Our friends were married in a beautiful ceremony on the golf course at the Forest Highlands Golf Club.
We celebrated with a reception and dinner at the clubhouse
We celebrated with a reception and dinner at the clubhouse
Flagstaff is located on the historic Route 66, as I tried to capture with this street sign.
One more picture from downtown Flagstaff
He also managed the Seattle Mariners in the team's early days.
Wills was 89.
Once again, Eve has to fight enemies on both sides. As she actively persues the criminals, a gang of cops of outlaw cops is after her. While guided by her instincts and her desire to do right, and by a promotion that was based more on good PR for her department, than on her merit, she is pretty much despised by both her command and the rank and file. Her saving grace is her soon to be retired partner, Duncan "Donuts" Pavone.
As this is the fourth book that I have read in this series, (I started with Movieland, Lee's latest) I found this to be a great installment to the series. Great characters and a plot of many twists.
I would strongly recommend every book in this series. You can get your copy of Gated Prey by clicking here.
I'm very honored to be quoted many times in this wonderful tribute by Union-Bulletin feature writer Annie Charnley Eveland. To see the story, click here
This was the much-anticipated return of Russell Wilson his trade last March. Like the Mariners game, this one went down to the last play, as the 'Hawks barely won after Denver curiously attempted a 60 plus yard field goal in the final 20 seconds. The kick went wide, and the Hawks came away with a victory. The question was, why not give Wilson a chance to get the first down and get in better field goal range? That's his forte.
While a mixed reception was predicted for Wilson's return, after all, he quarterbacked the Seahawks to a Super Bowl victory, the boos were overwhelming.
Tuesday morning, one day after Labor Day, I read that Ken Levine curtailed his 16 year blog, something that I read every day, showing me there were still bloggers out there.
Tuesday night, I watched on TV as the Seattle Storm lost in the WNBA playoffs, it being the last game for Sue Bird, who inspired our area with her outstanding play, her charisma and compassion for over 20 years. Bird won championships, Olympic Gold Medals, and the hearts of area sports fans.
Thursday, Queen Elizabeth, who served for well over seven decades, ruling Great Britain, but virtually "grandmother" to the world slipped away, leaving us something that most of the world has never seen, a King of England.
One that I could always count on was By Ken Levine. I remembered Ken mostly from his announcing of Mariner games on the radio. He had a short tenure in the 90s. However, he is most famous for comedy writing on classic shows like Mash, Cheers, and Frasier.
Levine has had the success in the TV industry that most of us dream about, but on his blog, he comes across as down to earth and approachable. That trait is further demonstrated in his very successful podcast, Hollywood and Levine, that is released every week.
Levine blogged daily, which has inspired me to try and blog daily. Like this blog, it was not tied to any subject, just whatever crossed his mind at the time.
I was truly saddened to read yesterday that Ken is curtailing his blog, saying that his latest post would be his last. His blog will stay on the web to entertain readers with 16 years worth of content. He said that maintaining it had gotten to be a chore and distracted him from other projects. Ken has always had his fingers in many pots including writing plays, cartooning, and podcasting, in which he plans to continue.
So to Ken, I want to say, "Thank You" for the morning entertainment, which made readers feel like they were part of something special and didn't cost us a nickel. We learned, we laughed, we cried, and we got angry. We fantasized about being in his world and really, what more could you ask for?
After the game, the crowd chanted "Thank You, Sue". Bird stood on the court in tears and then walked off, to take her place amongst players like Edgar Martinez and Steve Largent as local sports heroes.