Saturday, February 21, 2026
1864 1st US Catholic parish church for black worshippers was dedicated in Baltimore
1965 Malcolm X was shot dead by Nation of Islam followers in New York
1975 Watergate figures John Mitchell, H. R. Haldeman & John D. Ehrlichman were sentenced to 2½-8 years for conspiracy and obstruction of justice
2014 President Barack Obama met with the Dalai Lama
2020 Lilly arrived and became a part of our lives until December 3, 2024
2023 Joe Biden vowed unwavering support for Ukraine in a speech from Warsaw Castle
2025 The Associated Press filed a lawsuit against three Trump administration officials after they banned the news agency from attending presidential press events after the agency refused to refer to the Gulf of Mexico as the "Gulf of America".
In bed at 9:35, awake at 2:55 but unable to sleep, up at 3:45. 27/12/32/25.
Morning meds at 11 a.m.
Note to CBG:
I finished Theo of Golden last night. After waking up this morning at 3 a.m., I lay in bed thinking about the ending Theo of Golden, and more specifically, wondering about the identity of the young woman who showed up at Mr. Ponder's office, asking for his help in finding a missing person. It came to me after my required daily weigh-in and BP check for CHF. "Willa" was Ellen's daughter, the one she described to Theo much earlier in the narrative, in answering his question about the happiest day in her life. The author didn't tell us what happened to her and Ellen later, a bit of a disappointment, but I suppose we are to assume that Mr. Ponder effected a meeting between Olivia/Willa and her mother, and that we'll learn more about it in the planned sequel to Theo of Golden, now planned as Ellen of Golden.
I liked the book very much. It reminded a bit of both Chaucer's Canterbury Tales and Edgar Lee Masters' Spoon River Anthology, though neither of those favorites featured a protagonist like Theo. Neither of those classics, however, which I still return to, triggers the personal reflections that this novel does. I was stunned by the ending, the attack on Ellen and Simone, and Theo's accidental death. I was a bit disappointed in the posthumous revelation that Theo was Asher's father and Minette's grandfather. It seemed a bit contrived and fantastical to me, but novels are all contrived, as is fiction generally. It's all made up. And, on the other hand, it is consistent with the truth that most of us have secrets in our lives, sometimes bitter and even disabling disappointments, or just sins and guilts, or, like the T-shirt I mentioned in an earlier text, 'battles others know nothing about.'
I was also a little surprised that he paid so little attention to race, he and his characters all being residents of the Deep South and having lived through Jim Crow America and the civil rights movements of the 50s and 60s into the present. The closest he seemed to come was when Kendrick confronted Derrick the DA for never looking him in the face, of really seeing him, as Kendrick, unrepresented by counsel, pled guilty to a crime he didn't commit, though he spent a year in jail for it. On the other hand, however, Kendrick did see the humanity in the 'little' Hispanic man who caused the accident that killed his wife and terribly injured his daughter, Lemisha and apparently led Derrick to see it also.
The character that struck me the most, though, was Tony, the bookseller and Vietnam vet. He returned from the war emotionally jaded, wounded in his soul. Though he attended church services with Ellen (and her bike) after Theo's death, I suspect he never really became a believer in a loving God 'whose eye is on the sparrow' and 'who has the whole world in his hands,' the God he was taught about as a child and before he went off to fight a senseless, wicked war. On the other hand, he was clearly affected by Theo's saintliness, which reminds me of Francis of Assisi's advice to his followers: "Preach always. If necessary, use words." Theo lived his belief in the great commandments, loving God and neighbor as himself.
Thanks again for recommending the book. I'm glad I read it and was even inspired to try to be a better human being.💖





