Saturday, January 18, 2025

Saturday's postcard: The Penn Restaurant in Warren, Pennsylvania

This is an undated mid-century postcard for The Penn Restaurant on Route 6 in Warren, Pennsylvania. There's a message on the postcard, but no stamp or postcard, so perhaps it was hand-delivered or sent in an envelope.

The Penn Restaurant is no longer around and I can't find much history about it online. But there's a mention in a 2022 article by Brian Ferry in the Times Observer of Warren. The relevant excerpt:
Stephanie Proukou wants to bring back a taste of home.

She has a lot to choose from.

“At one point there were like seven restaurants in town and my family owned four of them,” Proukou said. “The Lazy Susan was my grandfather’s. My grandmother had the Penn Restaurant on Pennsylvania Avenue. My cousins, the Spiridons, had Blue Manor. And then my dad had the Warren Sub Shop.”

Before moving back to Warren recently, Proukou had been away for decades, but people remember her family’s food. One dish stands out — Teddy’s Steak Sub.

“Every time I came back to Warren, everybody would say, ‘I’ve never had a steak sub like your dad’s steak sub,” she said. 
It's possible (likely?) that The Penn Restaurant has been closed for decades. But if anyone has any memories or information about it, please share them in the comments.

The message on the back is colorful. And it's written to the "Plant Wive Chief's" of Mercer Street in New Castle, Pennsylvania:
"Hiya Good Girls. Here is where we chow up. Try and send you a card from Jamestown New York.
Roman Gypsys.
Joe & [can't decipher]"
Someone also wrote, in pencil, "No Beer" and "Arrow shows where we sit."

There are stories behind the back of this card. And we'll never know them. Sigh.

Other Warren-related posts

Monday, January 13, 2025

My 20 favorite first-time watches of 2024

I'm not sure they had a good grasp on how best to market Black Narcissus back in the day.

I watched just under 100 films in 2024, most of them with Ashar. Movies from just about every decade and several different countries. About 10 were watched with the crowd at Terror Trader's Spook-o-Rama nights in Tempe. Following on the heels of the 2022 and 2023 lists, here are my 20 favorite first-time watches from 2024, listed chronologically by year of release:

  • The Black Cat (1934, Edgar G. Ulmer)
  • Humanity and Paper Balloons (1937, Sadao Yamanaka)
  • The Body Snatcher (1945, Robert Wise)
  • Dragonwyck (1946, Joseph L. Mankiewicz)
  • Black Narcissus (1947, Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger)
  • The White Reindeer (1952, Erik Blomberg)
  • Love Letter (1953, Kinuyo Tanaka)
  • Godzilla (1954 Japanese original version, Ishirō Honda)
  • The Night of the Hunter (1955, Charles Laughton)
  • Cash on Demand (1961, Quentin Lawrence)1
  • Night Creatures (1962, Peter Graham Scott)2
  • Kill, Baby, Kill (1966, Mario Bava)
  • The Swimmer (1968, Frank Perry)
  • The Snake Girl and the Silver-Haired Witch (1968, Noriaki Yuasa)
  • Kelly's Heroes (1970, Brian G. Hutton)3
  • The Wicker Man (1973, Robin Hardy)
  • The Living Dead at Manchester Morgue (1974, Jorge Grau)4
  • The Holdovers (2023, Alexander Payne)
  • Past Lives (2023, Celine Song) 
  • I Saw the TV Glow (2024, Jane Schoenbrun)

High honorable mention: Roma (2018), The Flesh and the Fiends (1960), Vampyr (1932)
Honorable mention: Midsommar, Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3, Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves, Rasputin the Mad Monk, Late Night with the Devil, IF (2024), Paper Man (2009), Deadpool & Wolverine, The Descent5, Mystery Train, Tower of London (1939), Shock (1946), And Now the Screaming Starts!
Best movie that I did not vibe with at all: Asteroid City
Best sequel that was surprisingly fun: House II: The Second Story
Most laughed-at for its awfulness: Burial Ground (1981)6
Biggest letdowns: Infra-Man, The Keep, The Fog (1980), Halloween III: Season of the Witch, Master of the World 
Best made-for-TV movies: Pray for the Wildcats7, The Night Stalker
Best TV mini-series: The Fall of the House of Usher
Best rewatches: Fargo, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, L.A. Confidential, Man on the Moon, Wonder Boys, Malice, Psycho, Tucker & Dale vs. Evil, Carrie, Jaws, Who Framed Roger Rabbit, Capote, Chungking Express, American Movie (1999 documentary), The Lost Boys, Johnny Dangerously, Cabin in the Woods, Foul Play, Do the Right Thing, The Shining

Footnotes
1. A new Christmas classic for the list. I mentioned last month we were going to try to watch this, and we did.
2. Original UK title: Captain Clegg
3. This was our Donald Sutherland memorial film
4. When I was growing up, this was usually Let Sleeping Corpses Lie in the TV listings. It has had many other titles, including Zombi 3, Breakfast at the Manchester Morgue and Don't Open the Window.
5. This was the most uncomfortable watch of the year. Claustrophobic, dark, unrelenting and completely without cathartic moments. I praise it on technical merits, but I cannot say I enjoyed it.
6. "Mother, this cloth. It smells of death!"
7. What more could you want? It has Andy Griffith, William Shatner, Robert Reed and Marjoe Gortner.

