Last updated 5/21/21
Every once in a while, (and sometimes each day) I listen to a great podcast, enjoy an article, or see a good video that I want to share with you.
I like to think of them as my e-links:
Friday’s e-links 5/21
This week I listened to Find You First by Linwood Barclay. As clever as Elevator Pitch (with murders that were caused by crashing elevators), this Barclay mystery took me to a dying tech millionaire who wants to find the children he fathered years ago at a fertility clinic. Then, the murders begin and the book becomes riveting. I only let myself listen to it during the evening when I wash dishes. To continue the book, I looked for extra chores.
Friday’s e-links 5/14
Sadly, I am reading the fourteenth and final Maisie Dobbs mystery. Moving from the first book to the last one, I saw one very real woman respond to two World Wars and peace time as a captivatingly clever detective and a very human (heroic and tragic) wife and mother. To those of you who might want to read the series, I recommend it as the perfect respite in a complicated world.
Friday’s e-links 5/07
When many of us refer to Big Tech, it would be helpful to have an image of what we really mean. Now, we can get that picture from The Washington Post. So very clearly, it gave us a series of graphics that trace how Facebook, Apple, Amazon, and Google got bigger and bigger through each one’s acquisition history.