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...After an amicable evening with his wife and family and several houseguests, Bent was awakened at the crack of dawn by someone warning that the Indian mob along with some Mexicans had reassembled, drunk and bloodthirsty, and was headed his way. Bent met them at the door and asked their purpose. The answer was direct and not good.

"We want your head, gringo, we do not want for any of you gringos to govern us, as we have come to kill you."

"What wrong have I done you?" Bent responded. "I have always helped you. I cured you when you were sick and never charged you."

"Yes," cried an Indian, "and now you must die so that no American is going to govern us!" With that, a shower of arrows enveloped Bent at his door, which he managed to slam shut and bolt. His family, now thoroughly alarmed but still dressed in nightclothes, was horrified to see three arrows sticking out of the governor's face and blood streaming everywhere.

The mob began breaking the thin mica windows of the Bent's adobe home while rocks and more arrows flew inside and cries of "Kill the Americans" rose to a pitch along with war whoops and curses in both the Spanish and Pueblo tongues. The family could hear people clattering on the roof, trying to smash through. In deperation, someone suggested they endeavor to break through the wall the adobe shared with the house next door, and the women frantically set at this task using fire pokers and kitchen tools. Bent, meantime, was shouting out a broken window, trying to reason with the mob, but they only laughed and cursed at him. Gunfire coming through either a window or the door hit Bent in the face and stomach, while the women hysterically beat and clawed at the soft adobe bricks.

Soon they had cracked a hole large enough for a human body and after the children had gone through Bent's wife, Ignacia, was adamant that the governor should go next. But the arrows sticking out of his head would not fit through the narrow opening and Bent was obliged to withdraw and pull them out from beneath his skin before reentering the hole "holding his hand on top of his bleeding head." Just then some Indians burst into the house and confronted Ignacia with a gun. Her servant, a Navajo woman, jumped in between her mistress and the gunman and was shot.

The shooter then struck Ignacia with the gun butt and was about to finish her off when one of his companions discovered the hole broken into the wall and crawled through. Other Indians had already broken into the next-door house and were wandering its rooms. By then Bent was enfeebled from his wounds and lying down, his head cradled by Mrs. Thomas Boggs, one of his houseguests. With his stunned and horrified family watching, a Pueblo named Tomás Romero burst in and seized Bent by his suspenders and jerked him up, only to smash him to the floor, pounce on him, and scalp him alive. Other Indians riddled Bent's body with arrows and still others finally put him out of his misery in a hail of gunfire.

The assailants stripped Bent of all his clothes and began to mutilate him with knives. Some reports said he was decapitated. A plank was brought and Bent's bloody scalp was stretched upon it, nailed with brass tacks. This was then proudly paraded through Taos by the drunken mob...



-Winston Groom
Kearny's March: The Epic Creation of the American West, 1846-1847
New York, N.Y. 2011.





I previously asked ( in AllardChardon's Seldom-Used Words thread) if anyone knows the author. He may be the most successful author nobody recognizes.


The book is worth reading. The years of its focus were pivotal in American history— a fact that is neither widely known nor generally appreciated. I read Hampton Sides' Blood and Thunder a couple of years ago (which Groom cites as a primary source); the two books are enjoyable and somewhat duplicative but both are commendable.


 
I just finished Summer Knight, book 4 of the Dresden Files, by Jim Butcher. I'm also about halfway through Storm of Swords, by GRR Martin.
 
Recently finished Moneyball by Michael Lewis (excellent) and just started Bonk: The Curious Coupling of Science and Sex by Mary Roach. Very amusing.
 
"Thje Black Latios" by Mekon at FF.Net - an Altoshipping (Ash and Latias) story with all sorts of interesting tidbits.
 
I'm reading fan fiction stories that have recently been updated, as well as some more stories I found by searching Literotica.
 
Maeve Binchy, Tara Road. (I have no idea why; it's just been in the pile on my nightstand for over a decade.)
 
Stan lee's biography. What makes it more interesting is I just finished Jack Kirby's and the he said/she said Two sides of the coin on their feud is pretty entertaining.
 
"PKM Rangers: Rise of the Dark Gems" - it's one of my favorite Pokemon fan fiction stories (and I have a lot of favorites).
 