Sunday, January 12, 2025

Book cover: "The Sheep Look Up"

As 2025 gets off to an unsurprising, catastrophic and gut-wrenching start with the southern California wildfires, it's appropriate to go with something somber and dystopian for the first featured vintage book of the year.

  • Title: The Sheep Look Up
  • Author: John Brunner (1934-1995)
  • Cover design: Mark Rubin and Irving Freeman of Plum Studio. Read a little more about the cover on this 2016 post on Science Fiction and Other Suspect Ruminations. 
  • Publisher: Ballantine Books 
  • Format: Paperback
  • Year: This is the November 1973 first paperback printing. The novel was first published in 1972.
  • Cover price: $1.65 (equivalent of about $11.50 today)
  • Pages: 461
  • Dedication: "To Isobel Grace Sauer (née Rosamond) 1887-1970 In Memoriam"
  • Chapter titles: The novel is broken into 12 months, starting in December and ending in November. Each month has numerous short chapter titles.
  • Epigraph: "PLEASE HELP KEEP PIER CLEAN THROW REFUSE OVERSIDE" — Sign pictured in God's Own Junkyard, edited by Peter Blake
  • First sentences: Hunted? By wild animals? In broad daylight on the Santa Monica freeway? Mad! Mad!
  • Last sentences: "The brigade would have a long way to go," the doctor told her curtly. "It's from America. The wind's blowing that way."
  • Random excerpt from the middle #1: But if it was the simple life they were after, how come they used electricity? It was all very well to say it was clean power and be generated from waterfalls and tides. The fact stood: It hadn't been.
  • Random excerpt from the middle #2: Naval commander: This is an emergency announcement from the Department of Defense, Navy. Hear this, hear this, all personnel currently on shore leave in the following states: New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Florida, Texas, California. Report at once to the nearest Army or Air Force base or National Guard headquarters and place yourselves at the disposal of the commanding officer. Your assistance is required in quelling civil disorder. That is all.
  • Rating on Goodreads: 3.91 stars (out of 5)
  • Goodreads review excerpt #1: In 2020, Susan Budd, author of the highly recommended novella Felicity, wrote: "Why are all the dystopian novels I read in my teens coming true? I have to keep reminding myself that this is science fiction from the 70s, not real life here and now. ... When I first read The Sheep Look Up, I enjoyed it as I did most science-fiction — as a work of pure imagination. I didn’t see that Brunner’s dark vision of the future was a prophecy that I would see fulfilled. I was too young and unaware. ... Believe it or not, this book was the assigned reading in a high school English class I took back in the late 70s. Coolest teacher ever!"
  • Goodreads review excerpt #2: In 2021, Bradley wrote: "The darkness in these pages should have made everyone in the '70s perk up and pay attention. We ignored all the warnings, however, and here we are. Again. And now we live in John Brunner's novel."
  • Rating on Amazon: 4.2 stars (out of 5)
  • Amazon review excerpt #1: In 2017, G wrote: "Plot-wise this is a bit dated, because the book has a massive focus on pollution, which some countries are in the process of correcting. You can look at this another way, though: what if the world didn't uncover the concept of 'green energy'? This is a good book in that sense. Lots of interesting thoughts and visuals. The main problem is that it's a tough read. It's disjointed with its scenes and characters, reading more like a short story collection than a true novel. There are also poems and fake commercials scattered throughout, along with ultra-short pieces (character interviews, conversations, quick events, and so on). So this is a good book to read, but I'm not sure I'd call it easy to get into."
  • Amazon review excerpt #2: In 2019, Dena from Australia wrote: "Written in 1972, the dystopian world depicted in this book was remarkedly prescient. Readers can relate to many of the circumstances, ranging from the inability to develop effective antibiotics, to the deliberate poisoning of the environment to pursue maxi profts. While we have made a little progress in mitigating the worst aspects of predator capitalism, the ascendance to power of politicians such as Trump and his local and global equivalents threatens the survival of our world in much of the same way as depicted in the book."
  • A few blog posts about the book: Gaping Blackbird, Salon Futura, Kate of Mind, and Mirabile Dictu

Related Papergreat posts
*-I'm no longer as optimistic as I expressed in this 2016 post.
We haven't had meaningful rain in Florence since roughly Labor Day.