Glenn Muir
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glennmuir.bsky.social
Glenn Muir
@glennmuir.bsky.social
Graduate of WVU. Lover of Theatre, the Arts, etc. Solidarity for SAG-AFTRA & WGA! ADHD. Just trying to survive in a crazy, messed up world. Anti-Vaxxers NOT TOLERATED HERE!!! He/Him. Gay 🏳️‍🌈
Got off work and just voted!
November 4, 2025 at 11:06 PM
And for my personal taste, four plays to get to know me
October 27, 2025 at 1:36 PM
Four books to get to know me (Kinda hard actually imo):
October 27, 2025 at 1:36 PM
So this past Saturday, I finished Stephen King's small town vampire epic 'Salems Lot and while I still prefer Carrie more, I gotta admit I'm just impressed by how effectively he manages a bleak atmosphere in both. I was caught off guard by the overwhelming dread he crafted in those final chapters.
October 20, 2025 at 4:32 PM
October 18, 2025 at 9:14 PM
I am right here in the middle of Pennsylvania, not Pittsburgh nor Philadelphia, where even here there are hundreds of people from all over protesting against oligarchy. This is not just a city thing, this is all over America! #NoKings
October 18, 2025 at 9:14 PM
This makes me want to bring up an interesting counter example to the popular literary "War is Hell" consensus Willa Cather's 1922 World War I novel One of Ours. It tells the story of a young Nebraska man named Claude Wheeler who feels adrift from his relatively privileged life.
September 25, 2025 at 3:01 AM
I just want to gush about this Victorian English Mystery I just finished: Willie Collins' The Moonstone (1868). I knew that this was one of those foundational texts of the modern detective fiction genre, but I didn't expect an emotional, funny, and engaging story that's aged better than its peers.
September 20, 2025 at 12:46 AM
This is literally hard for me, as I've read so many classics these past two years, but one in my top 20, maybe top 10 is easily Their Eyes Were Watching God (1937) by Zora Neale Hurston. Her prose is envy-inducing in all the best ways!
September 14, 2025 at 2:41 AM
Woohoo! Finally finished my first book here at the new house to break it in. And what a find! Ray Bradbury's 1950 sci-fi fix-up novel (think literary collage of short stories previously published, all strung together by similar settings, characters, themes etc.). It's like a retelling-
August 25, 2025 at 12:50 AM
Damn . . . you ever just want to talk about a book you've finished because it was so good to you? that especially is the case of Winesburg, Ohio by Sherwood Anderson. A story cycle of loneliness in a small fictional Midwestern town. Part bildungsroman, part collage of isolation, this hit a nerve!
August 15, 2025 at 8:13 PM
And Then There Were None by Agatha Christie (1939/40)

Going by discovery roughly chronologically. So as a teen, I got into Agatha Christie because my Mom (RIP) was also a big fan of her work. Christie's the "Queen of Crime," and this is regarded as her masterpiece. The proto-slasher in a ways.
August 3, 2025 at 12:43 AM
To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee (1960)

Virtually everyone who knows this moving, albeit dated and problematic in parts, classic tale about racism, growing up, and the pursuit for justice in depression era Alabama. I knew the movie first, then the book, and ofc the novel covers more ground here
August 3, 2025 at 12:43 AM
Wanted to give a shout-out to @remembrancermx.bsky.social for her admiration for the Broadway musical adaptation of E.L. Doctorow's novel, and I wanted to read the actual source it was based on for this July. Ragtime (1975), a lyrical panorama of 1910s America that I finished this night. A classic!
July 21, 2025 at 5:37 AM
The Trumpet of the Swan by E. B. White (1970)

A touching story of a mute trumpeter swan who discovers his voice by learning to play said trumpet held my ADHD-addled attention like nothing before. We were assigned this in fifth grade and this was the first traditional chapter book I enjoyed reading!
July 16, 2025 at 1:55 AM
Just want to gush about this novel, The Portrait of a Lady by Henry James. What a hell of a doorstopper! (About 522 pages). It's a psychological novel but I was hooked throughout like any action-packed adventure. And Madame Merle, what a villainess! Why didn't I dive into Henry James' work earlier!?
June 8, 2025 at 1:50 PM
Finished a collection of short stories by Tobias Wolff titled Our Story Begins. An anthology of 31 stories, 21 old and 10 (as of this book publication) showcasing his craft of late 20th and early 21st century realism. This was my first exposure to him, and it's a hell of an introduction.
April 19, 2025 at 1:23 AM
A weekend spent on the slim memoir The Diving Bell and the Butterfly by Jean-Dominique Bauby, about his struggles following a severe stroke which paralyzed him in all but his left eye and slight head movements (the medical condition is called "Locked in Syndrome"). He died 2 days after publication.
April 13, 2025 at 7:14 PM
I finished today The River Between by Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o, a 150-page drama set in colonial Kenya involving the tensions between two villages, one rapidly colonized and christianized, the other steadfastly adherent to indigenous Gikuyu traditions, and the struggle of one man, Waiyaki, to unite them.
April 12, 2025 at 2:04 AM
I could gush about her days and days on end, but I'll simply end it here. While not the best work to end my adventures with her, I'm glad to have begun my literary adventure with her, and hope to return to Cather's work again someday.

So from the bottom of my heart:

Thank you Willa,
thank you.
April 4, 2025 at 2:39 AM
Well, I finally read all of Willa Cather's novels with her final one, Sapphira and the Slave Girl I just finished today. And unfortunately imo, her last, was also one of her least. Let's get the good out of the way: her prose and sense of place, while somewhat flabby in old age, are still sharp.
April 4, 2025 at 2:39 AM
I just finished the last Ernest Hemingway book I have so far in my collection, though I hope to add more in the future (thank you bookstores): his second story collection published in 1927 - Men Without Women. Most of my Hemingway's been Scribner's paperbacks, but this one is a Vintage Classic.
March 30, 2025 at 5:52 PM
Another day, another Hemingway completed for the first time. This time, arguably his most famous work, the 1952 novella The Old Man and the Sea. A slender but action story of an aging, down on his luck cuban fisher who faces great dangers and possible rewards deep out into the Gulf stream.
March 28, 2025 at 1:52 AM
I finished today Booth Tarkington's 1918 Pulitzer Prize winning novel The Magnificent Ambersons. A Greek tragedy in the early 20th century Midwest about the decline and fall of an American aristocratic family as the world around them, like the new invention of the automobile, speeds past by them.
March 23, 2025 at 11:30 PM
Well, I just finished tonight Ernest Hemingway's For Whom The Bell Tolls , easily one of the best war novels I've yet read (though granted, I haven't read many). The 471 page epic about American dynamiter Robert Jordan and a Spanish guerilla outfit blowing up a bridge in the Spanish Civil War . . .
March 13, 2025 at 2:24 AM