Tuesday, September 28, 2021

Books I Read in 2021, Vol XI

 

GLENSHEEN'S DAUGHTER: The Marjorie Congdon Story
Sharon Darby Hendry

In 1932, Elisabeth Congdon, an unmarried heiress to a mining fortune, adopts a three-month-old baby girl. The child, Marjorie, grows up in the Glensheen Mansion in Duluth, Minnesota, given everything she could possibly need or want. Forty-five years later, Elisabeth is found smothered in her bed. Her night nurse has been bludgeoned to death with a candlestick. Evidence points to Elisabeth's son-in-law, Roger Caldwell, and her adopted daughter Marjorie. This is the inside story of Marjorie Congdon and the stream of mysterious arsons and murders that have followed in her wake.

I bought this book (from the used book corner of a local-crafts store in Grand Marais, MN) because I once sung about Marjorie Congdon LeRoy Caldwell Hagen in the Dakota Chautauqua at the Dakota County (MN) Fair. It was a deceptively bouncy song about such a dark, twisted woman:

Oh Marjorie, Marjorie you tried so hard
To do that perfect crime
Marjorie, Marjorie, and now you're in the slammer
Doing time
You had a wealthy mother who was murderously smothered
With a pillow across her face
And when you went to trial and issued your denial
Somehow you were acquitted, got away that case
(Pete Martin & Eric Peltoniemi)

It took a little effort to get into the book because I felt assaulted with lots of names and relationships that I couldn't keep straight, but once Hendry started documenting Marjorie's parade of financial misdealings, arsons, and murders, it got pretty interesting.

The book, published in 1999, ends with Congdon sitting in prison for arson (having somehow gotten away with the murder of her third husband), awaiting parole. Wikipedia updates the story: "Marjorie was released from Arizona State Prison on January 5, 2004. She was arrested again, on March 23, 2007, in Tucson, Arizona, at her residence at an assisted living facility on charges of computer fraud and several other counts. In November 2008, Marjorie Congdon LeRoy Caldwell Hagen pleaded guilty to fraud after illegally taking funds from the bank account of Roger Sammis after his death. Mr. Sammis had been under her care before his death, and some suspect Ms. Congdon of foul play."

What a woman!

First line: It was a warm fall afternoon, October 30, 1992.

Page 56, Line 5: At this, Marjorie pulled him out of the public school and enrolled him in Benilde, a Catholic school.

Last line: It was one of many prices, he said, for the bad choices he'd made in life.


Friday, September 24, 2021

Free Guy: An Entirely Enjoyable Return to the Movies

 

On the strength of ActorBoy's recommendation, and paid for by a very old gift card from AngelFace, I went to see Free Guy, starring Ryan Renolds, today.

The reason it was a very old gift card is, of course, because COVID-19 hit soon after I got it for Christmas in 2019. And let me tell you, just walking into the theater lobby and smelling that popcorn was a little emotional. It very well could have been two full years since I had been to a movie theater; I don't really know.

"But what about the movie, Dewey?"


Oh...well...let me just say that I never expected to enjoy a sci-fi/romantic comedy/action movie this much.

Yeah.

It hit all the right beats and nailed every joke and I wish I had a copy of the script so I could lay some of the quotable quotes on you...including the obligatory rousing "come on, guys, we can do this if we all work together" speech that leads to the film's climactic battle.

[I originally wrote "...leads to the film's climax," but I changed it because there's ANOTHER climax involving the romantic comedy aspect of the movie that I will not say anything more about so as not to spoil it for anyone...because I'm thinking y'all should go see Free Guy for yourselves.]

Fair warning...there are just enough four-letter words used to give it its PG-13 rating. And as always, they could have done without them and no one would have noticed. But I don't know...it may have gotten a PG-13 anyway for the amount of video-game-style violence.

On top of the humor and action, the movie also has some decent things to say about life-as-we-know it and how people can make a difference if they try. That's another reason why I like it so much.

There IS one quote that I'm pretty sure I'll be using in real life: "Don't have a good day. Have a great day."


The First Post

  I woke up with the idea for this new blog as a way to take the place of what I used to post in a Facebook "Note". FB doesn't...

Top 3 Posts