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Bible:
A new Bible translation tackles the challenge of turning ancient Greek and Hebrew texts into modern American English and then adds a twist: It's written like a screenplay.
Take the passage from Genesis in which God gets angry at Adam for eating the forbidden fruit from the tree of knowledge of good and evil:
"Adam (pointing at the woman): It was she! The woman You gave me as a companion put the fruit in my hands, and I ate it.
"God (to the woman): What have you done?
"Eve: It was the serpent! He tricked me, and I ate."
Later, Eve bears her first son, Cain.
"Eve (excited): Look, I have created a new human, a male child, with the help of the Eternal."
Even people who have never read the Bible could probably guess that other translations don't say Adam pointed his finger at Eve when he blamed her for his disobedience. Neither do other Bibles describe Eve as "excited" about her newborn son.
NEW TRADITION
What are medicine bags decorated with space-age beads doing in the Mt. Kearsarge Indian Museum?
Displayed alongside traditional creations, they are part of the current exhibit in the museum's new Contemporary Art Gallery, "Like Breathing: Native American Quill and Beadwork," which runs through Oct. 31.
What the pieces have in common is that they are all new.
The gallery grew out of a request by basket-maker Bill Gould and craftsman Darryl Peasley, who asked if the museum could provide a space for high quality, locally produced art. Gould- makers from Warner, are the first Native American juried members of the League of New Hampshire Craftsmen.
Executive Director Lynn Clark and Curator Nancy Jo Chabot liked the idea. The gallery would not only benefit the artists but also inform visitors that native culture is alive and flourishing.
Fourth 'Bourne' a cerebral ride
The fourth film in the Bourne franchise, The Bourne Legacy, may seem heady and intentionally disorienting and hard to follow at first - until you realize it's really about drug addiction, and the lengths to which a junkie will go to get his fix.
Structurally, yes, it's loaded with all the lies, schemes and high-tech trickery that are staples of the espionage genre. But a deeper, more individualistic source of tension propels the film along. Think of it as Drugstore Cowboy with an international scope and more explosions. That may help as you compare it with the first three films in the series that starred Matt Damon as Jason Bourne, the amnesiac CIA assassin of Robert Ludlum's novels, and established Damon as the rare action star who can actually act.
Fresh from the market
Last week, thanks to a grant from the Capital Area Wellness Coalition, I spent a few days rounding up local food from people who sell every Wednesday at the Canterbury Community Farmers Market. Pork and goat cheese mozzarella from Our Place Farm in Loudon. Bicolor corn and tomatoes from Warner River Organics. Tomina's Lemon balm cookie dough made in Laconia. A tangy fresh cow milk cheese called quark from Brookford farm in Canterbury, along with just-spun cream and beets and, best of all, bread flour made from wheat they grow themselves. Maple syrup and cucumbers from North Family Farm (which happens to be owned by my brother- and sister-in-law).
Quick and tasty
Salty olives and capers and a good-quality chicken sausage make all the difference in this Paleo Diet-friendly main course. To reduce prep time further, shop at a salad bar for cut vegetables. Feel free to add red bell peppers, eggplant or tomatoes, and adjust the cooking time accordingly. The recipe was tested using an organic apple chicken sausage.
Chicken Sausage With Squash and Fresh Herbs
1 medium red onion
12 ounces cooked chicken sausage (in links)
2 tablespoons olive oil, plus more as needed
1½ pounds mixed summer squash and zucchini
½ cup mixed fresh flat-leaf parsley, basil and/or thyme leaves
½ cup pitted kalamata olives (about 25)
¼ teaspoon salt, more to taste
¼ teaspoon freshly ground black pepper, more to taste
¼ cup capers, drained
half a lemon
Cut the onion into very thin slices. Cut the sausage crosswise into 2-inch chunks.
Inspired "creamed" corn
There are few foods as simple, delicious and complete as fresh seasonal corn on the cob. When it's really fresh, I'll even eat it raw. No boiling, no butter, no salt. It's perfectly sweet and tender right off the stalk.
Still, even perfection can get boring, and I recently began wondering what else I could do with fresh corn. I thought back to my days as the host of the Food Network's Cooking Live, when one of my guest chefs whipped up some corn soup and thickened it with pureed corn.
Of course, I'd known that any pureed vegetable will thicken a stew or soup. But corn has a secret ingredient - Duh! - cornstarch. I was astonished by the creaminess and thickness of my guest's soup.
This recipe was inspired by that soup. Creamed corn is thus named because it usually depends on cream for its creaminess. That's a problem for me for a couple of reasons. The cream not only makes the dish too rich, it also tends to mask the flavor of the corn.