Hôtel de Sourise
(Archives Nationales)
Line 1 Métro to Saint-Paul or Line 11 Métro
to Rambuteau


After leaving the Hôtel Carnavalet, you have only to walk a few blocks along the Rue des Francs Bourgeois to the Hôtel de Soubise, where the eighteenth century aristocracy met, gossiped, and listened to music. These aristocratic gatherings were also called salons, although the qualities sought in the guest list were totally different from those in the salons held by women such as Madame de Tencin. Members of the bourgeoisie, no matter how talented or witty, were not invited. Here invitations were based on birth, not intelligence. What was deemed important was that guests had family trees with roots firmly planted in feudal times, that their manners were impeccable, and that they were properly attired. The ideas of the Enlightenment had barely touched this class.

This was the aristocracy descended from knights, who centuries before had received their huge estates in exchange for military service to the king, and, with those estates, their place in society above all other classes. Their idea of chivalry— honor, glory, Platonic love, and gentlemanly behavior— which they accepted without question, dated from this early period, and had been, like the aristocracy itself, anachronistic for centuries, since at least the time of Joan of Arc, when the paid army came into being. This "code of chivalry" had by the eighteenth century degenerated into little more than a code of gentlemanly behavior. Of all the more modern trends, only materialism and moral laxity, both antithetical to the twelth-century code of chivalry but characteristic of the eighteenth century, permeated the Rococo walls of salons such as those held here and at the Hôtel de Soubise.




-Ina Caro
Paris to the Past: Traveling Through French History by Train
New York, N.Y. 2011.





I picked up the book because of its title and discovered, to my surprise, that the author is the spouse of Robert Caro— noted biographer of Robert Moses and the lying, swindling, crooked, blackmailer, Lyndon Baines Johnson.


To my further edification, I discovered that Ina Caro is the only person that Robert Caro has trusted to do research for his celebrated biographies. Now I know where the Caros vacation.


If you are a Francophile, you'll enjoy this book.


 
Transformers GX - a Yu-Gi-Oh! GX and Transformers crossover fan fiction story.
 

"The circumstances are of great delicacy, and every precaution has to be taken to quench what might grow to be an immense scandal and seriously compromise one of the reigning families of Europe. To speak plainly, the matter implicates the great House of Ormstein, hereditary kings of Bohemia."

"I was also aware of that," murmured Holmes, settling himself down in his armchair and closing his eyes.

Our visitor glanced with some apparent surprise at the languid, lounging figure of the man who had been no doubt depicted to him as the most incisive reasoner, and most energetic agent in Europe. Holmes slowly reopened his eyes, and looked impatiently at his gigantic client.

"If your Majesty would condescend to state your case," he remarked, "I should be better able to advise you."

The man sprang from his chair, and paced up and down the room in uncontrollable agitation. Then, with a gesture of desperation, he tore the mask from his face and hurled it upon the ground. "You are right," he cried, "I am the King. Why should I attempt to conceal it?"

"Why indeed?" murmured Holmes. "Your Majesty had not spoken before I was aware that I was addressing Wilhelm Gottsreich Sigismond von Ormstein, Grand Duke of Cassel-Felstein, and hereditary King of Bohemia."



-Arthur Conan Doyle
The Adventures and Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes
Modern Library Edition
New York, N.Y. 2002.





I've greatly enjoyed watching Jeremy Brett's filmed portrayal of the famous fictional consulting detective. Other than as a child reading one story ( "The Speckled Band" ) that appeared in a collection of detective stories, I had never read any of Arthur Conan Doyle's work.

I was extremely curious to see how faithfully the Granada-Jeremy Brett televised versions adhered to the original stories. Much to my delight and surprise, I discovered that the filmed versions are quite similar.

While the stories are entertaining, they are not the kind of stuff I normally read. In what may be a first, I declare that the film version (at least, of the Jeremy Brett variety) is better than the book!


 
A truly awful steampunk book called Boneshaker. Poorly written, ill-paced, and just lifeless. What can I say? The genre interests me but this book... really doesn't.
 
Recently finished Moneyball by Michael Lewis (excellent) and just started Bonk: The Curious Coupling of Science and Sex by Mary Roach. Very amusing.

Bonk sounds very familiar. I know I haven't read it, but I wonder if I saw her interviewed somewhere.

LeCarre and Pratchett have both come highly recommended to me. I read Tara Road years ago and was annoyed by the Cameron Diaz/Kate Winslet movie, The Holiday, for being a rip-off of it.

Right now, I'm not reading books as much as I'd like. Wicked is on my nightstand, but I just picked up a script for a show I want to talk my community theatre group into staging - God of Carnage - so I'll be reading that first. Yes, this is the one that is now a movie with Jodie Foster and, I believe, Kate Winslet.
 
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