourselves a walk on this footpath last time we were in Ludlow and ran out of time.

The Mortimers were the local aristocratic family and had an unerring ability to choose the wrong side during the Wars of the Roses.

We walked past one of the several weirs on the River Teme.



More pics! )

Just One Thing (08 November 2025)

Nov. 8th, 2025 12:42 pm
nanila: me (Default)
[personal profile] nanila posting in [community profile] awesomeers
It's challenge time!

Comment with Just One Thing you've accomplished in the last 24 hours or so. It doesn't have to be a hard thing, or even a thing that you think is particularly awesome. Just a thing that you did.

Feel free to share more than one thing if you're feeling particularly accomplished! Extra credit: find someone in the comments and give them props for what they achieved!

Nothing is too big, too small, too strange or too cryptic. And in case you'd rather do this in private, anonymous comments are screened. I will only unscreen if you ask me to.

Go!