'Hope Springs' has real punch
Here's how surprisingly effective Hope Springs is: It will make you want to go home and have sex with your spouse afterward. Or at least share a longer hug or a more passionate kiss.
You don't have to be married for 31 years like the stuck-in-a-rut couple Meryl Streep and Tommy Lee Jones play to feel inspired by the film's message about the importance of keeping your relationship alive. It sounds like a cliche because it is a cliche, and more: It's a cottage industry, one that's launched countless afternoon talk show episodes and shelf after shelf of self-help books.
What's so fascinating about ferns?
The recent rain has brought much needed moisture to our region and returned the woods to a panorama of lush textures and colors. Some of the main contributors to this array of verdant frilliness are ferns.
Ferns are ancient plants. Fossil records show that they first appeared about 360 million years ago. If that isn't reason enough to appreciate them, I don't know what is. But there is more to like about ferns.
They have a fascinating life history. Instead of producing flowers or seeds like other vascular plants they make spores, sometimes millions of them. One scientist estimated that a single leaf from a wood fern produced 7 million spores! The spores come in little cases called sori. In some species they are found on the underside of the leaf or frond, while in other species they grow on a separate fertile frond. The pattern of the sori on the leaves or the shape and color of the fertile frond are often used as distinguishing identification features.
Nip your transportation budget in the bud
Last week I gave a somewhat grumpy overview of airfare pricing, tempered a bit with an alert to watch for a probable drop in fares across the board around Aug. 20-21. But let's say the drop doesn't help you that much - perhaps you're traveling as a family of four or more. Is there anything else you can do to reduce the overall cost of vacationing? Indeed, yes!
It's not easy being green
There's still enough summer left for optimism, but the season is going by fast. If you didn't plant it, cultivate it or nurture the heck out of it this year, you've probably had a so-so year for certain plants. Take heart, for it wasn't entirely your fault.
Many of the old standbys, some of our most beloved perennial plants (orange daylilies or phlox panniculata, which are renowned for their steadfast endurance), have bloomed and gone by in a flash.
And what a tsunami of blueberries we've had - many were coming way ahead of season and all at once, but now there are none or few blueberries left.
Geraniums, those classic and stalwart sun-loving heat-tolerant favorites, under-performed for many. Liberal pruning encourages dense growth, and geraniums like well-drained, fertile, moist soil, but never wet leaves.
Olympic avoidance
Mandy Hauck turned 25 on Wednesday, but she avoided Facebook and her happy birthday messages to steer clear of Olympic spoilers about her favorite sport, fencing.
Hauck has also deleted her iPhone apps for CNN and ESPN, opting for news from the London Games the old-fashioned way, via TV coverage that's time-delayed by NBC for prime time.
The network is making live streams of the action available in real time online. Hauck's hanging tough, though, in favor of doing actual work during the day as the marketing communications manager for a software company in Atlanta, a job that requires her to stay on Twitter while she attempts to stay away from its main page and trending topics.
Sister-in-law needs to be stood up to
Q: How do I keep the peace with a sister-in-law who is bigoted, ignorant and rude to my children?
I am almost at the point of not allowing my children to be in her presence, but she is at virtually every family gathering or holiday that we spend with my husband's parents (who are fine).
I swear, she is one of the worst people I've ever met, and I often marvel at the fact that she's related to the man I chose to spend my life with.
A: Hopefully, that very man is standing up to her. He's got the most significant role in this, as it's ultimately his duty not to let the family member he was born with do damage to the family he chose.
Together, you can agree to limit your exposure, to initiate more visits with just his parents or to have a private conversation with her.
Steeped in politics
In a twist of irony, many visitors to August's Republican National Convention will travel between their hotels and the downtown event on a busy road named to honor President John F. Kennedy, a Democrat.
Kennedy Boulevard, a gateway to downtown from the west, was so named in 1964 partially because of a special connection between Tampa and the 35th president. Kennedy had waved to massive crowds lining that road from an open-topped Lincoln Continental on Nov. 18, 1963. The next time he rode in that car, four days later in a motorcade through downtown Dallas, he would be shot to death.
A statue of JFK now stands at the present site of the University of Tampa, looking out over his eponymous thoroughfare.
Stadium becomes world's largest synagogue
In a New Jersey sports stadium transformed into what was called the world's largest synagogue, tens of thousands of people celebrated the completion of the reading of the Talmud, the book of Jewish laws and traditions.
The program at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J., on Wednesday night combined a festive atmosphere of singing and dancing with more the serious pursuits of prayer and reflection; it was dedicated to the victims of the Holocaust.
"Tonight is a night of inspiration and opportunity," Rabbi Elly Kleimnan told the gathering.
Rabbis from around the world addressed the audience during the five-hour program, and speeches and prayers in Hebrew and English were streamed by audio and video throughout the stadium's concourses.
The celebration, called Siyum HaShas, marks the completion of the Daf Yomi, or daily reading and study of one page of the 2,711-page book. The cycle takes about seven and a half years to finish.
A cooperative musical endeavor
Don't bother trying to figure out who wrote what in Bring It On: The Musical.
Co-song creators Lin-Manuel Miranda, Tom Kitt and Amanda Green enjoyed reading reviews of their show as it toured the country and critics tried to untangle their contributions. Some saw Kitt's fingerprints all over a song he didn't write. Another was certain Miranda could be heard in something he had no part of.
"Usually when someone tried to do that guessing game, they got it wrong," Miranda said with a laugh. "That just feels like it's a credit to our process."
Inspired by the teen cheerleading movie franchise, Bring It On: The Musical was as risky a move for the creators as one of the human pyramids the performers do onstage. Yet all three are now basking in the glow of its well-received Broadway debut.
'Wimpy Kid' not so wimpy
Maybe it has to do with the lowered expectations surrounding something with "Dog Days" in its title being released during a traditionally less stellar time in the movie-going season, but the third installment in the Wimpy Kid franchise turns out to be not so wimpy after all.
Although it paints everything with the same broad sitcom strokes as its predecessor, Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Dog Days, culled from the third and fourth books in Jeff Kinney's wildly successful "novel in cartoons" series, proves nimbler and truer to its origins than last year's Rodrick Rules.
Despite the fact that this "school's out" edition is hitting theaters at a time when many kids in the country are getting ready to go back, the modestly budgeted Fox 2000 presentation should still come within spitball distance of the $53 million taken domestically by No. 2.
Back in town, friends in tow
One of the beautiful things about being a musician is that you can take your music along wherever your heart may lead you. You cannot necessarily take your band mates and fans along, however, especially if your heart happens to lead you to an organic vegetable farm in the Middle of Nowhere, Montana. Which is why veteran New Hampshire musician Laurie
Sargent will make an appearance at the Spotlight Cafe at the Capitol Center for the Arts next Thursday night.
"There's a saying that New England girls always go home," said Sargent, whose career highlights include a top 40 hit with the band Face To Face, a stint as a recording artist for Sony Records and a handful of other distinctive musical ventures with the bands Morphine, Twinemen and the Chip Smith Project. "I'm really excited about coming back and playing with musicians that I know and trust."
Who fans trade in tickets, 33 years later
By MICHELLE R. SMITH
It was December 1979 when Emery Lucier learned the concert he was eagerly awaiting in Rhode Island by British rock band The Who had been canceled over safety concerns. The 17-year-old was so angry he knocked over a chair in his high school classroom.
"I just remember being so upset about the whole thing," he said.
Lucier, now 50, of Milford, Mass., held onto the ticket, for which he paid $25 ($12.50 for the ticket and $12.50 more for the scalper). On Tuesday, he and nine other people traded in tickets from that canceled show and got new ones for The Who's final appearance on its Quadrophenia tour in February at the Dunkin Donuts Center, the same venue it was supposed to play 33 years ago.
Jermaine Jackson wants family truce
Jermaine Jackson called yesterday for an end to the public feud that has embroiled his family for more than a week, saying issues over the care of his mother and with late brother Michael's estate should be handled privately.
Jackson wrote in a statement first released to the Associated Press that he regrets the public turmoil that resulted from his mother Katherine's 10-day trip to an Arizona spa. The trip sparked a missing person's report and a driveway confrontation between relatives at the home of Katherine Jackson before a judge stripped her of guardianship duties.
"Mistakes have been made and irrational things have been said on both sides in a highly charged emotional environment," Jermaine Jackson wrote. "It is time for us all to draw a line in the sand and move towards peace, co-operation, love and healing."
Building a better burger
Before I stopped eating gluten, I was a vegetarian - and the backbone of many meals was the simple, versatile veggie burger. Nuke one of those babies for a minute then top with traditional hamburger fixings. Or use some red sauce and cheese to make a pizza burger. Or cheddar and salsa for Mexican night. Once, during a rather busy stint covering New Hampshire's Legislature, I ate veggie burgers every day for a month.
Alas, most of those burgers are full of gluten, which adds protein and binds together other ingredients to give them a meaty feel. That's good for taste and texture, but bad for those us with gluten sensitivities. In fact, the first clue to my own allergy involved something called "wheat meat" and a whole lot of hives.